
Queen Ursula’s Plot To Rule Europe—and Save the World
Not national governments, not even Brussels, but Commission chief von der Leyen alone can and must deliver us all—or at least that is what she thinks.
Not national governments, not even Brussels, but Commission chief von der Leyen alone can and must deliver us all—or at least that is what she thinks.
The move by the “pro-Russia” party of the Varna coalition puts their allies in Brussels in a tough spot.
Romania has “learned the necessary lessons” from last year’s annulled election and will conduct the next one according to “democratic standards,” Interim President Ilie Bolojan promised.
Steve Witkoff cited progress after a five-hour talk with Putin, but other White House advisors pushed Trump to increase pressure on Moscow.
The Commission’s delays and rejections of freedom of information requests hinder journalists “from fulfilling their watchdog role,” the letter signed by 140 reporters points out.
Brussels is talking about a ceasefire while hindering negotiations with a new set of “fanatic pro-war initiatives.”
The U.S. might ramp up sanctions on Russia, while Merz would let Kyiv bomb the Kerch Bridge with German Taurus missiles.
It would be a real smoking gun if the EU elite were to reject the democratic oversight of foreign interference, NGO lobbying, and systemic corruption.
Greece has the highest number of open cases of alleged human rights violations against illegal migrants, yet has avoided infringement actions faced by conservative governments.
USR leader Elena Lasconi refuses to drop out of the presidential race, despite her entire party pulling their support at the last minute.