Polish President Calls Election in Shadow of War
Polls suggest the ruling PiS will struggle to stitch together a parliamentary majority without the rightist, Ukraine-critical Confederation (Konfederacja).
Polls suggest the ruling PiS will struggle to stitch together a parliamentary majority without the rightist, Ukraine-critical Confederation (Konfederacja).
Arnold Vaatz, similarly to his colleague Hans-George Maassen, contends the Union parties have “developed into followers who now ape what the Greens, the left-wing parties, and the media they control think up in terms of such rules.”
With a new opinion poll showing PIS at just 5% among first-time voters, the governing party is totally outflanked by both the left and populist right among younger age cohorts.
Presently, with the polling figures as they are, the national-conservative Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) will be needed to form a majority coalition unless the center-right People’s Party (ÖVP) is willing to take a sharp left turn to join forces with the SPÖ along with either the Greens or NEOS.
The most basic inspection of the facts leads one to the conclusion that every cog in the immigration wheel is either milking the system, or at the very least working against the interests of the British people.
The questionable appearance of two Spanish ministers at a reception hosted by Morocco occurred after both their phones were hacked by Moroccan intelligence.
Thuringia’s FDP president’s statements come after CDU chief Friedrich Merz and several leading Thuringian CDU politicians called for cooperation with the AfD at the local and state levels, respectively.
The latest polling data revealed that if elections were held this weekend, the AfD would collect a record high 23% of the national vote, just three percentage points behind the establishment CDU/CSU.
A mere 38% of respondents reported feeling satisfied with Austria’s political system in 2022, down from 67% who gave the same answer in 2018.
In an almost comedic turn of fortune, a recount in Madrid—to the benefit of the conservative PP—could mean the socialists will require the single in-person vote of exiled Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont.
MP Alessandro Cattaneo (FI), the first signatory, said: “The green light from the Chamber to the motion on nuclear power, as an alternative and clean source for the production of energy, is the clearest response to the demagoguery of the left.”
The country-wide protests were triggered by former PM Imran Khan’s arrest which, his supporters claim, was politically motivated.
The exhibition took place in the European Parliament in Brussels, around the so-called works of art of the Swedish lesbian photographer Elisabeth Ohlson, who makes no secret of her LGBT activism.
Conservatives have long complained of the uselessness of the EPP. A potential break with the socialists would pose a massive hurdle for the European political centre ahead of the 2024 EU elections.
“Only people who are not running in the next parliamentary elections have been selected” for serving in Slovakia’s upcoming technocratic government, led by an experienced economist free of party influence, President Čaputová announced.
The parliamentarians voted against the government’s advice—advocating for a mere suspension—in favour of a pure and simple repeal.
It was not Brexiteers who misled UK voters over the forward march of an EU army.
Germany’s leading green policy advisor Dr. Peter Graichen evoked the fury of the press when he stated that he ‘overlooked’ the fact that he proposed his best man as head of the German energy agency.
“The will of the Swedish people, which is reflected in the results of parliamentary elections, will become less and less relevant as power is increasingly centralized in Brussels,” Åkesson said.
The LIOT group announced its intention to propose a new bill to repeal the pension reform. They will focus specifically on the repeal of Article 7—the one that pushes back the legal retirement age from 62 to 64 years.
Chega managed to host the largest demonstration ever against a foreign head of state—and, in another first, secured unity among disparate factions of the Portuguese Right, which usually compete rather than cooperate.
This year’s CPAC Hungary will showcase the country’s promise as a testing ground of conservative policies.
To submit a pitch for consideration:
submissions@
For subscription inquiries:
subscriptions@