State of the Union: Weekend Euro News Update
Your weekly update of European news stories from over the weekend; this week we have news from the Security conference in Munich and the political deadlock in Madrid; summaries only with Dimokratía.
Your weekly update of European news stories from over the weekend; this week we have news from the Security conference in Munich and the political deadlock in Madrid; summaries only with Dimokratía.
Since last December, Matteo Renzi, the Italian Prime Minister, has been launching a series of rhetorical attacks against the Brussels establishment and neoliberal consensus. A review of this change in European politics and its meaning going forward.
Recently I had the pleasure of listening to a talk about the rise of populism and ‘illiberalism’ in Eastern Europe at the Legatum Institute. A report on the talk and my views thereof.
Weekly update on European news from over the weekend; this week news from Berlin, Nottingham and Brussels – updates only with the HP
A Call to arms: On 9th February, DiEM25 is being launched at the Volksbühne in Berlin; the fight to retake European Democracy is beginning, and it’s time democrats across Europe stood up to reclaim their right as a citizen of Europe to democracy. “Carpe DiEM”
There has been a series of varied responses to Prime Minister Cameron’s reform proposals, outlined by Donald Tusk earlier this week. Reactions have been negative from all sides, but there have been positive responses as well. A review of the backlash, only with the HP.
The European nations are some of the oldest and most developed in the world. But does that make them more legitimate than the Union? What is the role of the nation state in modern Europe, and why is it so important?
After months of negotiations, a draft deal which can be discussed and reviewed has been laid on the table by President Donald Tusk, which will be sent around the European capitals; this Euro News Memo takes a look at what’s been proposed.
Nationalism, whilst generally steered clear of in most countries, is utterly shunned from the political scene in places like Germany and Spain, for historical reasons. France and Britain however, were never subject to denazification and the lasting impression that nationalism must be avoided in politics. In this discussion, I argue why nationalism must be avoided at all costs by democracies, and why nationalist rhetoric can only be a destructive force.
The weekly State of the Union update, providing summaries of European news from over the weekend; this week includes news from Germany, France and Sweden only with the HP.