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  • EU and Canada Declare Strategic Partnership Amid Global Geopolitical Shifts

    EU and Canada Declare Strategic Partnership Amid Global Geopolitical Shifts

    EU and Canada: Best Friends Forever (Especially When Things Get Weird)

    The European Parliament just made it official: Canada is basically Europe’s favorite overseas cousin. In a resolution adopted Wednesday with 482 votes in favor, MEPs declared it’s time to take this relationship to the next level—because let’s face it, the world has gotten complicated.

    German MEP Tobias Cremer put it perfectly: “Canada is perhaps the most European country outside Europe.” High praise from a continent that invented croissants and bureaucracy.

    Why the Sudden Love Fest?

    With Russia playing war games, China flexing its economic muscles, and America being, well, “increasingly erratic” (their words, not ours), the EU figured it’s time to buddy up with someone who shares their values and actually answers their calls.

    The partnership wishlist reads like a geopolitical dating profile: deeper security cooperation, joint support for Ukraine, protecting the Arctic from militarization, and—most importantly—defending multilateralism. Because nothing says “we’re serious” like coordinating through the UN, NATO, G7, G20, and probably a few WhatsApp groups.

    Show Me the Money (and Maple Syrup)

    Beyond the security stuff, MEPs are practically begging the ten EU member states still dragging their feet to ratify CETA—the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. It’s been provisionally applied since 2017, and they’d really like to make it official before the 10-year anniversary in 2027. Nothing says “strategic partnership” like finally signing the paperwork.

    The resolution also calls for stronger energy cooperation, presumably so Europe can diversify away from certain problematic gas suppliers who shall remain unnamed (but rhyme with “Hussia”).

    Arctic Anxiety

    There’s also growing concern about Greenland, with MEPs wanting to safeguard its autonomy amid “rising geopolitical interest.” Translation: everyone suddenly cares about a giant ice sheet, and not just because of climate change.

    The bottom line? In a world where alliances shift faster than social media trends, the EU and Canada are making their friendship Instagram-official. Now they just need matching t-shirts and a secret handshake.

  • EU’s Enlargement Push: Strategic Expansion or Ambitious Overreach?

    EU’s Enlargement Push: Strategic Expansion or Ambitious Overreach?

    Europe’s Getting Bigger (Again), and This Time It’s Personal

    The European Parliament just voted overwhelmingly to roll out the welcome mat for new members, and they’re not being shy about it. With 385 votes in favor, MEPs declared that EU enlargement isn’t just a nice-to-have—it’s basically Europe’s security blanket in an increasingly chaotic world.

    The message? Letting new countries join isn’t charity work; it’s self-preservation. According to Parliament, the cost of not expanding would actually be higher than absorbing new members. Think of it as buying insurance before your house floods, except the flood is “geopolitical grey zones vulnerable to antagonistic foreign influence.” (That’s Brussels-speak for “places where troublemakers can cause problems.”)

    The Fast-Trackers

    Montenegro and Albania are apparently the overachievers of the group, aiming to wrap up their accession negotiations by 2026 and 2027 respectively. Ukraine and Moldova are also knocking on the door, with MEPs pushing for swift progress. Even Iceland is getting a mention for increased EU enthusiasm, and Greenland is apparently flirting with the idea of stronger EU ties. (Yes, Greenland. No, we’re not sure what took them so long either.)

    No Cutting in Line

    But before anyone gets too excited, Parliament laid down some ground rules. This isn’t a participation trophy situation—countries need to actually earn their spot. The report emphasizes that accession must remain “merit-based and reversible,” which is diplomatic code for “we’re watching you, and we can change our minds.”

    Rule of law, democracy, media freedom, minority rights, and fighting corruption are all non-negotiable. MEPs noted that countries showing the worst democratic backsliding are conveniently the same ones barely aligning with EU foreign policy. Coincidence? They think not.

    The Fine Print

    Lithuanian MEP Petras Auštrevičius summed it up nicely: enlargement has historically made Europe stronger and richer, but the EU itself needs to get its house in order first. That means internal reforms and—brace yourself—more qualified majority voting instead of letting single countries veto everything.

    The Parliament is also calling for beefed-up monitoring of reforms, more support for pro-EU civil society groups, and adequate funding in the next EU budget. Because nothing says “welcome to the family” quite like proper infrastructure investment and countering foreign disinformation campaigns together.

    The bottom line? Europe’s door is open, but you’d better be ready to prove you deserve to walk through it. And bring your A-game on democratic values—there’s a checklist, and yes, they’re actually going to use it.

  • Europe Finally Decides to Pool Its Defense Shopping List

    Europe Finally Decides to Pool Its Defense Shopping List

    Europe Decides It’s Time to Actually Share Its Defense Toys

    In a move that screams “we probably should have done this earlier,” the European Parliament just voted to create a common defense market. Because apparently, 27 countries buying their own separate tanks, drones, and missile systems wasn’t the most efficient use of everyone’s euros. Who knew?

    On Wednesday, MEPs passed two reports with the kind of overwhelming support usually reserved for free lunch proposals. The first report (393 votes in favor) basically says: “Hey, let’s stop pretending we’re all individual military superpowers and start shopping together.” Think Costco, but for air defense systems.

    The plan? A “Buy European” approach to defense procurement. Translation: Stop ordering your military hardware from Amazon Global and support local weapons manufacturers. Ukraine gets honorary membership in this exclusive club, because nothing says “we’re with you” like including you in bulk purchasing agreements.

    The second report (448 votes in favor) tackles Europe’s rather embarrassing capability gaps. Turns out the EU is a bit short on air defense, drones, counter-drones, cyber warfare tools, and basically everything you’d want if someone decided to start trouble. It’s like showing up to a video game tournament and realizing you forgot to level up.

    Four flagship projects are in the works with names straight out of a sci-fi novel: the European Drone Defence Initiative, Eastern Flank Watch, Air Defence Shield, and Defence Space Shield. MEPs are basically telling the Commission: “These sound cool, but can you maybe explain what they actually do, when they’ll happen, and who’s paying?”

    German MEP Tobias Cremer summed it up perfectly: “Europe’s autonomy begins with a single market for defence.” Italian MEP Lucia Annunziata noted that modern warfare has gone all high-tech with AI weapons and smart mines, so Europe needs to get its act together fast.

    The message is clear: Share your toys, coordinate your shopping lists, and maybe—just maybe—Europe can defend itself without needing to call its older cousin across the Atlantic every time things get dicey.

  • EU Allocates €1.6 Million Aid Package for 267 Workers After Tupperware Belgium Collapse

    EU Allocates €1.6 Million Aid Package for 267 Workers After Tupperware Belgium Collapse

    EU Throws €1.6 Million Lifeline to Workers After Tupperware Goes “Pop”

    In a move that proves even plastic container empires aren’t forever, the European Parliament voted Wednesday to rescue 267 Belgian workers left jobless after Tupperware Belgium sealed its fate—and not in an airtight container.

    The European Globalisation Adjustment Fund is stepping up with €1.6 million (because apparently globalization giveth, and globalization taketh away). The vote passed with a resounding 562 MEPs in favor, 53 against, and 19 who presumably couldn’t decide if their vote was still fresh or needed to be thrown out.

    What Went Wrong?

    Tupperware Belgium’s demise reads like a corporate soap opera. The American parent company got snatched up by creditors last October, pulled the manufacturing licenses from its Belgian subsidiary faster than you can say “burp seal,” and left the operation financially unviable. Bankruptcy followed in February 2025, proving that even companies built on keeping things fresh can’t preserve themselves forever.

    The Rescue Package

    The displaced workers will receive career counseling, job-search assistance, and training in “new professional skills”—including digital skills, because apparently the future doesn’t involve as many plastic bowls as we thought. The total support package rings up at €1.9 million, with the EU covering 85% and Belgium’s Flemish Public Employment Service chipping in the rest.

    Plot twist: A group of European entrepreneurs is apparently trying to resurrect the brand across Germany, France, Belgium, Italy, and Poland. Because nothing says “phoenix rising from the ashes” quite like reusable food storage.

    Since 2021, the EGF has helped over 181,000 workers across 20 member states bounce back from economic curveballs, disbursing €727 million in total. Sometimes globalization does bring a consolation prize.

  • EU Parliament Tries to Square the Circle: More Defense Spending, Less Debt, Still Fix Poverty

    EU Parliament Tries to Square the Circle: More Defense Spending, Less Debt, Still Fix Poverty

    EU Parliament Draws Its 2026 Economic Battle Lines (Spoiler: It’s Complicated)

    The European Parliament just dropped two resolutions that basically say: “We need to spend money on defense, but not that much money, and definitely not by borrowing more, and oh, can we also fix poverty while we’re at it?”

    In a Wednesday vote that saw 392 MEPs nodding along (and 219 presumably shaking their heads), Parliament tackled the EU’s economic priorities. The main takeaway? Things are looking a bit dodgy. Public debt is up, growth is sluggish, and inflation is being… well, inflation.

    Here’s where it gets spicy: those fancy new EU economic governance rules everyone was excited about? Member states are already hitting the emergency “escape clause” button just one year in. It’s like buying a gym membership and immediately claiming you have a doctor’s note.

    Defense Spending: The Expensive Elephant in the Room

    MEPs are side-eyeing the push for increased defense budgets, warning that tanks and fighter jets shouldn’t come at the expense of, you know, everything else Europe cares about. They’re also pointing out the uncomfortable truth that military spending doesn’t magically boost your economy’s output. Revolutionary thinking, really.

    Social Priorities: Because People Still Need to Eat

    In a separate resolution (404 votes in favor—yes, like the error code), Parliament demanded that social objectives get a seat at the big kids’ table of EU economic governance. They want €20 billion dedicated to helping children, better tracking of in-work poverty (because apparently having a job doesn’t guarantee you can afford rent anymore), and actual implementation of the European Pillar of Social Rights.

    The message is clear: Europe wants to be strong, competitive, and socially responsible—all while not drowning in debt. Simple, right? The adopted texts will be available March 11, presumably after everyone’s had a strong coffee and a lie-down.

  • EU Parliament Extends Child Safety Scanning Rules Until 2027, Buys More Time for Permanent Framework

    EU Parliament Extends Child Safety Scanning Rules Until 2027, Buys More Time for Permanent Framework

    EU Kicks the Can Down the Digital Road (Again)

    In a move that surprises absolutely no one familiar with EU bureaucracy, the European Parliament just voted to extend temporary rules allowing tech companies to voluntarily scan for child sexual abuse material online. The new deadline? August 3, 2027. Mark your calendars, folks—that’s when they’ll probably ask for another extension.

    With 458 MEPs voting “yes” (and 103 apparently having other ideas), Parliament decided that the current exemption to privacy laws—originally set to expire this April—needs more runway. Why? Because negotiating a permanent framework is apparently harder than assembling IKEA furniture without instructions.

    The Fine Print (That Actually Matters)

    Here’s where it gets interesting: MEPs aren’t just rubber-stamping everything. They’re drawing some lines in the digital sand. End-to-end encrypted chats? Off limits. Scanning your traffic data alongside your actual messages? Nope. The technology should only target material already identified as abuse or flagged by users and trusted organizations—not your aunt’s questionable cat memes.

    German MEP Birgit Sippel summed it up nicely: We need to protect kids and fundamental rights. Revolutionary concept, really.

    Why the Delay?

    Parliament has been ready to negotiate since November 2023. The Council finally got its act together in November 2025. Now they’re actually talking. At this rate, flying cars will arrive before permanent legislation.

    The temporary fix was already extended once in 2024, making this the legislative equivalent of hitting the snooze button—twice. But hey, at least they’re trying to get it right rather than rushing through something that’ll get torn apart in court later.

    Bottom Line

    The extension buys time for a proper long-term solution while keeping voluntary detection measures in place. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than the alternative: a complete legal vacuum where nobody knows what they can or can’t do. And in EU politics, “not terrible” counts as a win.

  • Europe’s Women Work Two Months Free Every Year—And Parliament’s Finally Had Enough

    Europe’s Women Work Two Months Free Every Year—And Parliament’s Finally Had Enough

    Europe’s Pay Gap Problem: Women Work Two Months Free (And Nobody’s Thrilled About It)

    Here’s a fun fact that’s not fun at all: European women essentially work 54 to 67 days a year for free compared to their male counterparts. That’s right—nearly two months of unpaid labor. And if you throw in all the cooking, cleaning, and family organizing women do at home, add another eight weeks to that tally. Suddenly, “having it all” sounds more like “doing it all for nothing.”

    The European Parliament just voted overwhelmingly (458 to 72, with 98 abstentions—someone couldn’t decide) to demand an action plan to fix this mess. The irony? Women are increasingly outperforming men in education, yet they’re still getting paid less and undervalued in the workplace. It’s like winning the race but being told you came in second anyway.

    The gender pay gap currently sits at 12%, which cost the EU a cool €390 billion in 2023. But wait, there’s more! The pension gap is even worse at 25.4%, meaning retired women are nearly twice as likely to face poverty compared to men. Nothing says “golden years” like financial insecurity after a lifetime of unpaid overtime.

    The culprit? Women shoulder a disproportionate share of unpaid care and domestic work—childcare, elder care, and everything in between. This forces many into part-time work or out of the workforce entirely, which tanks their career progression and pension accrual. Meanwhile, member states apparently need encouragement to get men to actually use their parental leave. Revolutionary stuff.

    Parliament wants the European Commission to create an action plan that includes better working conditions, fair pay in female-dominated sectors (which are mysteriously always “undervalued”), and investment in reliable childcare services. Because shockingly, when parents can actually afford quality childcare, they can stay in the workforce. Who knew?

    As MEP Irena Joveva put it: “We have still not eradicated persistent gender inequality.” Understatement of the century? Perhaps. But at least someone’s finally doing the math on how much free labor women have been providing while everyone pretends equality already exists.

    The ball’s now in member states’ court. Let’s see if they can turn these demands into actual change—or if women will still be working two months free in 2027.

  • EU Parliament’s Wednesday Whirlwind: Spyware, Sunburns, and Serious Business

    EU Parliament’s Wednesday Whirlwind: Spyware, Sunburns, and Serious Business

    EU Parliament’s Wednesday Whirlwind: Spyware, Sunburns, and Serious Business

    Buckle up, because the European Parliament is having quite the Wednesday. At 9 AM sharp, MEPs are diving headfirst into the Middle East situation, discussing the US-Israeli military operation against Iran—because nothing says “morning coffee” like geopolitical crisis management. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will be there, presumably armed with PowerPoints and strong opinions about the upcoming EU summit covering everything from Ukraine to migration. You know, light topics.

    But wait, there’s more! At 12:30, Parliament tackles the cheerful subject of child sexual abuse online, voting to extend privacy exemptions that let companies voluntarily hunt for predators before the current rules expire April 3rd. They’re so committed to the cause, they’re having another debate about it at 1:30 PM. Because if you’re going to protect children from online monsters, you might as well do it twice.

    Holiday disasters get their moment in the sun around 4 PM, when MEPs discuss updating Package Travel rules. Remember when that airline went bankrupt and stranded you in Mallorca? Parliament remembers. They’re voting Thursday on new rights for compensation when your dream vacation becomes a nightmare.

    In the “also happening” category: Armenia’s Prime Minister drops by at noon for a formal address, MEPs vote on their 2027 budget wishlist, and there’s an evening session examining Greece’s “Predatorgate” spyware scandal. Oh, and they’re discussing the rise of far-left political violence, human trafficking for Russia’s war machine, and political prisoners in Georgia.

    It’s basically a geopolitical speed-dating session, but with more voting and fewer awkward silences. Democracy: it’s exhausting, but someone’s got to do it.

  • Europe’s EU Parliament Adopts 60-Day Housing Crisis Plan With 367-Vote Approval

    Europe’s EU Parliament Adopts 60-Day Housing Crisis Plan With 367-Vote Approval

    Europe Finally Tackles Its Housing Crisis (And Yes, They Have a 60-Day Plan)

    Millions of Europeans are discovering that “home sweet home” has become “home sweet unaffordable nightmare,” and the EU Parliament has finally decided to do something about it. On Tuesday, they adopted a comprehensive report with 367 votes in favor—because nothing says “urgent crisis” like a democratic process.

    The Problem: No Room at the Inn (Or Anywhere Else)

    Europe is short a casual 10 million homes. Rents have skyrocketed by over 30%, and young people are learning that “adulting” now includes accepting you’ll probably live with roommates until you’re 47. The Parliament’s Special Committee on the Housing Crisis—yes, they created an entire committee for this—has confirmed what everyone already knew: the housing situation is, to use a technical term, “really bad.”

    The Solutions: A Greatest Hits Album

    The Parliament’s plan reads like a wish list written by someone who actually has to pay rent:

    Speed Dating for Building Permits: Planning permits must now be processed within 60 days. That’s right—the EU is putting bureaucracy on a diet. Digital permit-granting procedures will replace the traditional method of “submit paperwork, wait indefinitely, age significantly.”

    Tax Breaks for Humans: The plan calls for incentive-based tax systems to help low- and middle-income households, because apparently, the current system of “pay more for everything” wasn’t working out.

    Airbnb, We Need to Talk: Short-term rentals are getting the side-eye. The upcoming law aims to balance tourism with, you know, people actually being able to live in cities. Revolutionary concept.

    Squatters, Beware: Parliament strongly condemns illegal occupation and wants stricter measures to protect property owners. They’re also pushing for better tenant protections, because fairness apparently needs to work both ways.

    Made in EU (Literally): The plan includes boosting the EU’s construction industry with minimum “Made in EU” requirements for components in EU-funded projects. Industrial sovereignty meets home improvement.

    The Money Talk

    The report demands better coordination of existing EU funds and suggests reallocating unused Recovery and Resilience Plan resources. Translation: “We found some money in the couch cushions; let’s use it for housing.”

    Investment will target social, public, cooperative, and affordable housing—all those categories that sound boring until you realize you can’t afford anything else.

    The Human Element

    In a touching moment of recognizing that buildings don’t construct themselves, MEPs called for improving working conditions for skilled workers through training and fair wages. They also want easier labor mobility across the EU and, when necessary, recruiting skilled workers from outside. Turns out, you need people to build houses. Who knew?

    The Bottom Line

    As rapporteur Borja Giménez Larraz eloquently put it: “A generation that cannot afford a home cannot build a future.” Committee Chair Irene Tinagli added that housing affects “people’s health, social cohesion, and access to economic opportunities”—and probably their ability to have a decent Tinder profile.

    Now comes the fun part: member states actually have to implement these recommendations. The Parliament has spoken. The roadmap exists. The 60-day permit deadline awaits.

    Let’s see if Europe can build its way out of this crisis faster than it can process a standard building permit under the old system.

  • European Parliament Demands Action on Deadly Cyberbullying After Woman’s Tragic Loss

    European Parliament Demands Action on Deadly Cyberbullying After Woman’s Tragic Loss

    European Parliament Gets Real About Online Cruelty

    The European Parliament marked International Women’s Day with a sobering reminder that the internet isn’t just cat videos and memes—it’s also a battlefield where cyberbullying can have devastating consequences.

    Jackie Fox took the floor Tuesday to share her heartbreaking story. Her daughter, a healthy young woman, became the target of relentless physical and online abuse that ultimately led to her taking her own life. Because apparently, some people think hiding behind a screen gives them a license to be terrible humans.

    Here’s the kicker: Fox discovered there were no laws protecting adults or children from this digital torture chamber. So she did what any grieving mother turned warrior would do—she campaigned for “Coco’s law” in Ireland, legislation specifically targeting cyberbullying. Now she’s asking the EU to make it everyone’s law, because cruelty shouldn’t have borders.

    Parliament President Roberta Metsola wasn’t mincing words: “The courage of women who refuse to stay silent continues to shape our societies.” Translation: We’re done with the nonsense.

    MEPs jumped into the debate, emphasizing that online harassment isn’t “free speech”—it’s violence wearing a digital mask. They stressed that women deserve safety both online and offline (revolutionary concept, right?) and called out the reactionary forces trying to roll back women’s rights.

    The message was crystal clear: Bullying and hatred need to stop, whether they’re happening in a schoolyard or a comment section. Because at the end of the day, words on a screen can hurt just as much as sticks and stones—sometimes even more.