June 26th: Europe's High-Stakes Summits & Domestic Flashpoints – From NATO's 5% Pledge to Labour's Welfare War, Paris's Pension Push, and Budapest's Pride Standoff

Meanwhile in Europe - Un pódcast de Meanwhile in Europe

Welcome to today's episode! Fresh from the NATO summit in The Hague, where allies committed to a significant 5 percent defense spending pledge by 2035 – a move spurred by Donald Trump and already prompting discussions of a "financial wheeze" from Italy to reclassify infrastructure costs – European leaders are gathered in Brussels for the EU Council. Here, Germany's Friedrich Merz makes his debut in the "Königsklasse", as leaders confront critical trade talks with Donald Trump, contentious Middle East policy, and evolving migration approaches.But the political action isn't just in the capitals. In the UK, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is embroiled in "open warfare" within his Labour party over controversial welfare cuts, facing a rebellion that could be "catastrophic" for his government, with "calls for 'regime change'" against chief of staff Morgan McSweeney. Simultaneously, French Prime Minister François Bayrou races to finalize sensitive pension reform talks today, holding a press conference to "tirer la conclusion de ses échanges" with social partners. Despite the threat of a motion of censure, Bayrou is expected to survive this political challenge, even as a physical "leak" in the National Assembly literally interrupted his speech.And in Hungary, a significant pride standoff is unfolding. Hungary's Justice Minister Bence Tuzson sent a letter to embassies warning that Budapest Pride is banned and participation is illegal. This directly challenges the joint statement of support signed by 21 EU countries' embassies, and prompted EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to publicly back Budapest Pride, calling on Hungarian authorities to allow it to go ahead. Viktor Orbán, in turn, demanded Brussels "refrain from interfering in the law enforcement affairs of Member States", against a backdrop where his government had previously banned LGBTQ+ assemblies, though the city's mayor asserts the event can proceed under municipal authority.Tune in as we unravel these pivotal moments shaping Europe's future today.

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