The EU Agenda is a Leftist Agenda: An Interview with Professor Ryszard Legutko
Like all leftist agendas, it is directed against the nation-state, against national sovereignty, and against the family.
Like all leftist agendas, it is directed against the nation-state, against national sovereignty, and against the family.
It is essential that the people elect a new European Parliament in which representatives of the conservative and patriotic movement sweeping Europe have a clear majority. Otherwise, Brussels will persist in its deleterious encroachment on our national competences, until the train wreck becomes inevitable.
The EU itself has a major rule of law problem, and it doesn’t even respect the most fundamental rights.
As Brussels scrambles to act like a superpower in a multipolar era, it can scarcely understand the world around it, let alone develop a coherent policy.
Farmers have been at the epicenter of the onslaught of Green Deal policies.
These purported legal disputes are really a power struggle between Brussels and conservative national governments, most notably in Hungary and, previously, Poland.
Whether we get a Commission that will take another step towards a responsible migration policy is yet to be seen. At least we could demand this in the European Parliament if we gain a majority at the polls on June 9th.
The calamitous changes caused by Europe’s migration mishaps can no longer be quarantined from public view.
Who and what are we voting for in June? And what difference could it make?
Like all leftist agendas, it is directed against the nation-state, against national sovereignty, and against the family.
It is essential that the people elect a new European Parliament in which representatives of the conservative and patriotic movement sweeping Europe have a clear majority. Otherwise, Brussels will persist in its deleterious encroachment on our national competences, until the train wreck becomes inevitable.
The EU itself has a major rule of law problem, and it doesn’t even respect the most fundamental rights.
As Brussels scrambles to act like a superpower in a multipolar era, it can scarcely understand the world around it, let alone develop a coherent policy.
Farmers have been at the epicenter of the onslaught of Green Deal policies.
These purported legal disputes are really a power struggle between Brussels and conservative national governments, most notably in Hungary and, previously, Poland.
Whether we get a Commission that will take another step towards a responsible migration policy is yet to be seen. At least we could demand this in the European Parliament if we gain a majority at the polls on June 9th.
The calamitous changes caused by Europe’s migration mishaps can no longer be quarantined from public view.
Who and what are we voting for in June? And what difference could it make?
To submit a pitch for consideration:
submissions@
For subscription inquiries:
subscriptions@