
Sweden Democrats Say European Leaders Undermine Mideast Peace
Officials also accused Brussels of choosing to ignore that many Gazans want to see Hamas rule.

Officials also accused Brussels of choosing to ignore that many Gazans want to see Hamas rule.

Prime Minister Lecornu rejects Socialist demands for a wealth tax, banking instead on reducing taxes to make it more profitable to work.

Former PM Janez Janša accused the left-wing government of intimidating conservatives at a time when it is struggling in the polls.

The prime minister branded Nigel Farage’s immigration plan “racist”—a gamble that could backfire as polls show nearly half of Britons agree with it.

Fr. Custodio Ballester’s supporters say the case is meant to intimidate others into silence—while the Church stays quiet.

The suspects—mostly from immigrant backgrounds—were acquitted of all charges despite evidence pointing to rape and abuse of a 12-year-old girl.

Officials in Brussels claim Ukraine meets entry criteria, but sceptics insist key conditions remain unmet.

Hamburg tops the list as cities spend millions on hotel rooms for migrants amid a housing crunch.

The anti-terror raid on SOS Chrétiens d’Orient follows years of smear campaigns by left-wing media over its work in Syria.

Zbigniew Ziobro said “In a lawless state one can hardly expect anything else.”
The Department of Homeland Security says the new rules aim to stop long-term visa holders from abusing the system “once and for all.”
The German government will give billions of euros to NGOs that are “against the Right.”
Former EU ‘climate pope’ Frans Timmermans is accused of “fairy tale” thinking, and not for the first time.
France braces for a turbulent September as the prime minister faces a likely defeat in his confidence vote.
The international organisation wants to see states legislate against all forms of surrogate motherhood.
The attack is being treated as “an act of domestic terrorism” against Catholics.
Budapest argues that the decision violated EU law because Hungary was denied its right to vote.
The European People’s Party has branded the EU’s draft budget a disaster for agriculture, even though it backed earlier CAP reforms that raised costs for farmers.
Nearly three-quarters of French teachers surveyed said they would not recommend their career to others.
The pipeline bombings were intended to pressure Budapest over stalled EU talks. Now Kyiv downplays the risk—while attacking a country supplying nearly half of its imported electricity.
The findings confirm what liberals in Europe have been denying for a decade.
The Czech government has said it will vote against the proposal to monitor digital communications when it comes before the EU Council.