Lawyers at the European Parliament and the Council of the EU are finding ways to work around renewed transparency initiatives. The lack of leadership and political will makes the task for greater transparency even more difficult.
Labour's shadow Brexit minister, Keir Starmer, has urged the UK government to keep Britain in the Euratom treaty that governs the movement of nuclear materials, and argued for the European Court of Justice to continue having its say. Labour wants to work with rebelling Tory MPs in a vote later this year to stop Britain's exit from Euratom. "Brexatom" could impact the supply of radioactive isotopes used in cancer treatment.
Israel's foreign ministry defended Hungary's campaign against George Soros in a statement Monday, denouncing the Hungarian-US billionaire as someone who "continuously undermines Israel's democratically elected governments" by supporting NGOs. Israel's Budapest envoy and Jewish groups said Hungary's recent billboard campaign against Soros was a proxy for anti-Semitism. The Israeli foreign ministry, however, said that criticism of Soros is legitimate. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu is due to visit Hungary next week.
The founder of Italy's Northern League, Umberto Bossi, has been jailed for fraud after an Italian court sentenced him to two and a half years in prison on Monday, for embezzlement while he led the anti-immigration party that campaigned for the secession of Northern Italy. His son, Renzo, and the former party treasurer were also convicted and jailed. Bossi was once an ally of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.
In a speech on Tuesday, the UK prime minister is expected to urge Labour and other opposition parties to “come forward with your own views and ideas” on what post-Brexit Britain should look like.
Massimo D'Alema, a social-democratic prime minister in the 1990s, said that Matteo Renzi's term was "not so brilliant" and that the Five Star Movement is "unable" to run the country.
“It is possible that a crime has been committed,” car type-approval authority RDW said about the emissions strategy used in a Suzuki Vitara.
Tens of thousands demonstrated on Sunday against president Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in a rally of Turkey's main opposition party in Istanbul. The Republican People's Party's leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, had launched a 450-kilometre march after a parliamentarian from his party was imprisoned in June. The march grew into a protest over Erdogan's crackdown on people with alleged links to terror groups, launched after last summer's failed coup attempt.
Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker agreed at the G20 summit in Hamburg to start the provisional application of the EU-Canada free trade deal (Ceta) on 21 September this year. Some chapters, for instance on the investor court system, will not be applied. The accord will enter fully into force once all EU member states ratify it.
Despite the EU's protests, the Hungarian government has managed to turn the country's media into a propaganda machine. Now the theme that dominates the airways, cables and billboards is: Soros using the EU to transport migrants.
The leaders of five political groups said that the UK's offer on citizens' rights was a “damp squib” that risks “creating second-class citizenship”.
The US president will be back in Europe for France's Bastille Day, while the EU and Ukraine will hold a summit in Kiev, and MEPs will discuss migrant rescue operations in the Mediterranean.
Marathon meeting between Trump and Putin, as well as violent street protests, stole the headlines of a G20 summit on global warming and trade.
The ESM, the eurozone emergency fund, agreed on Friday to unblock a new tranche of aid as part of the bailout programme agreed upon in 2015.
EU member states on Friday appointed Mariya Gabriel as European commissioner for digital economy and society. Gabriel, a former MEP, replaces Kristalina Georgieva as the new Bulgarian member of the EU executive body. Her nomination was confirmed by the European Parliament earlier this week. She will take office on Monday and is due to serve until the end of the commission's mandate on 31 October 2019.
The EU is right that diplomacy is key in deterring cyberattacks. Yet, more political decisiveness and coordination are required to be successful.
While many say they seek a solution to the refugee crisis, the answer might be – quite literally – right in front of your face: digital technology.
US and Russian leaders to meet for about 30 minutes in the margins of the event at the same time as plenary talks on global warming.
The European Parliament on Thursday voted to suspend EU membership talks with Turkey. MEPs supporting the move argued that Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan's crackdown on opposition and the press, go against EU values and democratic criteria. Ankara warned that suspending talks would be a "terrible mistake". The parliament, however, has little say in the process. EU member states are divided on whether to continue accession talks with Turkey.
The US president's first visit to Poland on Thursday resulted in warm words, but few concrete solutions for Central Europe.
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