
“Noise and Smell”: Civic Training Requested for ‘Racist’ French Estate Agents
Landlords and estate agents want to select tenants—but is it permissible to ask why?

Landlords and estate agents want to select tenants—but is it permissible to ask why?

The monument to John III Sobieski was approved, built, and promised—before city authorities reversed course and left a bare pedestal on the battlefield site.

The Commission’s strategy to integrate Ukraine strains the EU’s internal unity and fuels criticism over an institutional double standard.

A £1.8 million Home Office scheme will offer housing, mental health support and employment help to migrants after their removal from Britain.

Authorities confirmed the suspect had been ordered to leave France earlier this month but remained in the country.

The Green-led ministry in Rhineland-Palatinate has sought to normalise large numbers of unexplained absences from the asylum system.

Trump insists that recent “chaos” is a result of Democrats refusing to work with migration officials.

The long-promised ban on Russian gas is now law—but replacing it with U.S. LNG is expected to come at a higher price.

EU leaders are racing to seal a trade deal with India to cut reliance on China—but questions grow over who will actually benefit.

Sussex Police detained two men and a woman after a vehicle was obstructed and attacked during protests outside a former army barracks in Crowborough, South East England.
Opponents accuse Brussels of pushing through a deal that benefits industrial elites while ignoring mounting rural anger.
Greenland’s leader says U.S. proposals are “disrespectful,” but Trump maintains he will take the island “one way or the other.”
Meloni’s government is staking one of its flagship reforms on a popular vote that will shape the future of Italy’s judicial system.
Senior European figures are beginning to acknowledge that ending the war in Ukraine will ultimately require dialogue with Russia.
How can Britain defend other nations if it can barely defend itself?
A Vienna arbitration case has forced the government to decide whether religious law can ever be enforced by the state.
Voter choices in several Member States will have an impact on whether the EU consolidates its centralising drift or preserves internal counterweights.
The case returns to court after a conviction triggered a political storm and cast doubt over the future of France’s most prominent challenger to the establishment.
The case has become a flashpoint for wider concerns about how far German authorities can go in policing speech.
Official data confirm that buying or renting in Europe is becoming increasingly out of reach for the average citizen.
Brussels doubles down on gender, diversity, and decarbonisation while Europe’s strategic and social problems are pushed aside.
Should a no-confidence motion succeed, a new election is a more likely outcome than the appointment of yet another government of losers.