
Family Business: The Cases Against Joe and Hunter Biden
Both Bidens face court challenges as they are accused of taking millions in foreign payments.

Both Bidens face court challenges as they are accused of taking millions in foreign payments.

The landmark reform in Sweden’s foreign aid policy is indicative of the SD-supported government’s attempt to reorient policies so they align with national, not globalist, interests.

Ukrainian security services are investigating the incident as terrorism.

The subject of clothing in schools regularly crops up in French politics, but until now no education minister has implemented it.

Brussels’ attempts to consolidate the flow of health data are raising concerns about ‘medical totalitarianism’ as MEPs warn against sacrificing patient privacy for profit.

Survey respondents link immigration to the erosion of the educational and social welfare systems, high social trust, and low-crime society.

Addressing the Spanish PM directly, the head of the centrist European People’s Party said, “It is obvious that this is about you, about your career, not about Spain or Europe.”

Söder still pushes for the nationwide classification even though it has had no effect on AfD’s popularity in three eastern German states.

Backed by a majority of MEPs in Strasbourg Thursday, the legislation could steamroll the opposition to surrogacy of member states.

The meeting abroad would be a victory for the separatists as it gives the appearance of bilateral negotiations between two heads of state.
The case has been brought forward by a professor of competition policy who said Apple’s charges for developers are “excessive and only possible due to its monopoly on the distribution of apps.”
As mining experts declared the EU’s Raw Materials strategy effectively dead in the water, MEPs visited cobalt mining facilities in the Congo with the promise of enhanced humanitarian aid.
Yevhen Borisov, accused of having accepted bribes in return for exempting some would-be soldiers from mobilization, is said to have purchased real estate worth around 4 million euros at the posh Marbella resort in southern Spain.
In two separate jihadi suicide bombings, at a metro station in the EU Quarter and Brussels Airport in Zaventem, 32 people lost their lives.
The movement, which started in Marseille, is now spreading across the country. “It’s not a movement of anger but rather one of disgust,” a member of an influential police union explains.
Romania is upset about being made fun of, Slovakia protests the naming of its territories as “detached” Hungarian land.
Republicans believe an inquiry would lead to even more information being uncovered about the president and his son’s dubious foreign business dealings.
Spain’s political impasse looks set to drag on as both the Left and Right search for coalition partners. Meanwhile, VOX leader Santiago Abascal blamed polling companies for spoiling the day for populists.
Russia expands its attacks, hitting Ukrainian ports on the Danube.
Labour has acknowledged that it is doing something “very wrong” on the expansion of London’s green policy, though Mayor Sadiq Khan appears keen to push ahead.
A stone in the EU’s shoe is a Poland-led loose alliance of five nations bordering Ukraine that, in a bid to protect their farmers, wish to extend a ban on the sale of Ukrainian grain, a demand that if not met, some warn they will satisfy unilaterally.
Having accused North Korea of providing Russia with military aid—a claim denied both by Pyongyang and Moscow—it is certain that the West will be keeping a steady watch on an upcoming meeting.