Nottingham Forest are in a strong position to qualify for the Champions League but could their season get even better?
Musk has used X to share support for far-right political parties in Europe. His remarks have drawn ire from political leaders, including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Elon Musk continues to champion right-wing politics in Europe.
Europe’s generous welfare states are coming under increasing strain as weak economic growth collides with rising demands on government budgets, particularly from aging populations.
"Trump might forget about Greenland. But also, he might not. Nobody knows. He operates on whims," @anneapplebaum writes.
U.S. duties could nudge the European Union toward protectionist measures and away from free trade.
Rightwing politicians in the US have increased their attacks on “woke” company policies ahead of Trump’s return to the White House. US banks have been targeted by 22 Republican attorneys general who accused them of colluding to block finance to oil and gas companies.
European shares ended on a positive note on Friday, benefiting from a broad-based rally which was fuelled by declining government bond yields and encouraging economic data from China, with the STOXX 600 logging its fourth straight weekly rise.
Still, the official announcement declined to use the word war to characterize Moscow’s activities outside Ukraine. Instead, the EU condemned Russians’ “destabilising” and “malicious actions.” The inability to describe acts of war as acts of war is part of a culture of distortion and denial regarding the subject of state-sponsored violence.
Elon Musk and MAGA are already disrupting the status quo, and Europe seems ill-prepared. For the last decade or more, Europe’s governments have been trying to resist covert influence operations from adversaries like Russia and China.
Donald Trump wants to sell Europe more gas. That sounds doable: the European Union needs more of it. And the trade might discourage the U.S. president-elect from slapping a 10% tariff on European goods which could,
Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said he could see the two separate European programmes working on new fighter jets and combat air systems being combined in future or at least designed to work together.
The leader of a prominent European Jewish organization says authorities across Europe need to immediately take action against a precipitous rise in antisemitism.