News

  • European Parliament’s Quietest Week Ever: President Metsola Does All the Heavy Lifting

    European Parliament’s Quietest Week Ever: President Metsola Does All the Heavy Lifting

    European Parliament’s Quietest Week Ever? President Metsola Does All the Heavy Lifting

    If you were hoping for dramatic debates or legislative fireworks from the European Parliament the week of May 11-17, 2026, you’re in for a disappointment. In what might be the political equivalent of a ghost town, the Parliament has essentially cleared its schedule—except for one very busy person: President Metsola.

    The weekly agenda reveals a stunning lack of plenary sessions, committee meetings, delegations, public hearings, and formal sittings. That’s right: zero, zilch, nada across all categories. It’s as if someone hit the “out of office” button for the entire institution.

    But fear not! President Metsola is single-handedly keeping the lights on. On Tuesday, she’ll address a Copenhagen summit about keeping children safe in the AI era (via video, naturally—why travel when you can Zoom?), meet with some bishops, and commemorate a Spanish senator’s 25th death anniversary. Wednesday brings a Conference of Presidents meeting, a chat with Commission Executive Vice-President Mînzatu, and another video address. Thursday? Just a quick virtual appearance at a sustainability forum.

    The only other sign of life is a press conference about a “European Single Ticket” initiative (one continent, one ticket—revolutionary!) and the standard pre-session briefing on Wednesday.

    So what’s everyone else doing? Taking an early summer holiday? Binge-watching EU regulation documentaries? Your guess is as good as ours. At least President Metsola’s calendar is full enough for three people.

  • Europe Day 2025: 76 Years of Unity, Plus Free Snacks at Every EU Building

    Europe Day 2025: 76 Years of Unity, Plus Free Snacks at Every EU Building

    Europe Day 2025: 76 Years of Unity, Plus Free Snacks at Every EU Building

    Mark your calendars, folks—May 9th is Europe Day, and this year’s bash is celebrating 76 years since the Schuman Declaration basically invented the “let’s all get along” concept for a continent that really, really needed it.

    The party’s extra special in 2025 because it’s been 40 years since Portugal and Spain joined the club, and 40 years since someone decided “Hey, we should actually celebrate this thing officially.” Better late than never, right?

    Every EU Building Is Having an Open House (Yes, Really)

    In what can only be described as the world’s most bureaucratic carnival, practically every EU institution is flinging open its doors on May 9th. The European Parliament in Brussels kicks off at 10 AM with their choir—because nothing says democracy like synchronized singing—followed by speeches and the chance to see where laws are actually made. There’s even a live music stage, because apparently legislation needs a soundtrack.

    The European Council is letting people tour the Justus Lipsius building, which is basically like getting backstage access to where the real decisions happen. All 27 member states will have stands showing off their culture and food (finally, the important stuff), plus there’s a photo booth where you can pretend to be an EU leader. Instagram gold.

    The European Commission’s Berlaymont building opens with the catchy slogan “Europe’s Moment”—featuring interactive spaces about everything from climate to social justice, plus an art trail for when policy discussions get too real. They’re even throwing a free concert that evening, because nothing says “successful political union” like live music.

    Frankfurt, Strasbourg, and Luxembourg Join the Fun

    The European Central Bank is hitting up Frankfurt’s Europa-Fest to talk about everyone’s favorite topic: money. Specifically, the euro redesign and that digital euro project they keep mentioning. The European External Action Service promises “Step Inside EU Diplomacy,” which includes video calls with EU staff worldwide—basically a very official Zoom party.

    Even the European Committee of the Regions and the European Economic and Social Committee are getting in on the action, proving that literally every EU body wants you to know what they do (and maybe understand it, if there’s time).

    The Numbers Don’t Lie

    A fresh Eurobarometer survey reveals that three-quarters of Europeans think EU membership is actually pretty great, and 75% feel like EU citizens—the highest level ever recorded. In a world that feels increasingly chaotic, turns out people appreciate a little continental stability.

    So whether you’re grabbing free food at a member state stand, taking a selfie on a red carpet, or just enjoying buildings lit up in EU colors worldwide, Europe Day 2025 is shaping up to be quite the celebration. Democracy, prosperity, and peace—with a side of interactive quizzes and treasure hunts for the kids.

    Not bad for 76 years of work.

  • Africa and Europe Meet in Eswatini: Three Days to Tackle Global Challenges

    Africa and Europe Meet in Eswatini: Three Days to Tackle Global Challenges

    Two Continents, One Conference Room, and a Whole Lot of Agenda Items

    Pack your bags for Eswatini, folks—the Africa-EU Parliamentary Assembly is about to kick off its inaugural plenary session, and it’s shaping up to be quite the diplomatic shindig. From May 12-14, African and European parliamentarians will gather at the impressively named Ezulwini Palazzo International Convention and Conference Centre (try saying that three times fast) to tackle everything from security to critical raw materials.

    The guest list? Pretty impressive. Prime Minister Russell Mmiso Dlamini, Prince Lindani, and co-presidents Hilde Vautmans from Belgium and David Houinsa from Benin will be there to get things rolling. No pressure, but they’ve only got three days to solve youth mobility, women in agriculture, multilateralism, and oh yeah, that whole “global race for critical raw materials” thing. Light work, really.

    The agenda reads like a greatest hits of contemporary geopolitical challenges: peace and security, parliamentary diplomacy, and how to keep young people from fleeing their countries. They’ll wrap up by sending recommendations to the Africa-EU Council of Ministers—because nothing says “we mean business” like a strongly worded recommendation.

    For any journalists wondering if they can crash the party, there’s a press point scheduled for Tuesday morning at 9:00 AM. Show up early, grab your coffee, and prepare for some high-level diplomatic speak about cooperation, partnership, and other words that sound important in press releases.

    Who knows? Maybe they’ll actually figure out how to share those critical raw materials without anyone getting too critical about it.

  • EU Gives Tech Companies Breathing Room on AI Rules While Banning “Nudifier” Apps

    EU Gives Tech Companies Breathing Room on AI Rules While Banning “Nudifier” Apps

    EU Cracks Down on AI Creeps, Gives Tech Companies More Time to Comply

    In a move that’s both practical and surprisingly spicy, European Parliament and Council negotiators have hammered out a deal that tweaks the EU’s AI Act—and yes, they’re specifically banning “nudifier” apps. Because apparently, we needed legislation to tell people that’s not okay.

    The agreement, reached in the wee hours of Thursday morning, aims to make life easier for AI providers while keeping the law’s teeth intact. Think of it as the EU saying, “We’re still serious about AI regulation, but let’s not make everyone’s head explode trying to comply.”

    Deadlines Get a Reality Check

    The big news? Companies get more breathing room. High-risk AI systems—the kind used in biometrics, law enforcement, and border management—now have until December 2027 to get their act together. AI systems used as safety components in machinery? They’ve got until August 2028. Even the watermarking requirements for AI-generated content got pushed back slightly to December 2026.

    It’s almost as if legislators realized that implementing complex AI regulations takes more than a few months. Revolutionary thinking, really.

    The “No Creepy AI” Clause

    Here’s where things get interesting. The EU is explicitly banning AI systems that create child sexual abuse material or generate intimate images of people without consent. These so-called “nudifier” apps—which do exactly what they sound like—are now officially persona non grata in the EU.

    Companies have until December 2026 to ensure their systems aren’t being used for digital perversion. The ban covers images, video, and audio, because the EU is nothing if not thorough when it comes to protecting human dignity.

    Less Red Tape, More Common Sense

    The deal also cuts down on bureaucratic overlap. AI systems in machinery products won’t need to comply with both AI rules AND sectoral safety rules—just the safety ones, with appropriate safeguards. Small and mid-sized companies get exemptions from certain requirements, because crushing innovation under paperwork isn’t exactly the goal here.

    As co-rapporteur Arba Kokalari put it: “We show that politics can move just as quickly as technology.” Bold claim, but we’ll give them credit for trying.

    What’s Next?

    Both Parliament and Council need to formally adopt the agreement before it becomes law, with plans to wrap things up before August 2026. Until then, AI developers can breathe a little easier—as long as they’re not building nudifier apps, in which case they should probably start looking for a new line of work.

  • EU Finally Figures Out Who Pays When Workers Cross Borders (Only Took a Decade!)

    EU Finally Figures Out Who Pays When Workers Cross Borders (Only Took a Decade!)

    EU Finally Figures Out Who Pays When Workers Cross Borders (Only Took a Decade!)

    After nearly 10 years of negotiations—yes, you read that right, ten years—the European Parliament has finally agreed on updated rules for social benefits for workers who dare to work in more than one EU country. The Employment and Social Affairs Committee gave the thumbs up with 47 votes in favor, proving that sometimes bureaucracy moves at the speed of a particularly lazy snail.

    So What’s the Big Deal?

    The new rules tackle the age-old question: “Which country pays when I work somewhere else?” Spoiler alert: it’s complicated, but now slightly less so.

    If you’re unemployed and looking for work abroad, you can now take your unemployment benefits with you for six months (extendable if needed). Think of it as a “try before you buy” deal for job hunting across borders. Cross-border workers get clarity too—work somewhere for at least 22 uninterrupted weeks, and that country foots the unemployment bill. Simple math, finally.

    Family Benefits Get Less Confusing

    The agreement distinguishes between “I’m staying home to raise kids” money and other family benefits. This means parents can actually reduce working hours without financial penalties that make accountants weep. Revolutionary stuff.

    Long-Term Care and Fraud-Busting

    Long-term care benefits now have actual definitions—imagine that! Meanwhile, to combat fraud (looking at you, letterbox companies), workers sent abroad must be insured for at least three months beforehand. No more parachuting in for benefits tourism.

    There’s also a mandatory notification system, except for business trips under three days. The construction sector doesn’t get this exception, presumably because someone was definitely abusing it.

    What’s Next?

    Both Parliament and Council need to formally adopt the deal. Then, after a decade of hemming and hawing, mobile workers across Europe can finally know which country’s social security system has their back—without needing a law degree to figure it out.

  • Your Car’s Midlife Crisis Just Got More Complicated (But Not *That* Complicated)

    Your Car’s Midlife Crisis Just Got More Complicated (But Not *That* Complicated)

    Your Car’s Midlife Crisis Just Got More Complicated (But Not That Complicated)

    Good news, Europe: your clunker can keep its biennial checkup schedule! In a move that will delight owners of aging vehicles everywhere, MEPs just voted to reject the European Commission’s ambitious plan to make cars over ten years old get annual inspections. Because apparently, even Brussels bureaucrats can be talked out of their more zealous ideas.

    The European Parliament’s Transport Committee has given the thumbs up to a revamped vehicle inspection regime that’s trying to drag car checks into the 21st century—without making everyone’s life miserable in the process. The vote? 30 to 11, which in parliamentary terms is basically a landslide.

    Road Trip, Anyone?

    Here’s something genuinely useful: soon you’ll be able to get your car inspected in any EU country, not just where it’s registered. Planning an extended Spanish holiday but your inspection’s due? No problema! You’ll get a six-month temporary certificate, though you’ll still need to face the music back home eventually. It’s like getting a hall pass, but for your Volkswagen.

    Your Airbag Needs a Checkup Too

    In a plot twist that makes actual sense, those fancy safety features automakers have been bragging about—airbags, automatic emergency brakes, and other life-saving tech—will now actually get inspected. Revolutionary concept, right? They’re also adding checks for electric and hybrid vehicles, because apparently someone noticed those exist now.

    The committee also wants to make sure your car has dealt with any outstanding recalls. Failed to fix that potentially exploding airbag? No inspection pass for you. It’s tough love, automotive edition.

    Fighting the Good Fight Against Odometer Fraud

    In a bid to combat the shady world of odometer tampering (yes, that’s still a thing), repair shops will now have to record mileage readings. But MEPs threw small businesses a bone: this only applies if the repair takes more than an hour. Because nothing says “proportionate regulation” like a 60-minute timer.

    Motorcycles Can’t Hide Anymore

    Heavy motorcycles, you had a good run. The optional inspection loophole is closing, and electric bikes are joining the party too. Democracy has spoken, and it says your Harley needs a checkup.

    The rapporteur, Jens Gieseke, summed it up perfectly: safer roads, efficient inspections, less fraud, and—crucially—no extra burden on regular folks. It’s almost like they thought this through.

    Now the rules head to negotiations with EU countries, with final approval expected in mid-May. Until then, your ten-year-old sedan can breathe easy knowing it won’t need annual inspections. You’re welcome, Europe’s beloved beaters.

  • EU Offers €20,000 Prize for Fearless Journalism—If You Dare to Expose Corruption

    EU Offers €20,000 Prize for Fearless Journalism—If You Dare to Expose Corruption

    Got a Hot Story? The EU Wants to Give You €20,000 for It

    The European Parliament is once again opening its wallet—and its heart—for journalists who aren’t afraid to ruffle some feathers. The sixth edition of the Daphne Caruana Galizia Prize for Journalism is now accepting submissions, and if you’ve been doing the kind of reporting that makes corrupt officials nervous, this could be your moment.

    Named after the Maltese journalist who was assassinated in 2017 for her anti-corruption work (because apparently some people really don’t like being exposed), the prize celebrates journalism that defends core EU values. You know, the boring stuff like human dignity, freedom, democracy, and not being terrible.

    Show Me the Money

    Here’s the deal: €20,000 is up for grabs for professional journalists or teams who’ve published hard-hitting work in EU-based media. An independent jury of press and civil society representatives will pick the winner, presumably while wearing very serious expressions and nodding thoughtfully.

    European Parliament President Roberta Metsola didn’t mince words: “Nine years since Daphne Caruana Galizia was brutally murdered, journalists around the world continue to be intimidated, threatened, and assassinated.” Nothing like a cheerful reminder that journalism can be a dangerous business.

    Past Winners Weren’t Messing Around

    Previous laureates include heavy hitters like the Pegasus Project (exposing global surveillance), investigations into missing child migrants, and reports on Russia’s shadow fleet. So if your entry is “10 Best Brussels Cafés,” you might want to aim higher.

    The deadline is July 31, 2026, at midnight CET—which means you have plenty of time to finish that explosive investigation you’ve been sitting on. Submit at daphnejournalismprize.eu, and maybe start practicing your acceptance speech. Just remember to thank democracy, freedom, and the rule of law. They’re really into that stuff.

  • European Parliament’s Week: Where Democracy, Spyware, and Scooters Collide

    European Parliament’s Week: Where Democracy, Spyware, and Scooters Collide

    European Parliament’s Week: Democracy, Spyware, and Scooters

    Brussels is buzzing, Yerevan is hosting, and President Metsola is everywhere at once

    The European Parliament is gearing up for another week of democratic gymnastics, and if you thought your calendar was full, wait until you see theirs.

    Monday: Democracy Goes on Tour

    While most MEPs settle into their Brussels offices, President Metsola jets off to Yerevan, Armenia, for the European Political Community Summit. On the agenda? “Reinforcing Democratic Resilience & Addressing Hybrid Threats” – which sounds like a superhero movie but is actually about keeping democracy from getting hacked, manipulated, or otherwise messed with.

    Back in Brussels, committees tackle everything from the European Central Bank’s annual report to climate talks with Commissioner Hoekstra. Because nothing says Monday morning like monetary policy and existential climate dread.

    Tuesday: Money, Moldova, and Mountains of Meetings

    Tuesday cranks up the intensity with President Metsola ping-ponging between Bavarian ministers and launching something called the “IE Competitiveness Hub” (we assume it’s important). Meanwhile, committees dive into the real meat: carbon border adjustments, temporary decarbonisation funds, and – brace yourself – genomic techniques in plants.

    The AGRI committee votes on forest reproductive material regulations, which is exactly as riveting as it sounds but probably matters more than we think.

    Wednesday: The Housing Crisis Gets VIP Treatment

    A special high-level event tackles the EU housing crisis, because apparently even in Brussels they’ve noticed that nobody can afford rent anymore. Elsewhere, committees scrutinize everything from transnational repression to whether Georgia, Albania, and Montenegro are playing nice enough to join the club.

    The FEMM committee holds a hearing on AI and gender-based violence, specifically addressing “the Grok case” – proving that even Elon Musk’s chatbot can’t escape European regulatory scrutiny.

    Thursday: Spyware, Scooters, and Seriously Important Stuff

    Things get spicy when the LIBE committee discusses “EU Funding for Israeli Spyware Companies.” Someone’s getting grilled, and it won’t be pleasant.

    President Metsola, apparently immune to jet lag, addresses Florence’s inauguration of the David Maria Sassoli Hall before diving into energy strategy conferences. Later, there’s a press conference on “Europe, Family and Digital Safety: Educating Tomorrow’s Citizens Against Cyberbullying” – because the internet remains undefeated in creating new problems.

    Friday: Piaggio and Poetry

    In a delightful change of pace, President Metsola visits the Piaggio Group in Pontedera. Yes, the scooter people. Because even EU presidents need to occasionally remember that Europe makes things besides regulations.

    She wraps up the week in Rome at “Luci d’Europa” (Lights of Europe), which sounds either deeply meaningful or like a very fancy dinner party. Possibly both.

    The Weekend: Even MEPs Rest

    Saturday and Sunday? “No event for this day.” Even European democracy needs a nap.

    The week proves that running a continent involves equal parts high-stakes diplomacy, mind-numbing technical details, and the occasional factory tour. Democracy: it’s exhausting, it’s everywhere, and somebody’s got to do it.

  • European Parliament’s Week-Long Marathon: Democracy Never Stops (But Coffee Machines Do)

    European Parliament’s Week-Long Marathon: Democracy Never Stops (But Coffee Machines Do)

    European Parliament: A Week So Packed, Even the Coffee Machines Are Exhausted

    Brussels is about to become the world’s busiest conference room as the European Parliament gears up for what can only be described as a bureaucratic marathon from May 4-8, 2026. Spoiler alert: the weekend is blessedly event-free, because even MEPs need to recover.

    While President Metsola kicks things off in Yerevan, Armenia—tackling democratic resilience and hybrid threats at the European Political Community Summit—the real action unfolds back in Brussels, where committees are multiplying faster than rabbits in spring.

    Monday’s Highlights: Democracy and Central Banking Walk Into a Bar

    The Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee gets cozy with the ECB’s Vice-President Luis de Guindos, presumably to ask the hard-hitting question: “So, about inflation…” Meanwhile, the Environment Committee hosts not one but TWO commissioners for what they’re calling “structured dialogues”—which is EU-speak for “we need to talk.”

    Tuesday: When Every Room Is Booked

    If you thought Monday was busy, Tuesday laughs in your face. Committees are stacked like pancakes, with topics ranging from generational renewal in agriculture (spoiler: young farmers exist!) to the riveting world of payment services. The FEMM Committee tackles AI and gender-based violence, while TRAN debates whether your car is roadworthy enough.

    There’s also a “High Level Event on the Housing Crisis”—because nothing says “high level” like acknowledging that nobody can afford rent anymore.

    Wednesday Through Friday: The Descent Into Madness

    By midweek, things get properly chaotic. Human rights in China, cyberbullying, Israeli spyware, and—wait for it—a public hearing on “excessive price increases in EU touristic areas and overtourism.” (Translation: Why does a coffee in Venice cost more than your flight there?)

    President Metsola, apparently immune to jet lag, bounces from Armenia to Bavaria to Florence to Pontedera, addressing everything from competitiveness hubs to the Piaggio Group (makers of Vespa scooters—at least someone’s having fun).

    The Real MVP: The Acronyms

    Between ECON, ENVI, LIBE, DROI, IMCO, PECH, and approximately 47 other letter combinations, the real winner here is whoever maintains the Parliament’s acronym database.

    Weekend Plans: Absolutely Nothing

    Saturday and Sunday? “No event for this day.” Even the European Parliament knows when to call it quits. The buildings will sit empty, the coffee machines will cool down, and MEPs will presumably remember what their families look like.

    The Takeaway

    Democracy is messy, exhausting, and apparently requires discussing everything from forest reproductive material to the Strait of Hormuz’s impact on food security—all in the same week. But hey, at least they’re trying. And come Saturday, they’ll have earned that weekend off.

    Just don’t ask them about Monday.

  • EU Parliament Cracks Down on Cyberbullying With Tougher Penalties and Big Tech Accountability

    EU Parliament Cracks Down on Cyberbullying With Tougher Penalties and Big Tech Accountability

    EU Parliament Declares War on Keyboard Warriors (And It’s About Time)

    The European Parliament just passed a resolution that’s basically the digital equivalent of “we need to talk.” With a show of hands on Thursday—yes, apparently they still do that—MEPs decided that cyberbullying has officially gotten out of hand, and it’s time to do something about it before the internet becomes even more of a dumpster fire than it already is.

    Here’s the deal: 92% of EU citizens want authorities to crack down on online harassment. That’s a higher approval rating than most politicians could dream of, so Parliament is finally listening. They’re demanding tougher penalties for cyberbullies, easier reporting systems for victims, and—brace yourself—actual accountability for social media platforms. Revolutionary stuff, really.

    The Criminal Masterplan

    MEPs aren’t messing around. They want a harmonized EU-wide definition of cyberbullying (because apparently, being horrible online means different things in different countries). They’re even considering adding it to the official list of EU crimes, which would put trolls and hate-mongers in some seriously uncomfortable legal territory. The Parliament is also pushing for hate crime to join that exclusive club, covering the worst offenders who make the internet a nightmare for minorities, women, and LGBTIQ+ folks.

    And here’s a fun fact: platforms still don’t have a legal framework for detecting child sexual abuse material. Parliament is “disappointed”—which is diplomatic speak for “seriously, what are you waiting for?”—and wants the Commission to get platforms to adopt voluntary reporting mechanisms yesterday.

    Big Tech Gets a Timeout

    The resolution takes direct aim at social media platforms and their sketchy business models that basically reward hateful content. Those hyper-personalized algorithms that keep feeding you rage bait? Yeah, Parliament noticed. They’re calling out platforms for pushing divisive content while burying the reasonable stuff, because nothing says “engagement” like a good old-fashioned online fight.

    MEPs want stricter enforcement of the Digital Services Act, particularly the parts about protecting minors. They’re also concerned about AI-generated abuse—deepfakes and non-consensual intimate images created by so-called “nudifier apps” (yes, that’s a real thing, and yes, it’s as awful as it sounds). Parliament wants those banned immediately.

    Actually Helping Victims (Novel Concept)

    Beyond punishing the bad guys, Parliament wants better support for victims, including more funding for support organizations and integrating cyberbullying response into national mental health strategies. They’re also pushing for prevention education aimed at kids, parents, and teachers—because teaching people not to be terrible online seems like a good starting point.

    The Bottom Line

    With cyberbullying increasingly ruining lives and some countries like Ireland already passing laws (shoutout to “Coco’s law”), the EU is trying to catch up. The message is clear: the Wild West days of the internet are over. Now we just have to see if they can actually enforce it.