Europe’s Busiest Week: Where Everyone’s Talking But Nobody’s Actually There
If you thought your work calendar looked intimidating, spare a thought for the European Parliament’s week of April 13-17, 2026. It’s a masterclass in bureaucratic choreography that would make a Broadway producer weep.
Monday: The Great Exodus
While Brussels sits mostly empty with a resounding chorus of “no events for this day,” President Metsola jets off to Madrid to tell Spain to “Wake Up!” at an economic forum. One can only assume Spain hit the snooze button one too many times.
Tuesday: Committee Mania Strikes
Tuesday explodes with activity like someone finally remembered they had a job. The highlights? A hearing on caste discrimination, debates about cybercrime, and—because Europe loves its acronyms—votes on the MFF, LIBE, and REGI committees. Translation for normal humans: lots of people in suits discussing very important things in rooms with numbers instead of names.
The real winner? The Committee on Development, which somehow managed to pack four major discussions into one day, including exchanges with “VOICE” and the WHO. Ambitious doesn’t begin to cover it.
Wednesday: Peak Chaos
This is when things get spicy. President Metsola meets with everyone from the UN World Food Programme’s Cindy McCain to the Gulf Cooperation Council’s Secretary General. Meanwhile, committees tackle everything from artificial intelligence to sea turtles (yes, really—France wants to join a sea turtle protection convention).
The ENVI committee gets particularly frisky, voting on chemical regulations while simultaneously worrying about fossil fuels in Colombia. Multitasking at its finest.
Thursday: The Videogame Rebellion
In a delightful plot twist, multiple committees gather to discuss the citizens’ initiative “Stop destroying videogames.” Finally, something the kids can relate to. President Metsola, meanwhile, escapes to Finland faster than you can say “parliamentary recess.”
Friday: Finnish Him
Metsola wraps up her Finnish tour meeting with basically everyone who’s anyone in Helsinki, from the President to the Prime Minister to the Speaker of Parliament. Back in Brussels? Tumbleweeds.
The Weekend: Blessed Silence
Saturday and Sunday deliver what we all suspected: “No event for this day.” Even European bureaucrats need a break.
The real question is whether anyone actually knows what happened in all those meetings, or if they’re just really committed to looking busy. Either way, it’s democracy in action—verbose, complicated, and occasionally concerned about videogames.









