News

  • 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.

  • EU Parliament’s Chaotic Week: From AI Nudifiers to Designer Tomatoes

    EU Parliament’s Chaotic Week: From AI Nudifiers to Designer Tomatoes

    EU Parliament’s Upcoming Week: Where AI Meets Avocados (Sort Of)

    Mark your calendars for Friday, June 12—wait, make that April? The EU Parliament seems to have invented a new month, but let’s not dwell on temporal anomalies when there’s serious business ahead.

    The European Parliament is gearing up for what might be the most eclectic week since someone decided to put pineapple on pizza. Starting with their press briefing at 11:00 AM in the Anna Politkovskaya press room, MEPs are tackling everything from trade deals to “nudifiers” (yes, that’s apparently a thing we need to ban now).

    The Greatest Hits:

    First up, they’re voting on an EU-US trade deal and updated migrant return rules—because nothing says “productive week” like international commerce and immigration policy before lunch.

    But here’s where it gets interesting: Parliament will debate new genomic techniques for plants (designer tomatoes, anyone?) while simultaneously voting to simplify the AI Act, which includes banning AI-powered apps that digitally remove people’s clothes. One minute you’re discussing Brussels sprouts, the next you’re legislating against creepy deepfakes.

    Social media’s impact on children’s mental health is also on the agenda, sandwiched between discussions on EU-China relations and the Middle East situation with Kaja Kallas. It’s like a geopolitical buffet with a side of parental concern.

    The Formal Stuff:

    Two formal sittings will honor Sakharov Prize laureate Andrzej Poczobut and Montenegro’s President Jakov Milatović, providing brief moments of ceremony amid the legislative chaos.

    Journalists can tune in via webstreaming or the fancy Interactio platform—just remember to connect 30 minutes early if you’ve never used it, because nothing screams “cutting-edge democracy” like tech support during a press conference.

  • MEPs Head to New York to Push Disability Rights at UN Conference

    MEPs Head to New York to Push Disability Rights at UN Conference

    MEPs Take Manhattan (and Talk Disability Rights)

    A squad of European Parliament members jetted off to New York this week for what might be the most acronym-heavy conference of the year: the 19th Conference of States Parties (COSP19) to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD). Try saying that three times fast.

    Led by Li Andersson from Finland’s The Left party, the delegation spent June 9-11 doing what politicians do best—attending meetings, hosting side events, and making sure everyone knows they were there. The gang included MEPs from various committees with equally impressive acronyms: EMPL, LIBE, and PETI. (We promise these are real.)

    The main event? Celebrating the UN CRPD’s 20th birthday. Nothing says “happy birthday” quite like bilateral meetings and panel discussions about strengthening care systems and political participation for persons with disabilities.

    In a particularly ambitious move, the European Parliament teamed up with UNICEF, the International Labour Organisation, and the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights to chat about getting the private sector on board with inclusive care. Because if there’s one thing corporations love, it’s being voluntold to do the right thing.

    Andersson wrapped things up with a diplomatic reality check: “There is still a lot of work to be done to translate the core principles of the convention into practical action.” Translation: Twenty years in, and we’re still figuring this out, folks.

    The delegation also reminded everyone that the EU needs to put its money where its multilateral mouth is—particularly when it comes to actually funding disability rights initiatives. Radical concept, we know.

  • EU Cuts Red Tape, Unleashes €800 Billion Defense Spending Spree

    EU Cuts Red Tape, Unleashes €800 Billion Defense Spending Spree

    EU Hits Fast-Forward on Defense Spending (Finally)

    In a move that screams “we probably should have done this earlier,” EU negotiators just agreed to make it dramatically easier to spend money on defense. The new “Omnibus V” package—which sounds like a sci-fi movie but is actually just bureaucracy getting a turbo boost—aims to cut through the red tape that’s been strangling Europe’s defense industry.

    The headline? Up to €800 billion in defense investment over the next four years. That’s a lot of tanks, folks.

    Speed Dating, But for Building Weapons Factories

    Here’s the kicker: EU countries will now have just 42 working days to approve permits for defense projects. Building a new factory? Expanding an existing one? You’ll get an answer in roughly two months instead of… well, let’s just say “eventually.”

    Sure, there’s a catch—authorities can extend the deadline twice in “exceptional circumstances,” potentially stretching it to 102 working days. But here’s the fun part: if they ghost you past the deadline, your permit is automatically approved. It’s the bureaucratic equivalent of “if the teacher doesn’t show up in 15 minutes, we’re legally allowed to leave.”

    Shopping Across Borders Just Got Easier

    The deal also introduces a shiny new general transfer license, making it simpler for defense companies to move equipment between EU countries. Think of it as Amazon Prime, but for military hardware.

    Procurement rules got an upgrade too: framework agreements can now last ten years instead of seven, and spending thresholds have been raised. Translation: less paperwork, more actual work.

    Show Me the Money

    The European Defence Fund is getting streamlined, with special attention to small and medium-sized enterprises. Because apparently, not every defense contractor is a multinational behemoth—who knew?

    Projects showing “the highest standards of excellence, quality and efficiency” get priority funding. So basically, you need to be really good at what you do. Revolutionary concept.

    The Fine Print

    Before anyone gets too excited, both Parliament and Council still need to formally approve these deals. But given the urgency of Europe’s security situation and the fact that everyone seems to agree this is necessary, expect these measures to become law faster than the old permit process would have allowed.

    The message is clear: Europe is finally ready to invest seriously in its own defense. It only took a dramatically changed security landscape to make it happen.

  • EU Holds Two-Part Press Conference to Explain Migration Pact (Because One Hour Wasn’t Enough)

    EU Holds Two-Part Press Conference to Explain Migration Pact (Because One Hour Wasn’t Enough)

    EU Migration Pact Gets Its Own Press Conference (Yes, Really)

    Mark your calendars for June 10, 2026, when eight MEPs will gather to explain the EU’s shiny new Migration and Asylum Pact to anyone brave enough to ask questions. Think of it as a two-part extravaganza—because one hour of migration policy just isn’t enough.

    The morning kicks off at 9:15 CEST with Tomas Tobé from Sweden, Birgit Sippel from Germany, Jorge Buxadé Villalba from Spain, and Fabienne Keller from France (who couldn’t be bothered to show up in person and will Zoom in instead). They’ll be followed at 9:45 by another quartet: Germany’s Lena Düpont, Spain’s Juan Fernando López Aguilar, Italy’s Alessandro Ciriani, and Slovenia’s Matjaž Nemec.

    The venue? The Anna Politkovskaya room at the European Parliament in Brussels—because nothing says “we care about migration” like naming rooms after murdered journalists. Can’t make it? No worries. The whole thing will be webstreamed, and journalists can lob questions via the Interactio platform from the comfort of their home offices.

    For those keeping score, the Migration and Asylum Pact was adopted back in 2024 and covers everything from screening procedures to crisis management. Parliament even added some bonus regulations in February 2026 about safe third countries, because apparently the original pact wasn’t comprehensive enough.

    A special Working Group has been monitoring implementation since January 2025, which means someone’s actually reading the fine print. Interpretation will be available in five languages—six if you stick around for Part 2 and speak Slovenian.

    So grab your headphones, fire up that microphone, and prepare for sixty minutes of asylum procedure talk. Democracy in action, folks.

  • European Parliament’s June 2026: Presidential Marathons, Committee Deep-Dives, and Blessedly Empty Weekends

    European Parliament’s June 2026: Presidential Marathons, Committee Deep-Dives, and Blessedly Empty Weekends

    European Parliament’s Week: Where Presidents Meet, Committees Debate, and Weekends Remain Blissfully Empty

    The European Parliament is gearing up for a packed week in June 2026, and by “packed,” we mean President Metsola’s calendar is doing Olympic-level gymnastics while everyone else takes a breather.

    Monday kicks off with back-to-back presidential meet-and-greets that would make any diplomat’s head spin. Kenya’s President William Samoei Ruto drops by at 2 PM, followed swiftly by US Chamber of Commerce CEO Suzanne Clark at 3 PM. Speed networking, EU-style.

    Meanwhile, the real action happens in committee rooms where lawmakers tackle the sexy topics of drug precursors and Islamic extremism’s impact on European life. Nothing says Monday afternoon quite like debating how to monitor chemicals while pondering existential threats to democracy.

    Tuesday sees President Metsola jetting off to London (all times local, naturally) to commemorate Soviet deportation victims before pivoting to schmooze at the Wall Street Journal CEO Summit. Talk about emotional whiplash. Back in Brussels, someone’s holding a press conference about “the Ulm 5” and the criminalization of protest—because every week needs a catchy court case.

    Wednesday brings NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte to the Conference of Presidents, while the Budget Committee gets the thrilling honor of hearing about Draft Budget 2027. Spoiler alert: they’ll need more money.

    Thursday and Friday? President Metsola escapes to Bratislava, meeting everyone from the Slovak Prime Minister to students to—wait for it—Volkswagen Slovakia. Because nothing says diplomatic mission like a factory tour.

    The weekend? Absolutely nothing. Even European bureaucracy needs its beauty sleep.

  • EU Parliament Acts on Workplace Safety with Memorial Day and AI Oversight Push

    EU Parliament Acts on Workplace Safety with Memorial Day and AI Oversight Push

    EU Parliament Says “Enough Already” to Workplace Disasters, Proposes Memorial Day and AI Safety Checks

    The European Parliament has decided it’s high time to get serious about workplace safety, and they’re not just sending a strongly worded email about it. On Thursday, MEPs voted overwhelmingly (395 to 12, with 41 people apparently checking their phones) to adopt new proposals aimed at reducing work-related accidents, diseases, and deaths across the EU.

    The centerpiece? A new European Day of Remembrance on August 8th, commemorating the 262 miners who perished in the 1956 Bois Du Cazier mine tragedy in Belgium. Because if there’s one thing Europe does well, it’s remembering important dates—and this one comes with actual action plans for schools and workplaces.

    But here’s where it gets interesting: Parliament isn’t just worried about traditional hazards like falling objects and faulty machinery. They’re also eyeing your AI boss with suspicion. MEPs want the Commission to investigate how algorithmic management systems might be turning workers into stressed-out robots, noting that AI-directed tasks and performance monitoring can create “intensified work rhythms” and “abusive monitoring.” Translation: Your algorithm overlord might be working you to death, and Parliament has noticed.

    Climate change also made the list of workplace villains. With heat stress and extreme weather becoming the new normal, MEPs are demanding better protections for workers sweating through increasingly brutal conditions. Apparently, “just tough it out” is no longer an acceptable heat safety policy.

    To enforce all this, Parliament wants beefed-up labor inspectorates with actual staff and resources—revolutionary concepts, really.

    The stakes are sobering: In 2023 alone, 3,298 workers died on the job in the EU, with 2.8 million more injured seriously enough to miss at least four days of work. Rapporteur Chiara Gemma summed it up perfectly: “Memory must lead to responsibility.” And maybe fewer robots calling the shots.

  • Europe’s Parliament: Where 27 Nations Argue in 24 Languages

    Europe’s Parliament: Where 27 Nations Argue in 24 Languages

    Europe’s Got Talent (for Talking)

    So apparently, the European Parliament has a thing called “This is Europe debates” where they regularly gather European leaders to discuss the EU’s current state and future. Think of it as a continental book club, except instead of discussing the latest bestseller, they’re hashing out energy policy, defense strategies, and whether Malta gets a say in things.

    The page itself is a linguistic marvel – available in 24 languages, because nothing says “unity in diversity” quite like being able to argue in Bulgarian, Gaeilge, or Malti. It’s democracy’s version of a Choose Your Own Adventure book, except all paths lead to Brussels.

    These debates cover the hard-hitting topics you’d expect: Energy (keeping the lights on), EU Budget (who’s paying for dinner), Ukraine (obviously), Defence (because someone has to), and Consumer Protection (making sure your toaster doesn’t explode). There’s even an “All topics” option for the truly ambitious souls who want to dive into the full bureaucratic buffet.

    The Parliament helpfully provides a “Legislative Observatory” tool, which sounds like a telescope for watching laws being born – probably less exciting than stargazing, but infinitely more paperwork-intensive.

    And because it’s 2024, they’re everywhere on social media: Facebook, X, LinkedIn, Instagram, even Pinterest and Reddit. Yes, the European Parliament has a Pinterest. Democracy has never been so aesthetically pleasing.

    The debates themselves? They’re basically Europe’s way of having “the talk” with itself – regularly scheduled, slightly awkward, but ultimately necessary for keeping this 27-nation relationship healthy.