
UK Admits Vetting Failure Over Freed British-Egyptian Extremist
The row has intensified concern within Jewish communities and prompted criticism of ministers who publicly welcomed the man’s return.

The row has intensified concern within Jewish communities and prompted criticism of ministers who publicly welcomed the man’s return.

In Paris, each and every government attempt to reach a budget agreement has failed miserably.

The return of a convicted offender to Damascus marks a major break with a policy that has been in place since the Syrian civil war began.

Official figures show thousands of inmates without residence rights, fuelling calls for radical measures to free up prison space.

The Extremadura result has intensified doubts about how long the government can last.

Court rulings and old commitments are forcing Berlin to keep the planes coming—despite pledges to scale back admissions.

Campaigners have welcomed the shift but warn that any replacement system could be quietly expanded once again.

Rising fertilizer prices, driven by sanctions and Brussels regulation, are squeezing farm margins, cutting yields, and pushing food prices higher across the EU.

A new survey points to growing support for Islamist ideas, including backing for coercive enforcement, raising fresh concerns over integration and civil liberties.

Senior Labour figures have reopened the door to closer EU integration, with ministers now floating a return to the customs union despite earlier Brexit red lines.
At the MCC conference scholars from four continents will look at how preambles shape identities and legal frameworks.
Lawmakers warn that weak oversight of EU grant programmes may have allowed politically active networks to gain legitimacy and influence across multiple member states.
A survey from a U.S. polling company reports an overwhelming majority of Hungarians opposing the Tisza party’s austerity proposals.
He who supported Emmanuel Macron twice at the presidential election considers times have changed—sparking an outcry in his own camp.
The scenes of Syrian migrants celebrating the anniversary of Assad’s fall in German cities encapsulates the failures of Berlin’s asylum policy.
The fear of political erosion and social pressure push Brussels to externalize asylum and accelerate returns.
Officials don’t know where money is coming from to fix defence gaps. It likely won’t come at all.
New investigations reveal that the Kyiv government sabotaged its own oversight mechanisms as scandals multiplied.
A former Commission advisor warned that the system is “built to prevent change.”
The clash between the X owner and Brussels exposes the legitimacy crisis of a divided European Union.
Polish and Hungarian officials say it is “staggering” that they should be criticised for alleged wrongdoing while top EU figures are facing such serious allegations.
While EU officials gave decidedly measured responses, other European voices called the Trump administration “dangerous” and “no longer an ally.”