European Parliament Goes Full Globetrotter Mode
While most of us struggle to coordinate a single work trip, European Parliament members are about to embark on what can only be described as the world’s most ambitious group vacation—er, diplomatic mission—spanning three continents in a single week.
From March 30 to April 2, MEPs are scattering across the globe like confetti at a wedding, with delegations heading to India, Argentina, Egypt, Poland, Lithuania, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Malta, China, South Korea, Japan, and Germany. That’s right—someone in Brussels clearly discovered bulk airline discounts.
The Highlights Reel
In what might be the most significant detail, the delegation to China marks the first parliamentary visit there in eight years. MEPs will be having some stern conversations about those suspiciously cheap parcels flooding European mailboxes and digital regulation breaches. Nothing says “we mean business” like an eight-year gap between visits.
Meanwhile, other MEPs are tackling equally pressing issues: youth unemployment in Greece, housing crises in Portugal, human rights in Egypt, and—in what sounds like the plot of a feel-good documentary—visiting firefighters and informal settlements in Italy.
Three brave Legal Affairs Committee members drew the short straw and must “suffer” through visits to Stuttgart and Heidelberg to discuss AI with corporate innovators. Thoughts and prayers for their hardship.
The Irony
Back in Brussels? Crickets. The official agenda shows “No event for this day” for plenary sessions, press conferences, and pretty much everything else. Even Parliament President Metsola escaped to Gozo, Malta, presumably for some well-earned Mediterranean sunshine between meetings.
The weekend? Completely clear. Because even globe-trotting politicians need their rest.









