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Spain: Union Calls for General Strike Over Catalan Amnesty
Protests against the amnesty law have attracted thousands of participants over the last week.
Protests against the amnesty law have attracted thousands of participants over the last week.
Commission claims funds are held over rule-of-law concerns; Fidesz and PiS say process is politicised
It seems that German democracy must be “defended” from itself whenever it produces results that are unfavorable to the establishment.
Newspaper purchase ‘linked to plot against conservative government’
Eurocrats are concerned the U.S. is leaving Europe to foot the bill as the war in Ukraine and trouble on the horizon with China loom.
Building a coalition will be extremely difficult, as a possible ten or eleven parties could enter parliament.
German MEP calls for investigation into Commission’s oversight of Romanian insurance sector
“We need a critical mass of countries in favor of blocking boats, making it impossible for the Commission to intimidate countries who want to secure the borders,” Swedish MEP Charlie Weimers proposed.
Hungarian government must “remedy the situation” by November for students not to be excluded from EU’s Erasmus programme
Questions have been raised over a secret report into the Romanian motor insurance industry, which MEPs complain is being withheld from parliamentary examination.
With an ideologically aggressive president, and with the states becoming more and more dependent on money from the federal government, the table is set for fiscal blackmail of conservative states. First out: abortion laws.
It might seem a stretch for the EU to claim to be defending democracy by denying the right of sovereign nations to decide their own policies. But in Brussels doublespeak, ‘democracy’ can now mean its opposite.
Romania’s pro-EU government changed rules impacting the courts, despite human rights groups warning that the reforms represent a clear threat to judicial independence. The EU Commission failed to act.
Poland’s quarrel with Eurocrats looks set to return as Polish officials brandished a ruling by the EU Court of Justice as a “farce.”
Commission auditors warned against a public bailout for Parliament’s pension fund and expressed concern that financial ties to arms manufacturers could tarnish the EU’s image.
While a clear parliamentary majority seems unlikely, the center-right New Democracy is set to win Sunday’s election, and in large part due to the promise of building a wall and having the EU pay for it.
Emmanuel Macron has stressed that accession could take “decades,” but Volodymyr Zelensky doesn’t believe this is good enough.
Replacing unanimity with qualified majority voting would only benefit Western Europe, leaving smaller member states without the ability to protest the potential rise of a centralized EU super army.
This year’s CPAC Hungary will showcase the country’s promise as a testing ground of conservative policies.
The bureau hopes to avoid further litigation over the fund and to dodge another financial scandal. Using taxpayer money to keep the fund going is the least desirable option.
Petkov believes that no alliance is possible with Borissov and his party, GERB, without disavowing his initial political commitment. For Borissov, this is nothing less than “stubbornness.”
The Swedish Parliament voted to proceed with NATO membership—but Hungary has now revealed plans to, like Turkey, ratify Finland’s accession ahead of, and separate from, Sweden’s.
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