EU European News Megathread - Discussions about news coming from the European Union, and countries laying within Europe.

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Welcome to European News Megathread.
In my opinion, Europe deserves justice and it's own megathread on this website.
I hope it will stay up, and will be active.
Stay safe, fellow Eurofags.

For more news:
British News Megathread
US Politics General

NEWS ( AS OF 2025/02/08 )
Leaked draft: EU wants to make "hate crime" an EU-wide felony - Another attempt at suppressing free speech.
France's first lady plagued by rumors she was born 'male' - Self-explanatory.
Police in Sweden say 5 people shot at school in city of Orebro - Swedish Incel shoots up a school.
 
Exactly what kind of news is this megathread meant to cover? Political ones affecting the EU and its member states, or do you see it as broader still?
At least the British News Thread has enough bongs day-drinking in there at the state of their nation to keep moving forwards, but do we have enough Eurokiwis for their own version?
 
Exactly what kind of news is this megathread meant to cover? Political ones affecting the EU and its member states, or do you see it as broader still?
I envisioned this megathread covering political or top news stories that are happening within European Union member states. If there was a very important news story from a country that is European but not in the Union, I thought it could also have its stay here.

If, for some reason, this doesn't really warrant a megathread, then I am personally sorry for that. I thought, if UK and US can have general threads, why not also Europe?
 
I envisioned this megathread covering political or top news stories that are happening within European Union member states. If there was a very important news story from a country that is European but not in the Union, I thought it could also have its stay here.
I think it should be news of importance. Europe is a large continent, and not entirely filled with worthwhile stories. Something like "Major car factory closes in Germany" fits, but something like "someone got stabbed in Estonia" wouldn't, unless it is somehow linked to a major political European happening (for example migration)

Does this work for you?
 
I think it should be news of importance. Europe is a large continent, and not entirely filled with worthwhile stories. Something like "Major car factory closes in Germany" fits, but something like "someone got stabbed in Estonia" wouldn't, unless it is somehow linked to a major political European happening (for example migration)

Does this work for you?
I think it does, yeah.
I am 100% with you on that.
 
Don't worry about a shortage, Germany and its booming import industry of terrible decisions will keep this thread supplied in no time!
 
There was a massive EU wide scandal about how billions of tax payer dollars went to activists, greens and other bullshit. It already got memoryholed in Europe and I didn't see it getting mentioned on the farms. We could start there in my opinion because it is still ongoing. There is also enough corruption and bullshit to talk about, a nation like the Netherlands has constant news about how (green) judges basically decide government policy.

But I don't know if people are interested. This is an American forum, why would Americans care about the happenings in a nation filled with swampjews.
 
I will add to this thread as any American should by stating my non asked for opinion on European nations: England sucks because they let pakis rape their kids, France sucks because they have Paris in their country which is as big of an own as can be conceived, Spain and Portugal are allright but they still are pathetic compared to their past, Germany and all diet Germanies deserve to be mocked for their werid fetishes and cultural suicidal actions (I mean for fuck sake France atleast keeps their weird superiority complex), all Nordic countries except Finland are big homosex, balkan users can imagine I can find their country on a map and that I think their neighbors are better then them.
 
A german newspaper called the Wirtschafts Woche (Economics Weekly) has made a first article about the security conference.
Archive. (in original language)

Below is a translation from Google.
Notable mentions are:

Trump is demanding that NATO partners spend five percent of their GDP on defense, he is threatening allies such as Mexico, Canada and Europe with punitive tariffs ( just last weekend he announced tariffs of 25 percent on all steel and aluminum imports into the USA ), the US president wants to annex Danish Greenland and bring the Panama Canal and the Gaza Strip under US control. Trump has just imposed sanctions on the International Criminal Court. To do this, he basically wants to shelve all US development aid.

The speed, scope and determination of this flood of orders from Trump surprise even experienced observers of international politics.
TL: DR
"We are mad that USA won't be the only one supporting the NATO with proper military might."

Trump allegedly wants to freeze the conflict, reopen Russia's gas market in return and at the same time provide security guarantees for Kiev. It's the same old story again: is he really serious about all this?

"We could well be dealing with classic Trumpian negotiating tactics and maximum demands again,"

The EU and Germany remain caught off guard and in the dark. And this despite the fact that Kellogg's plans have been circulating since the US election campaign.
The Trump administration is making an effort to start negotiating a peacetreaty with some baseline variables to have something to work with.
EU and Germany mad because they feel left out even though they knew of those plans since Trumps campaign.

The MSC Index shows that only in one G7 country does the population believe in a safe and prosperous future - the USA. And "Make America Great Again" has always been what Trump was most interested in, apart from himself.
European leaders pleading "Won't anyone think of the Europeans" to the US government that's doing shit for the US. How about you faggots that have forsaken us do something for us. Absolute cunts.

Munich Security Conference
The Munich Panic Summit and the New American Toughness


Donald Trump sends his front row to the Munich Security Conference. The message: no consideration for German sensitivities. An extraordinary foreign policy week begins.

Donald Trump dominates the Munich Security Conference before it has even begun. The US President is not traveling to the MSC in Bavaria himself, but he is sending three of his most important representatives. Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his special representative for Ukraine , Keith Kellogg, are coming to the Hotel Bayerischer Hof on Odeonsplatz.

The trio's presence can be interpreted in a diplomatic positive way: the new US administration's attention to the Europeans is unbroken. The largest US delegation in years was praised by the conference's chairman, Christoph Heusgen, on Monday. Those who are more pessimistic fear chaos is heading for the EU. Either way: "Trumpism will be 'front and center' on the MSC main stage this year," explains security expert Rafael Loss from the European Council on Foreign Relations. "Without regard to European and German sensitivities and long-established transatlantic decorum."

The foreign and security policy emergency of Trump's second term will unfold for the first time on an open European stage from Friday (February 14).

Vance and Co. are the ambassadors of a new American toughness. Trump is demanding that NATO partners spend five percent of their GDP on defense, he is threatening allies such as Mexico, Canada and Europe with punitive tariffs ( just last weekend he announced tariffs of 25 percent on all steel and aluminum imports into the USA ), the US president wants to annex Danish Greenland and bring the Panama Canal and the Gaza Strip under US control. Trump has just imposed sanctions on the International Criminal Court. To do this, he basically wants to shelve all US development aid.

The speed, scope and determination of this flood of orders from Trump surprise even experienced observers of international politics. And are probably part of the new calculations in the White House. Heads of state from all over the world arriving in Munich will have no choice but to argue with the USA about all these issues.

Peace treaty for Ukraine?
Especially since, according to media reports, special envoy Keith Kellogg is also planning to present a peace treaty for Ukraine at the conference. Trump allegedly wants to freeze the conflict, reopen Russia's gas market in return and at the same time provide security guarantees for Kiev. It's the same old story again: is he really serious about all this?

Or do Trump's people in Bavaria ultimately just want to "float a trial balloon," as the SPD's foreign policy spokesman Nils Schmid believes. "We could well be dealing with classic Trumpian negotiating tactics and maximum demands again," says Schmid. After all, key questions about a possible agreement remain completely unanswered to this day. "A quick solution to the Ukraine question is simply not that easy," says the SPD foreign policy expert.


Commentary by Max Biederbeck
Can an agreement even succeed? Will Kiev go along with it? Does Russia want to? Will the Europeans be at the table when negotiations take place? Nothing is clear. The EU and Germany remain caught off guard and in the dark. And this despite the fact that Kellogg's plans have been circulating since the US election campaign. "The USA and Trump reject a central role in securing a possible ceasefire in Ukraine and see the Europeans as having a duty," says security expert Claudia Major from the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP).

There is growing concern in Berlin that this obligation will lead to a demand for a purely European peacekeeping force in Ukraine. Not only does the German government reject this, but a European solo effort would also be virtually impossible. The EU is "currently not in a military position to credibly take on this task without US contributions," explains Major. "Moreover, no European country has yet shown any serious willingness to send troops."

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Risk USA
The fear of Trump's possible Ukraine plan alone shows how easily and ruthlessly he can shake up the international structure. It is therefore hardly surprising that the MSC Security Index, published on Monday, has measured a sharp rise in reservations among the G7 countries: not only towards Russia or China, but also towards the USA. In Canada and Germany in particular, respondents believe that a growing risk to the world is posed primarily by the United States.

A perception, the report says, that "could also be linked to the increased fear of trade wars or the use of nuclear weapons by an aggressor." Transatlantic friendship certainly feels different.

And that is only the short-term perspective: In the long term, the US under Trump is increasingly turning its attention towards China. This so-called "pivot to Asia" would have taken place under a Democratic presidency. But under Trump, the seemingly inevitable US withdrawal from Europe will be faster, more ruthless and more brutal. The Ukraine plan in Munich could be the starting signal for this.

A move that could backfire for Trump. The US's opponents have long since learned to exploit the president's short-term eagerness to make deals. There is a fear that "Russia will wear down Ukraine and divide the Western camp through tactical negotiations while continuing to fight. Support for Ukraine in Western countries could decline, as tactical negotiations create the illusion of a tangible end to the war ("peace")," writes Major in a recent working paper..

Trump's main opponent, Beijing, could also "benefit from the US withdrawal from international commitments and the alienation of long-standing partners by Washington," writes the MSC. The new renunciation of power by the USA will mean that "other actors will have to fill the gap" and there will be a growing polarization of the global community. This will make it more difficult worldwide to maintain the existing international legal order, "prevent arms races and violent conflicts, promote economic growth for all and address common threats posed by global warming.

The Munich Security Conference threatens to become a panic summit. Trump, meanwhile, is unlikely to be interested in the complicated relationships of international politics. The MSC Index shows that only in one G7 country does the population believe in a safe and prosperous future - the USA. And "Make America Great Again" has always been what Trump was most interested in, apart from himself.
Edit:formating
 
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Here's one for the offering. The majority of it is a seething "fact check" of JD Vance's trip to Europe including justifying cancelling Romania's elections but buried right at the end is a very interesting statistic.

For all that we are told far-right extremism is the danger to Europe in fact the numbers do not support it. The left/anarchists attempted 32 terrorist acts of which 23 occurred. The right attempted 2, both thwarted.

I know we shouldn't overblow statistics but when 16 times as many terrorist actions are being taken by the left and that is being reported not in a paper with any political alliance to the right it's worth knowing.

In JD Vance’s confrontational and pugnacious speech at the Munich Security Conference, the vice-president ran through a series of examples to highlight his claims that Europe has gone off the rails. Here, we look at what he said – and whether it stacks up.

United Kingdom​


Speaking about “our very dear friends, the United Kingdom”, Vance claimed a “backslide away from conscience rights” had “placed the basic liberties of religious Britons in particular in the crosshairs”.

The British government, he said, had charged Adam Smith-Conner, a physiotherapist and an army veteran, with the “heinous crime of standing 50 metres from an abortion clinic and silently praying for three minutes, not obstructing anyone, not interacting with anyone, just silently praying on his own”.

Vance claimed that Conner told an “unmoved” law enforcement officer that he was praying for an unborn son that he and a former girlfriend had aborted years before. “Adam was found guilty of breaking the government’s new ‘buffer zones law’, which criminalises silent prayer and other actions that could influence a person’s decision within 200 metres of an abortion facility,” Vance said. “He was sentenced to pay thousands of pounds in legal costs to the prosecution.”


Fact check

Smith-Connor was convicted of breaching a safe zone in October last year, after refusing repeated requests to move away from outside an abortion clinic in Bournemouth in November 2022.

The 51-year-old told the council the day before he would be carrying out a silent vigil as he had on previous occasions. On the day, a community officer spoke to him for an hour and 40 minutes and asked him to leave – but he refused. Smith-Connor was handed a two-year conditional discharge and ordered to pay more than £9,000 costs after the case was brought by Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole council.

Smith-Connor is receiving legal support from Alliance Defending Freedom International, an American conservative Christian legal advocacy group that states it “champions religious freedom through … advocacy efforts”. ADF International said it would be supporting Smith-Connor to appeal against the decision in July.

Smith-Connor’s case was brought after a public space protection order was introduced outside the Bournemouth clinic in October 2022, which banned activity including protests, harassment and vigils.

October last year saw the introduction of the Public Order Act 2023 in England and Wales, which introduced buffer zones of 150 metres around abortion clinics to stop women being harassed with leaflets, shown pictures of foetuses, or having to pass by vigils.

Scotland​

The Scottish government was said to have begun distributing letters to citizens whose houses lay “within so-called safe access zones, warning them that even private prayer within their own homes may amount to breaking the law”. He went on: “The government urged readers to report any fellow citizens suspected guilty of thought crime in Britain and across Europe.”

Fact check

The Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) (Scotland) Act, introduced last year, introduced safe access zones within 200 metres of abortion clinics, banning harassing, alarming or distressing actions.

“Silent prayer” is listed among the banned activities to prevent mass silent vigils that have been used by large groups of US anti-abortion protesters such as 40 Days for Life who gather outside clinics to pressure women entering not to have an abortion.

A Conservative US TikToker erroneously claimed that silent prayer at home could break the law in Scotland. However the law states that the actions are banned if they are likely to cause alarm or distress to someone accessing abortion services. Silent prayer in a home which caused no distress and alarm to other would not fall under this category.

A Scottish government spokesperson said: “The vice-president’s claim is incorrect. Private prayer at home is not prohibited within safe access zones and no letter has ever suggested it was.”

Romania​

Vance told the Munich security conference that a former European commissioner had “sounded delighted” that an “entire election” in Romania had been annulled. Vance added: “He warned that if things don’t go to plan, the very same thing could happen in Germany too … But when we see European courts cancelling elections and senior officials threatening to cancel others, we ought to ask whether we’re holding ourselves to an appropriately high standard.”

Fact check

The US vice-president was referring to comments by the former European commissioner Thierry Breton. The former French minister had been speaking after the decision by Romania’s constitutional court in December to annul the early results of the country’s presidential election.

The court had intervened after declassified intelligence documents pointed to what was described as a massive and “highly organised” campaign for the independent candidate Călin Georgescu, on the TikTok platform that was probably orchestrated by a “state actor”. Georgescu has committed to stop all Romanian political and military support for Ukraine if elected.

Commenting on the case, Breton had said: “Let’s keep calm and enforce our laws in Europe when they are at risk of being circumvented … We did it in Romania, and we will obviously do it if necessary in Germany.”

Elon Musk intervened at the time on X, referring to “the staggering absurdity of Thierry Breton as the tyrant of Europe”. Breton responded: “Tyrant of Europe? Wow! But No Elon Musk: the EU has NO mechanism to nullify any election anywhere in EU. Not at all what is said in the video below related only to the application of the [Digital Services Act] and its moderation obligations. Lost in translation… or another fake news?”

Brussels​

Vance said that in Brussels “EU Commission commissars” had warned citizens that they intend to shut down social media during times of civil unrest at “the moment they spot what they’ve judged to be “hateful content”. In Germany, he claimed police had carried out “raids against citizens suspected of posting anti-feminist comments online as part of ‘combating misogyny’ on the internet”.

Fact check

Under the Digital Services Act, the European Commission can ask a digital services coordinator in an EU member state to ask a judge to assess an application for a temporary restriction on access within the EU to a large online platform or search engine. The commission does also have the power to bypass the judge-led process in an “urgent situation”. The commission has said that such an extreme measure must “follow the due process” and “would be limited in time”.

Restrictions on services can only be enforced where there is evidence of criminal offences involving threat to people’s life or safety. Should the commission use its enforcement powers, its decisions are subject to judicial redress at the European court of justice.

German police carried out raids last March on the homes of people suspected of posting misogynistic hate speech on the internet, including those advocating rape or sexual assault. Police raided homes and interrogated 45 suspects in 11 states. None of the suspects were detained.

Sweden​

Vance said “the government” had “convicted a Christian activist for participating in Qur’an burnings that resulted in his friend’s murder”. He went on: “And as the judge in his case chillingly noted, Sweden’s laws to supposedly protect free expression do not, in fact, grant – and I’m quoting – a ‘free pass’ to do or say anything without risking offending the group that holds that belief.”

Fact check

Salwan Najem was given a suspended sentence and a fine by a court over statements he made in connection with four incidents of Qur’an burning in Stockholm. He had carried out the book burning with Salwan Momika, who was subsequently shot dead during a TikTok broadcast last month. Najem, who came to Sweden from Iraq in 1998 and has been a Swedish citizen since June 2005, told the court that his actions were legitimate criticisms of religion protected by Sweden’s freedom of expression laws. Göran Lundahl, the judge in the case, said freedom of expression did not constitute a “free pass to do or say anything”.

Germany​

Vance cited the recent attack in Munich as reason for a “new direction”, suggesting the attack was typical. “An asylum seeker, often a young man in his mid-20s, already known to police, rammed a car into a crowd and shatters a community”, he said.

Fact check

German police and prosecutors have said that an Afghan suspect in a car ramming in central Munich that injured at least 36 people was believed to have had an “Islamist” motive and will answer to charges of attempted murder. They have not found links to a jihadist organisation such as the Islamic State group nor any accomplices.

According to the latest EU terrorism situation and trend report from Europol, there were a total of 120 terrorist attacks (98 completed, nine failed and 13 foiled) in seven EU member states in 2023. The highest number of terrorist attacks were perpetrated by separatist terrorists (70, all completed), followed by leftwing and anarchist actors (32, of which 23 completed). There were 14 jihadist terrorist attacks of which five were completed. Two rightwing terrorist attacks were foiled.
 
I think it should be news of importance. Europe is a large continent, and not entirely filled with worthwhile stories. Something like "Major car factory closes in Germany" fits, but something like "someone got stabbed in Estonia" wouldn't, unless it is somehow linked to a major political European happening (for example migration)
So the stabbing incident in Ireland last Sunday where a Brazilian, on bail for drug dealing, stabbed three people in Dublin. Reportedly knocking on doors and slashing at the throat of whoever answered counts? Especially as all the local politicians tried to downplay and it was initially reported that the man wasn't known to the police. And some university lecture came on Twitter to berate people who were angry about the attack for not thinking about what the poor knife wielder might have been going through.
 
So the stabbing incident in Ireland last Sunday where a Brazilian, on bail for drug dealing, stabbed three people in Dublin. Reportedly knocking on doors and slashing at the throat of whoever answered counts? Especially as all the local politicians tried to downplay and it was initially reported that the man wasn't known to the police. And some university lecture came on Twitter to berate people who were angry about the attack for not thinking about what the poor knife wielder might have been going through.
I think we have a lot of Irish posters and a lot of faggots covering shit up or not reporting because of our libel laws so any foreign eyes on their shit is good. Just bring receipts and archive.
 
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