Germany: AfD Ahead of Scholz’s SPD in Poll
The news comes after opinion polls have revealed the AfD to be the most popular political force across the former East German states.
The news comes after opinion polls have revealed the AfD to be the most popular political force across the former East German states.
Erdoğan’s election defeat would likely be celebrated in Europe, even if it means the end of the EU-Turkey refugee deal, after which new ways will have to be found to keep migration in check.
The main opposition “will have no excuses if they lose the election,” İnce said after announcing his withdrawal, clearly benefiting Kılıçdaroğlu’s bid to topple Erdoğan’s regime.
Boïko Borissov, the winner of the fifth Bulgarian election in two years, turned to an unusual candidate for prime minister in an attempt to finally form a functioning government.
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.
In addition to the FDP, which is a member of the ruling coalition, opposition parties like the CDU, CSU, and AfD have all rejected the interior minister’s radical plan to overhaul the citizenship law.
In order for the right to kill a child in the womb becomes part of the French constitution, the identical text must still be adopted by the Senate, where a draft has already been rejected in committee.
“The government apparently wants to destroy the German passport. Soon everyone should get it. Foreigners in Germany are thus deprived of a great incentive to integrate. This can become a major threat to the cohesion of our society,” Andrea Lindholz, a lawmaker for the CSU, said in response to the proposal.
Spain’s climate change law, which bans the country from exploiting its own resources, is part of the political establishment’s push to dynamite the middle class and subordinate the country to foreign interests.
To label one’s opponents as ‘antidemocratic’ may make rhetorical sense, but if the values held as sacred have no foundation besides being considered so by the majority, they will inevitably fail when significant minorities beg to differ.
The FDP deputy leader trashed his coalition partners’ positions on illegal immigration, energy policy, and their plans to hand out massive sums of money to citizens.
University professor Antonio de Castro mapped a network of foreign entities he saw as responsible for promoting Catalan separatism, with factions within the establishment foreign super powers weakening Spain to further their interests.
So far this year, 10,000 illegal migrants have been brought to Europe by the fleet of NGO ships currently operating in the Mediterranean.
Fourteen months after the chaotic elections in Berlin, the constitutional court ruled the entire election invalid. New elections must now be held within 90 days.
Germany has announced its plan to pull out of the Energy Charter Treaty, which has been considered a roadblock of the energy transition by many Greens. While climate activists rejoice, critics warn this might scare away remaining investors.
The connivance of the establishment Left (and, though less explicitly, the Right as well) with the long-term strengthening of separatism has been a feature, not a bug, of Spanish democracy.
“We must respond by taking to the street so that this government of treason and ruin falls,” said VOX party leader Abascal.
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