
Jordan Bardella Leads French Presidential Polls
Raphaël Glucksmann has emerged as the most popular figure on the Left, while Jean-Luc Mélenchon remains the most disliked politician in France.

Raphaël Glucksmann has emerged as the most popular figure on the Left, while Jean-Luc Mélenchon remains the most disliked politician in France.

Defamation dispute reflects rising tensions in France about religion and security—and the reliability of public opinion studies.

Hammer Gang members attacked innocent people in Germany and Hungary.

U.S. officials hold unannounced talks with Russian and Ukrainian representatives in Abu Dhabi to refine a viable peace settlement.

“European as well as Slovak history is full of examples when Christians played a critical role at a critical time.”

Putin told the Turkish president that the U.S. proposal could “in principle serve as a basis for a final peace settlement.”

The Hungarian prime minister’s political adviser described the modification of the aggregate chart as “blatant data tampering.”

Three authors from the nationalist and conservative Right have sold several hundred thousand books, while figures from the Left struggle to sell more than 200 copies.

More seemingly random violence has intensified a U.S.-wide debate over public safety and judicial leniency—with federal officials demanding accountability from local authorities.

France’s disgraced ex-president’s 216-page tome will offer a first-hand account of his 20 days behind bars, following a criminal conspiracy conviction.
A report noted the military’s “intelligence failure” over its “inability to raise the alarm.”
According to the White House, the updated document offers security guarantees, infrastructure protection, and a framework for Ukraine’s economic and political stability.
French officials are exploring a new program that could bring in up to 50,000 new young soldiers.
There is growing uncertainty whether the parliament can pass an austerity budget by the end of the year.
The Kingdom is preparing for major disruption this week as workers increase pressure on the government during tense budget talks.
The Electoral Commission of Slovenia said on Sunday night, based on the nearly complete count of votes, that 53% of
The extraordinary election had to be held after a court stripped former president Milorad Dodik of his position.
The strategy is obvious: to propagandize the public into accepting, if not celebrating, our “new normal” in which elderly couples are put down like household pets.
Merz said he doubted any agreement could be reached by the November 27 deadline set by Trump, while the Turkish president announced he would be talking to Putin on Monday.
The classification “creates the basis for significantly stricter prosecutions,” Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said.
Activists poured environmentally friendly paint into the canals, rivers, lakes, and fountains of ten Italian cities to draw attention to the “effects of climate catastrophe.”
The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) decided to overhaul voting rules in response to the controversy over the voting system’s vulnerability to influence.