Salvini and Le Pen in Pontida: “Whoever fights, wins”
The Le Pen-Salvini axis, a pillar of support for ID in the European Parliament, is standing firm with the election slogan “The Europe of nations, in defence of our identities and freedoms.”
The Le Pen-Salvini axis, a pillar of support for ID in the European Parliament, is standing firm with the election slogan “The Europe of nations, in defence of our identities and freedoms.”
Days before Poland votes, opposition parties and media hope to capitalise on a dispute between the conservative government and top military chiefs.
The incoming Slovakian prime minister said the exclusion is a price he is willing to pay.
Far-left across Europe focused instead on what they called “Israeli apartheid.”
“This is a clash of civilizations, and those who are coming into Europe really want to combat our civilization.”
Participants at MCC Brussels’s forum discussed the political, moral and anthropological implications of migration.
Instead of 0.4% growth, Germany will likely end the year with a 0.4% contraction, with independent projections predicting even worse figures.
Assimilation is a utopian idea. As we have seen throughout Europe, it simply does not happen.
Zelensky appeared skeptical about long-term military support from the alliance.
The new three-party government may be in place ahead of crucial EU talks on Ukraine.
Anti-war candidates are expected to win the day as the AfD meets in Magdeburg to decide on its list system for the 2024 European elections.
Spain’s political impasse looks set to drag on as both the Left and Right search for coalition partners. Meanwhile, VOX leader Santiago Abascal blamed polling companies for spoiling the day for populists.
Besides mass protests to contend with, Israel faces the risk of its public sector being crippled. The head of Israel’s main public sector union said he would meet with other union officials to discuss the possibility of declaring a “general labor dispute in the economy,” which they would activate “if necessary until a complete shutdown is achieved.”
With Spain in the EU presidency and European elections coming up next year, the shortfall of the Right in Spain is having repercussions in Brussels as well.
Were the PP to govern now, it is unlikely that it would try to resolve the asymmetries of the Spanish system on display during these elections, especially with Núñez Feijóo at the helm.
Despite substantially increasing their vote share, party president Alberto Feijóo could face a challenge from regional PP leader Isabel Díaz Ayuso, as socialists contemplate an unstable alliance with Catalan separatists to form a new coalition.
The Spanish Right comes out on top, but lacks the numbers to form a right-wing government.
FROM THE SUMMER 2023 PRINT EDITION: In Europe, populists were permanently marginalised—or so it was claimed by hostile observers. However, since pandemic policies ended, unresolved problems have returned to the forefront of political debate, giving a boost to right-wing populist parties everywhere.
The Gallup Institute’s survey’s results are not particularly surprising in light of the massive numbers of voters who previously voted for establishment parties, but who have now thrown their support behind the FPÖ, seeing in them a party that offers an alternative vision for the country.
European countries are slamming the door one after the other on the 2030 Agenda and progressivism. If Spain were to follow this trend, it would be a huge blow for progressives.
Under Spain’s Democratic Memory Law, the Francoist nobility was collectively singled out for extirpation, and its heads of family found themselves officially ‘disennobled.’
Germany is hopelessly behind on reaching its wind power goals.
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