News

  • EU Air Passenger Rights Finally Get First Upgrade in Nearly Two Decades

    EU Air Passenger Rights Finally Get First Upgrade in Nearly Two Decades

    EU Air Passenger Rights Get a Major Upgrade (Finally!)

    After gathering dust since 2004, Europe’s air passenger rights rules just got their first makeover—and travelers are about to feel a whole lot less helpless when their flight goes sideways.

    MEPs sealed the deal Monday evening, and it’s packed with wins for anyone who’s ever been stranded in an airport eating overpriced sandwiches while their airline shrugs apologetically.

    The Good Stuff You’re Getting

    First up: that sweet compensation for three-hour delays isn’t going anywhere. Airlines tried to wiggle out of it, but Parliament held firm. Depending on how far you’re flying, you could pocket €250 to €600 when things go wrong—unless Mother Nature or a rogue passenger caused the chaos.

    Speaking of chaos, airlines now have just 30 days to pay up or explain why they won’t. And they have to tell you how to claim your money within four days. No more mysterious compensation black holes.

    Parents and Families, Rejoice

    Here’s a game-changer: airlines can’t charge you extra to sit next to your kid under 14. Same goes for passengers with disabilities and pregnant travelers. Because apparently, we needed a law to establish that separating families mid-flight is bad business.

    No More Nickel-and-Diming

    Remember when airlines started charging for everything short of oxygen? The new rules put the brakes on some of that nonsense. You can now bring one personal item aboard for free, fix typos in your name without paying a ransom, and print your boarding pass without getting dinged. Revolutionary stuff, really.

    Price transparency also gets a boost—no more surprise fees appearing at checkout like unwanted party guests.

    When Things Go Wrong

    If your flight gets cancelled or delayed, airlines must provide refreshments every two hours, a meal after three hours, and up to three nights of accommodation if you’re really stuck. It’s the least they can do when you’re sleeping on airport benches.

    The rules are heading to a July vote in Parliament. If approved, European air travel might finally enter the 21st century—only 26 years late.

  • European Parliament Overhauls Rules to Give MEPs Predictable Schedules and More Speaking Time

    European Parliament Overhauls Rules to Give MEPs Predictable Schedules and More Speaking Time

    The European Parliament is shaking things up, and no, we’re not talking about another coffee machine malfunction in the cafeteria.

    President Roberta Metsola kicked off the June session by announcing a series of “innovative measures” designed to make parliamentary proceedings less of a marathon and more of a well-organized sprint. Translation? MEPs might actually know when they can grab dinner.

    The experimental changes include radical concepts like having actual start and end times for debates—revolutionary stuff, really. Monday sessions will wrap up at 20:30, while Tuesday and Wednesday will mercifully conclude at 19:00. Thursday gets the early bird special at 16:00, presumably so everyone can catch their flights home without the usual airport sprint.

    In a move that might actually spice things up, there will be more “blue-card” opportunities, allowing MEPs to spontaneously challenge each other during debates. Think of it as parliamentary improv, but with higher stakes and better suits. Members can also now immediately rebut personal attacks, because apparently waiting your turn was so last session.

    The Commission gets more speaking time to respond to members’ concerns, and there’s a new scrutiny session scheduled for Tuesday afternoons. A final agenda with precise timings will drop every Friday before sessions—imagine that, knowing your schedule in advance.

    Meanwhile, the agenda got some updates reflecting current events, including discussions on digital sovereignty (with a fresh AI twist) and Middle East peace efforts following the US-Iran deal.

    On the administrative front, three MEPs are facing immunity waiver requests from Poland, Spain, and Italy, though Poland has already backed off one request. Two MEPs are heading out, two are coming in from Hungary, and everyone’s trying to figure out if these new rules will actually stick or become just another well-intentioned experiment gathering dust in the parliamentary archives.

  • Freed Belarusian Journalist Finally Claims Sakharov Prize, Addresses European Parliament

    Freed Belarusian Journalist Finally Claims Sakharov Prize, Addresses European Parliament

    Journalist Walks Free, Gets Prize, Addresses Parliament—In That Order

    In a heartwarming tale of “better late than never,” Belarusian journalist Andrzej Poczobut is finally getting to enjoy his 2025 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought—you know, after spending years in a penal colony for the minor offense of criticizing a dictator.

    Poczobut, who made a career out of the apparently radical act of writing about history and human rights, found himself on the wrong side of the Lukashenka regime. Shocking, we know. After multiple arrests (because once just wasn’t enough), he was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2021. There, he enjoyed the five-star accommodations of solitary confinement and the luxury of deteriorating health without proper medical care.

    But here’s where the story gets a plot twist: In April 2026, Belarus and Poland decided to play “let’s make a deal,” and Poczobut was released in a prisoner exchange. Suddenly, that Sakharov Prize awarded back in December 2025 became something he could actually show up to collect.

    Now, the European Parliament is rolling out the red carpet. Tonight, MEPs from the Foreign Affairs, Development, and Human Rights committees are gathering in Strasbourg’s DE MADARIAGA room (fancy!) for an exchange of views with the man himself. Wednesday brings even more pomp: a formal address to the full Parliament at noon, preceded by a press point with EP President Roberta Metsola.

    Poczobut shares his 2025 Sakharov Prize with Georgian journalist Mzia Amaglobeli, who remains imprisoned—a sobering reminder that not all these stories have happy endings yet.

    The whole affair will be webstreamed, because nothing says “freedom of thought” quite like making sure everyone can watch democracy in action from their couch.

  • EU Parliament’s Monday Night Mayhem: Air Rights, Lobster Tariffs, and AI Bans

    EU Parliament’s Monday Night Mayhem: Air Rights, Lobster Tariffs, and AI Bans

    Brussels Gets Busy: Your Speed-Round Guide to This Week’s Parliamentary Circus

    If you thought your Monday was packed, spare a thought for the European Parliament, which is cramming more action into one evening than most people fit into a week.

    Kicking things off at 16:30, the Parliament’s press team will host a last-minute briefing—because apparently “last-minute” is now an official scheduling category in EU politics. Nothing says “we’ve got this under control” quite like a hastily arranged press conference.

    The real headliner? Air passenger rights are getting a makeover. MEPs will huddle in the ominously named “Conciliation Committee” to decide if they like the new rules enough to give them a thumbs up. For anyone who’s ever been stranded in an airport eating overpriced sandwiches, this one’s for you.

    Meanwhile, EU-US trade talks are heating up around 18:15, featuring preferential treatment for American goods and—wait for it—a special zero-tariff deal for lobster. Yes, lobster has its own legislative file. Democracy is beautiful.

    But the evening’s pièce de résistance comes at 19:15 with the AI Act debate, which includes a ban on “nudifier” apps (exactly what it sounds like, unfortunately) and systems creating child abuse material. Finally, legislators tackling the internet’s darker corners with actual consequences.

    Also on the docket: Belarussian journalist and Sakharov Prize winner Andrzej Poczobut will chat with MEPs, committees will vote on migrant return policies and genomic crop techniques, and everyone will probably need a very strong coffee.

    Democracy: it’s not pretty, but someone’s got to do it—preferably before dinner.

  • Brussels Braces for Showdown Over Passenger Flight Compensation Rights

    Brussels Braces for Showdown Over Passenger Flight Compensation Rights

    Brussels Gets Ready to Rumble Over Your Right to Complain About Delayed Flights

    Mark your calendars, aviation enthusiasts and frequent flyers stuck on tarmacs everywhere: June 15, 2026 is shaping up to be the Super Bowl of passenger rights drama. That’s when European Parliament President Roberta Metsola and a star-studded lineup of EU bigwigs will gather in Strasbourg’s Daphne Caruana Galizia press room to potentially announce whether you’ll still be able to shake your fist at airlines when they ruin your vacation plans.

    The cast includes Cyprus’s Transport Minister Alexis Vafeades, EU Commissioner Apostolos Tzitzikostas (try saying that three times fast), and MEPs Andrey Novakov and Virginijus Sinkevičius. They’ll be speaking in six languages because apparently arguing about flight delays requires multilingual precision.

    Here’s the tea: Back in January, Parliament tried to keep your right to get money back or rebooked when flights are delayed over three hours, cancelled, or overbooked. Seems reasonable, right? Well, EU ministers said “nah” in March, triggering eight weeks of what can only be described as bureaucratic cage fighting in the Conciliation Committee.

    The presser kicks off at 7:45 PM CET and will be livestreamed for those who can’t make it to France. Journalists can even ask questions remotely via the Interactio platform—because nothing says “cutting-edge democracy” like Zoom-bombing a press conference about airline accountability.

    Will passengers keep their compensation rights, or will airlines get a free pass to strand you in Frankfurt? Tune in to find out.

  • EU Parliament Attempts Second Fix for Overly Complex AI Act

    EU Parliament Attempts Second Fix for Overly Complex AI Act

    EU Parliament to Tackle AI Red Tape (Again)

    Remember that groundbreaking AI Act from 2024? The one that was supposed to regulate artificial intelligence and keep us all safe from robot overlords? Well, turns out it might have been a tad complicated. Who knew?

    The European Parliament is now voting on what they’re calling the “digital omnibus” – which sounds like a very crowded bus full of laptops – to simplify the whole thing. Because apparently, even lawmakers need a simplified version of the laws they wrote.

    On Wednesday, June 17th at 10:00 AM, two MEPs will face the press to explain how they’re making the AI Act less of a headache. Leading the charge are Arba Kokalari from Sweden and Michael McNamara from Ireland, who’ve been tasked with untangling the bureaucratic knots.

    The press conference will happen in Strasbourg at the Daphne Caruana Galizia press room (yes, that’s the actual name), and journalists can either show up in person or join remotely. It’ll be livestreamed for those who prefer watching regulatory simplification from the comfort of their own homes.

    The event will feature interpretation in six languages, because nothing says “simplification” quite like needing multiple translators to explain it.

    The final vote is scheduled for Tuesday, after which the MEPs will presumably explain whether they’ve successfully made AI regulation less complicated, or just added another layer of complexity while calling it “simplification.”

    Stay tuned to find out if Europe’s AI rules just got easier to understand, or if we’ll need another omnibus in 2028.

  • EU Parliament Briefs Press on New Migrant Returns Rules

    EU Parliament Briefs Press on New Migrant Returns Rules

    EU Gets Ready to Talk Returns: Press Conference Edition

    Mark your calendars, folks—or don’t, because this already happened 15 minutes ago according to the timestamp. The European Parliament is hosting what promises to be a riveting press conference about migrant returns, and they’ve rolled out the red carpet. Well, more like the beige carpet of bureaucracy, but still.

    The Main Event

    Dutch MEP Malik Azmani from the Renew group will be taking the mic on Wednesday, June 17, 2026 (yes, you read that right—someone’s calendar is having an existential crisis) at 13:30 CEST. He’ll be chatting about fresh EU rules on returning third-country nationals who’ve overstayed their welcome, legally speaking.

    The venue? The Daphne Caruana Galizia press conference room, because nothing says “serious policy discussion” like a room with a name longer than most press releases.

    How to Tune In

    Can’t make it to Strasbourg? No worries! The EU has embraced the digital age with the enthusiasm of a government agency that just discovered Zoom. Journalists can join remotely via the Interactio platform—just remember to use headphones and a microphone for “better sound quality.” Revolutionary stuff.

    The whole shindig will be webstreamed and available in six languages, because if you’re going to discuss returns policy, you might as well do it multilingually.

    The Backstory

    This press conference follows a vote on new EU returns regulations—a provisional agreement that the Civil Liberties Committee was scheduled to approve on Monday, June 15, 2026. It’s all part of the EU’s ongoing quest to standardize how member states handle migration returns, which is about as straightforward as assembling IKEA furniture while reading instructions in six languages simultaneously.

    For those keeping score at home, this is serious policy work dressed up in the usual Brussels fanfare of press conferences, procedure files, and enough acronyms to make your head spin.

  • EU and US Eliminate Most Atlantic Tariffs in Historic Trade Deal

    EU and US Eliminate Most Atlantic Tariffs in Historic Trade Deal

    EU and US Kiss Tariffs Goodbye (Mostly)

    In what might be the most amicable breakup since your favorite sitcom couple, European lawmakers are set to wave goodbye to most tariffs on goods crossing the Atlantic. On Tuesday, MEPs will rubber-stamp two pieces of legislation that essentially tell customs duties to take a hike—at least when it comes to most industrial and agricultural products from the United States.

    This cozy arrangement stems from an August 2025 joint statement where the EU and US apparently decided that charging each other extra for stuff was so last decade. Parliament and Council negotiators have already shaken hands on the deal, though they did manage to beef up the Commission’s original proposal with “several elements” (bureaucrat-speak for “we added some things”).

    To celebrate this tariff-slashing extravaganza, Bernd Lange—the International Trade Committee Chair who’s basically the EU’s point person for all things American trade—will host a press conference on Tuesday at 14:00 CET in Strasbourg. Think of it as a victory lap, but with more PowerPoint presentations.

    The festivities don’t stop there. Following the presser, there’s a media seminar diving into the thrilling world of EU trade agreements, covering everything from protecting Europe’s economy to the Mercosur deal. It’s like a trade policy buffet, and everyone’s invited.

    For journalists who can’t make it in person, there’s remote access via Interactio—though you’ll need the right browser and device combo, because apparently even digital attendance has a dress code. The event will be streamed live with interpretation in English, French, German, and Spanish, ensuring everyone can understand exactly how these tariffs are getting the boot.

  • EU Budget Showdown: MEPs Set to Challenge Ministers Over 2028-2034 Spending Plan

    EU Budget Showdown: MEPs Set to Challenge Ministers Over 2028-2034 Spending Plan

    EU Budget Talks: MEPs Ready to React (and Maybe Rant)

    Mark your calendars, budget nerds! Tuesday at 3:30 PM CET is about to get spicy in Strasbourg. Two MEPs are holding a press conference, and they’ve got opinions about the EU’s long-term budget negotiations. Spoiler alert: they’re probably not thrilled.

    The Dynamic Duo

    Leading the charge are Siegfried Mureşan from Romania and Carla Tavares from Portugal—Parliament’s tag-team champions for the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF). That’s EU-speak for “how we’re spending everyone’s money from 2028 to 2034.” No pressure.

    What’s Got Their Goat?

    The Cyprus presidency just dropped their draft negotiating position on June 11th, and EU ministers are huddling up on Tuesday to discuss it. Think of it as the Council saying, “Here’s what we think should happen with all those billions,” and Parliament’s co-rapporteurs preparing to say, “Well, actually…”

    How to Watch the Fireworks

    You can catch the action live from the Daphne Caruana Galizia press conference room (yes, that’s the actual name—the EU loves its lengthy titles). Can’t make it to France? No worries! There’s webstreaming, because it’s 2026 and we’re fancy like that.

    Journalists can even ask questions remotely via something called “Interactio,” which sounds like a rejected social media platform but is actually a pretty neat tool. Just remember: it only works on specific browsers, so leave your Netscape Navigator at home.

    The Tech Specs

    Five languages will be available—English, French, German, Romanian, and Portuguese—because nothing says “unified Europe” like needing five simultaneous translations. First-time Interactio users should log in 30 minutes early, presumably to figure out which button does what and to test whether their microphone makes them sound like a robot.

    Why Should You Care?

    This isn’t just bureaucratic theater (okay, it’s partly that). The MFF determines how the EU tackles major challenges and responds to citizens’ expectations. Translation: this is where they decide whether your favorite EU program gets funded or gets the axe.

    Parliament already laid out its position back in April, so Tuesday’s presser is essentially the “here’s what we think about what they think about what we think” phase of negotiations. Democracy: it’s complicated.

    The Bottom Line

    If you’re into high-stakes budget negotiations, multilingual press conferences, and watching politicians diplomatically express frustration, Tuesday afternoon is your Super Bowl. Just don’t forget your headphones—and maybe some coffee. Budget talks aren’t exactly known for their brevity.

  • EU Parliament’s Busiest Week: AI, Tariffs, and a Whole Lot of Talking

    EU Parliament’s Busiest Week: AI, Tariffs, and a Whole Lot of Talking

    EU Parliament’s Busiest Week: AI, Tariffs, and a Whole Lot of Talking

    Buckle up, Europe! The European Parliament is gearing up for what might be the most action-packed week since someone accidentally scheduled three committee meetings in the same room.

    Monday kicks off with the riveting “resumption of session and order of business” at 5 PM – because nothing says excitement like parliamentary procedure. The real star? A debate on simplifying AI rules, which ironically sounds complicated enough to need its own simplification. One can only hope the AI they’re regulating could help them schedule these meetings more efficiently.

    Tuesday transforms into diplomatic speed-dating central. President Metsola will receive Egypt’s Foreign Minister at 10:15, a US Congressional delegation at 4:15, and somehow squeeze in presiding over the plenary session at 5 PM. Meanwhile, Montenegro’s President Jakov Milatović gets the VIP treatment with a formal address at noon – presumably after checking whether Montenegro is, in fact, a mountain.

    The day’s voting marathon includes everything from US tariff adjustments (awkward) to vehicle recycling rules (your car’s retirement plan) and the delightfully named “European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers” – because even bureaucracy needs a lengthy title.

    Wednesday brings the main event: prep for the European Council meeting, followed by the 2025 Sakharov Prize ceremony for Andrzej Poczobut. Sandwiched between? Votes on tobacco taxes, timber trade with Liberia, and – wait for it – genetically modified plants. Because why tackle one controversial topic when you can juggle twelve?

    Press conferences are scheduled with military precision, including one about “new genomic techniques” that sounds like either cutting-edge science or a very expensive spa treatment.

    Thursday sees the voting bonanza continue with debates on Cuba’s political repression, organized crime recruiting children, and urban wastewater treatment – a combination that proves the EU can pivot from human rights to sewage with impressive agility.

    Friday? President Metsola jets off to Munich for a “Townhall Discussion with students,” presumably to explain what exactly happened during the week. Meanwhile, a tax subcommittee heads to Paris, because someone has to check on the OECD, and it might as well involve French pastries.

    The weekend? Gloriously empty. Even EU parliamentarians need a break from saving Europe, one lengthy debate title at a time.