
Farmers vs Factories: The Trade Deal Tearing Europe’s Biggest Party Apart
Spain and Germany are pulling in opposite directions, exposing how fragile the EPP’s claim to represent both workers and exporters has become.

Spain and Germany are pulling in opposite directions, exposing how fragile the EPP’s claim to represent both workers and exporters has become.

In an interview, Ribera also argued that Europe’s regulatory autonomy is at risk if the EPP-driven push for deregulation advances.

“What we have here is a vast political machinery that is quite the opposite of the definition of civil society. It does not represent certain groups of society, but a closed institutional elite in Brussels.”

Manfred Weber suggests not honoring the agreement with the Socialists and retaining the presidency of the Eurochamber next year.

The Commission’s talk of tougher visa rules is just political theatre.

The EPP leader calls for more power in Brussels even as he retreats on climate policies to ease public anger, exposing a risky two-track strategy.

The European People’s Party has branded the EU’s draft budget a disaster for agriculture, even though it backed earlier CAP reforms that raised costs for farmers.
Hungary’s leader warns Brussels against turning a bad deal into policy.

In the face of mounting pressure across Europe, the party opts for unity over reforms that could solve its legitimacy crisis.

The largest EU party’s refusal to comment has drawn sharp criticism amid a storm of reaction from supporters and opponents.