
Spain: Crunch Week As Catalonia Tries To Form New Government
Fugitive ex-president Carles Puigdemont, facing arrest threat, vows to return to parliament.

Fugitive ex-president Carles Puigdemont, facing arrest threat, vows to return to parliament.

The Ukrainian president wants Russia to be present at the upcoming summit in November.

Tax agency can’t explain how David Sánchez has €1.7 million in assets.

Google achieved and perpetuated its dominance—and strangled rivals—through default deals.

The Chinese app’s ‘reward program’ incentivizing screen time will never be rolled out in Europe.

The group is dismayed that ordinary citizens don’t appreciate their road blockades and airport disruptions.

“Read here what you are not allowed to read,” the new publishers wrote.

Critic says Labour is offering “excuses for violent assembly.”

Nearly 40,000 pig and poultry farms are subject to the law.

Two suffer gastric problems following swimming competition and are forced to withdraw.
A year after the country passed a radical self-identification law, even transgender activists are now warning of cases of fraud.
The Afghan immigrants were planning “to kill police officers and other people with firearms.”
Senators called the practice “one of the greatest ethical scandals in the history of medicine.”
The Belgian EU presidency doesn’t trust Europeans to judge online content without government intervention.
Speaking to The European Conservative, the EU’s agricultural commissioner warns that Brussels has to bypass Ukrainian agricultural oligarchs if accession is considered.
EU Parliament responds to appeal from parents who say schools ignore domestic court ruling.
New report “offers a glimpse of the nightmare awaiting Britain under a national Labour government.”
The decision is a win for businesses, which have suffered enormous losses from damage by eco zealots.
Despite little success with previous similar programs, EU leaders are willing to pour €7.4 billion into another North African agreement.
Ministers have welcomed the “landmark decision.” But why did it take so long?
In an act of solidarity, the farmers donated some €1,000 worth of olive oil to charity.
Cambridge’s Fitzwilliam Museum denies going “woke” despite putting warning labels on paintings.