
German State Backtracks on AfD Public Job Ban
AfD members in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate can no longer be excluded from teaching or policing roles, after the state walked back its proposed restrictions.

AfD members in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate can no longer be excluded from teaching or policing roles, after the state walked back its proposed restrictions.

Instead of austerity in a recession, France and other deficit-ridden EU states should try fiscal stimulus as a means to end their economic standstill.

The group carried out 14 attacks in Germany, some lasting several days and affecting around 230 organisations, including arms factories, power suppliers and government agencies

“There is the danger that even those who are ‘successfully’ removed from the continent are later able to come back anyway.”

A photographic exhibition in Brussels highlights the spiritual and artistic legacy of Spain’s most controversial monument.

Only one in five Austrians say coexistence with migrants is going well, a sharp drop from recent years.

Talk is growing that the prime minister is planning his resignation for some time in the near future.

Israeli airstrikes followed deadly clashes in Suweida that left 200 dead, as fears grow over regime attacks on Syria’s Druze minority.

The EU’s top trade negotiator is meeting U.S. officials in a last-ditch effort to stop a 30% tariff on European goods.

Vili Beroš is accused of leading a criminal network that defrauded the Croatian health system
France’s first lady is appealing a court ruling that cleared two women who spread viral claims she was born male.
Authorities allege that Reynders, who served as Belgium’s foreign minister and an EU commissioner, used lottery winnings to disguise over €800,000 in suspicious funds.
The failure shines a light on the consequences of rapidly shifting to green energy—but will wider Europe heed the warning?
The Centre for Media Monitoring, linked to the Muslim Council of Britain, is accused of spreading politically motivated misinformation about BBC coverage of the Gaza war.
Three influencers with over 200 million views between them were banned from entering a state parliament and are under investigation for right-wing extremism by the state’s domestic spy agency.
While the ruling class clutches its pearls, ordinary Americans are backing the only man who speaks their language—and defends their interests.
Prosecutors say the doctor exploited trust to carry out lethal home visits and used arson to destroy evidence.
A new EU report tries to paint pushback against the left-liberal agenda as the reserve of extremists and weird religious types. But their real fear isn’t fundamentalists. It’s ordinary people.
Data protection chief warns of online grooming, urges decentralised age checks.
Despite Stephen Ireland’s 30-year sentence for raping a 12-year-old, local police, councillors, and broadcasters continue to back his organisation—or quietly delete past endorsements.
After a savage assault on an elderly man, Spanish towns erupt in protest, demanding security and condemning government inaction.
Poland’s prime minister allegedly tried to stop the swearing-in of the conservative president-elect, triggering claims of a coup attempt.