
Clashes Erupt at Pro-Kurdish Protests Across Germany
Demonstrations in support of Kurdish regions in Syria drew large crowds across Germany, with police reporting violence at some protests.

Demonstrations in support of Kurdish regions in Syria drew large crowds across Germany, with police reporting violence at some protests.

A new report backed by senior Labour voices and leading lawyers takes apart Starmer’s argument for staying tied to Strasbourg.

The Italian Prime Minister is convinced that, as the balance of power is not favourable to Europe, it is better to continue negotiations.

The move signals a deeper shift in how secularism, feminism, and religious symbols are being reinterpreted by the Spanish state.

Pressure from the agricultural sector and the backing of conservative forces have managed, for now, to halt a key deal for Brussels.

From trade retaliation to calls for restraint, Europe is split as Trump prepares to address the World Economic Forum.

In the European Parliament, Péter Magyar sits in the EPP group, the party of Ursula von der Leyen who signed the controversial Mercosur deal on Saturday.

Brussels is expanding its anti-racism agenda just as voters worry about crime, housing and migration—fueling fears that lectures and regulation are replacing practical solutions.

The lawmakers said the right-wing nationalist party lost the election “because Wilders had lost interest.”

Sofia may align more closely with Orbán, Fico, and Babiš if former president Rumen Radev wins the spring parliamentary elections.
Fuad Awale, a convicted killer, successfully challenged his segregation in a high-security prison, arguing that his confinement caused “severe depression.”
The Labour government promised reforms and policy changes to curb illegal migration but arrival statistics show it’s only gotten worse.
Elections in eastern German states raise the prospect of the right-wing party forming its first-ever government.
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.