
Muslim Brotherhood Gets a Pass in the EP: Double Standards Exposed Again
The European Parliament’s refusal to act contrasts sharply with its tough stance on other actors, revealing political cowardice.

The European Parliament’s refusal to act contrasts sharply with its tough stance on other actors, revealing political cowardice.

A push framed as efficiency could sideline smaller states and weaken national control over foreign and security policy.

The trade agreement with Latin American countries pits the EPP’s members against each other as national agricultural interests collide with industrial goals.

The defection of Laurent Castillo would cut the French delegation inside the EPP to just five members and underline growing unrest over trade and leadership in Brussels.

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.