European Parliament Gets Real About Terror, Tyranny, and Trade (While Shuffling the Schedule)
The European Parliament kicked off its March 25-26 plenary session in Brussels with President Roberta Metsola doing what politicians do best: addressing approximately seventeen serious topics before anyone had their second coffee.
First up? A moment of silence for terrorism victims. Because nothing says “we’re committed to combating extremism” quite like a well-timed pause. Metsola specifically remembered Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old murdered in France, while carefully noting his family’s request that his death not become political football. (Spoiler: It probably will anyway.)
Then came the rapid-fire solidarity tour: Belarus got a shout-out for its “International Day of Solidarity” on March 25, with Parliament backing Belarusians fighting dictatorship. Iran’s regime received a proper scolding for oppressing its people and attacking Gulf State civilians. And former French PM Lionel Jospin, who recently passed away, got a respectful nod for his pro-Europe stance.
Metsola also condemned recent antisemitic attacks, reminding everyone that Jewish communities are “essential to European society” – a statement that really shouldn’t need repeating in 2026, but here we are.
The session marked the 10th anniversary of the 2016 Brussels terror attacks, where 32 people died. “Humanity prevails in the face of terror,” Metsola declared, leading MEPs in another moment of silence. At this rate, they’ll need to schedule dedicated silence time.
Schedule Chaos Ensues
Wednesday’s agenda got reshuffled faster than a deck of cards. Energy security jumped to first place, followed by European Council conclusions. An oral question about wastewater treatment (riveting stuff) got bumped from Thursday. Oh, and they squeezed in a debate about Iran’s death penalty threats because the schedule wasn’t packed enough.
The sitting will now run until 11 PM. Someone order pizza.
Thursday’s lineup includes a joint debate on the EU-US trade deal and several immunity waiver requests, because apparently some MEPs have been naughty.
Speaking of which, Poland wants Grzegorz Braun’s parliamentary immunity waived. The Legal Affairs Committee will handle that mess.
The Takeaway
The European Parliament is tackling everything from international terrorism to wastewater regulations, proving once again that democracy is messy, scheduling is optional, and moments of silence are becoming a regular agenda item. Democracy: it’s complicated, it runs late, and someone’s always requesting an immunity waiver.









