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Is it time to ban political advertising on Facebook?

Karin Pettersson

Karin Pettersson argues that ‘free speech’ is not a licence for politicians relying on rage to lie, and for such lies to be amplified by ‘social media’.

Ireland’s recovery: from bust to buoyancy … to Brexit?

Paul Sweeney

If procyclical domestic policies inflated Ireland’s economic bubble, procyclical austerity demanded by the troika which bailed it out makes Ireland’s recovery all the more remarkable.

The limits of the nationalist left

Jon Bloomfield

The nationalist left offers one response to neoliberal globalisation. The wrong one.

Wellbeing: an economy that works for children?

Reka Tunyogi

A Child Guarantee can be a second launchpad for investing in children.

Time to act to leave no child behind

Gitta Trauernicht

Children without or at risk of losing parental care represent a stain on Europe’s moral conscience.

Preventing digital feudalism

Mariana Mazzucato

Reforming the digital economy so that it serves collective ends is the defining economic challenge of our time.

A Green New Deal beyond growth

Éloi Laurent

A genuine European Green New Deal must place social justice and ecological protection ahead of fiscal discipline and economic growth.

A novel European Green New Deal to tackle climate change

Colin Hines

Support has been surging on both sides of the Atlantic for the idea of a Green New Deal. Time to turn it into action, and jobs, on the ground.

The parliamentary election in Poland—the future at stake

Maria Skóra

Whether the coming election in Poland will consolidate the monopoly of the national-conservative PiS or favour a more pluralist balance of power, it will have a significant impact on Polish political culture.

Portuguese elections: Socialists expected to return to power but without a majority

Eunice Goes

The Portuguese governmental ‘contraption’ has turned out to be surprisingly enduring—so much so that it may face another term

Ireland’s route from boom to bubble to bust

Paul Sweeney

Ireland’s volatile economic path of recent decades has wider European policy implications. Part one: the ‘Celtic Tiger’ and its demise

Should we worry about income gaps within or between countries?

Dani Rodrik

The rise of populist nationalism throughout the west has been fuelled partly by a clash between the objectives of equity in rich countries and higher living standards in poor countries.

Grosse Koalition, small Klimapaket

Adam Tooze

Much was expected of the new climate package negotiated by the grand-coalition government in Berlin. Less was delivered.

German rebalancing—out of exit options

Pálma Polyák

The consensus against German fiscal rebalancing is cracking—because the export demand which allowed it long to be avoided is looking shaky.

Why the radical right is no longer the exclusive domain of older, male voters

Caroline Marie Lancaster

The typical radical-right voter is often assumed to be older and male, with conservative views on women’s and LGBT rights—an assumption which should now be reassessed.

Open letter to my German friends about the ECB policy

Guillaume Duval

Guillaume Duval argues that Germany can see the end of ECB quantitative easing—if only it stops imposing austerity on the eurozone.

Top of Lagarde’s ECB to-do list: stop QE and democratise monetary policy

Jens van 't Klooster

If Christine Lagarde is serious about greening the European Central Bank, she must not hide behind its mandate.

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ETUI Advertisement

New Edition - Social policy in the European Union: state of play 2025

Can Europe preserve its distinctive social model while simultaneously rearming, reindustrialising, and reorganising its economy in a more conflictual and competitive world? This is the central question raised in this new edition of the Bilan social, a reference publication released every spring for more than 25 years by the European Trade Union Institute (ETUI) and the European Social Observatory (OSE).

READ HERE
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Is financial resilience and trust in Europe faltering?

In this episode of Eurofound Talks, host Mary McCaughey and senior researcher Eszter Sandor unpack the results of the 2025 Living and Working in the EU e-survey. While headline inflation has stabilised at 2.1%, the data reveals a continent gripped by chronic precariousness, with 57% of respondents now at risk of depression. Mary and Eszter explore how this economic insecurity is impacting institutional trust and democratic engagement.

LISTEN HERE
FEPS Advertisement

Read the book "The open future and its enemies" 

A robust democracy must not leave the future in the hands of the alliance between Big Tech and the far right. AI must be politically reined in and democratically shaped so that humanity retains its sovereignty.

Artificial intelligence is regarded as the driving force of progress. Yet it has long since become a challenge to democracy. The book argues that uncontrolled AI will erode our freedom, self-determination and democracy.

READ THE BOOK
Hans Böckler Stiftung Advertisement

WSI Minimum Wage Report 2026

Minimum wage policy across Europe has shifted significantly, with many EU countries raising wages above average and anchoring them to adequate living standards. This trend is consolidating as countries increasingly adopt the reference values recommended in the European Minimum Wage Directive — recently upheld by the European Court of Justice.

DOWNLOAD THE REPORT
S&D Group in the European Parliament Advertisement

S&D Africa Days 2026

We are pleased to invite you to save the date for the S&D Africa Days 2026, taking place on 30 June and 1 July 2026, in Brussels. 

At a time when Africa is too often viewed through narrow and one-sided narratives, this initiative reflects a key political priority for the S&D Group: to advance a renewed, forward-looking partnership of equals between Europe and Africa based on equality, solidarity, social justice and shared progress. 

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FES Advertisement

“What is the actual purpose of the state?” – this central question is the focus of the analysis. At a time when bureaucratic processes are making life difficult for citizens, the paper proposes a three-part model. It aims at a conception of the state as a platform that helps society build the capabilities it needs to address its problems effectively.

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