State Elections a Test for Beleaguered Berlin Government
Bavaria and Hesse appear to indicate a rightward shift in the country.
Bavaria and Hesse appear to indicate a rightward shift in the country.
Čaputová, a supporter of military aid to Ukraine, said she made the decision out of respect for last week’s election outcome.
Fr. Tiso’s career, for all its failings, was a catalyst in the formation of the modern Slovak state.
As alarm bells go off in the liberal West, Hungary is hoping for another patriotic ally to work with in the EU.
It’s coming down to the wire in Poland as polls indicate a post-election battle over coalition partners.
“Where the other parties talk about ‘coexistence’, we talk about assimilation and integration. Only in this way can conflict be avoided—everything else brings chaos and problems.”
Meat is emerging as a major sticking point in the Dutch elections.
The former prime minister could bring his country more in line with the politics of Hungary and Poland.
RAI is becoming a focus point of Meloni’s institutional battle with the left.
“[The established parties] fail to recognize that this is a reflection of their bad policies and the fact that the people will no longer tolerate them selling the German people down the river.”
The ruling PiS government may not revive the visa reforms after this year’s elections, as immigration becomes a leading issue on the campaign trail.
Despite ample media publicity, Italy’s bungling new left-wing opposition leader Elly Schlein is making matters worse for the centre-left PD as party insiders fear their own Jeremy Corbyn moment and loss of working-class voters to the Right.
Following the stunt, Sweden’s embassy in Iraq was stormed by a mob of protesters; governments of Jordan, Morocco, Kuwait, and the UAE recalled their ambassadors from Stockholm; and the Organization of the Islamic Conference (ICO) called for Quran burning to be banned globally.
VOX is proposing referenda on a host of issues, including illegal immigration and energy sovereignty.
After six nights of rioting, it would appear that the movement is ebbing slightly. But this apparent return to calm should in no way be seen as a victory because, as in 2005, the fundamental problem still remains.
Liberal opposition leader Donald Tusk took to denouncing Islamic immigration in the aftermath of this week’s turmoil in France while Poland’s PiS used the carnage as political ammunition during EU asylum talks.
Hannes Loth’s victory in the town of Raguhn-Jeßnitz in Saxony-Anhalt marks the AfD’s second electoral breakthrough in two weeks.
“The poll illustrates one thing clearly: the facade is crumbling and the majority of people in the Netherlands are no longer fooled by the mainstream media which continues to serve as an extension of our government. It is time for the Rutte government to step down,” said Dutch MP Simone Kerseboom (FvD).
After years of taking in large shares of asylum seekers, many of whom never receive asylum status, Sweden’s centre-right government has proposed constructing deportation centres to prevent illegals from going underground after being ordered to leave the country.
Poland promises to veto the migrant relocations, Hungary questions Brussels’s extra-budgetary requests, and others keep worrying about the possibility of a resurgent Wagner coming out of Belarus. All in one day.
The populist Right in charge of Austria for the first time ever? Communists in parliament? It’s not just a hypothetical: it’s currently the most likely scenario for 2024.
Everyone feels safe in Poland. This is thanks to putting our territorial integrity above the ideological agenda promoted in Brussels.
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