
The EU’s Censorship Regime Is Coming for X—Again
How does Brussels still delude itself into believing there is no free-speech crisis in Europe?

How does Brussels still delude itself into believing there is no free-speech crisis in Europe?

After last May’s annulled elections raised fears of EU interference, Bucharest’s Brussels-friendly prosecutors now aim to try 21 Romanians for political offences.

Brussels’ ex-digital commissioner declines to defend the Digital Services Act as Congress investigates its threat to free speech.

Huaweigate continues to unfold, implicating several MEPs from different political groups.

If real Europe is ever going to live free again, Brussels and its monstrous, soul-sucking, money-burning bureaucracy has to die.

‘We’ll also have to do it in Germany, if necessary,’ Thierry Breton confessed—as up to 100,000 people took to the streets of Romania.

Party co-chair Alice Weidel calls the Commission announcement a “frontal attack on the freedom of expression.”

Breton’s letter must be a sign that things are not all well at the top and that other commissioners must be thinking the same thing.

No one will miss Breton’s authoritarianism, but his departure only intensifies Ursula von der Leyen’s grip and makes the decline in French influence even more apparent.

The internal market commissioner quit with immediate effect