Time to Move Forward So We Don’t Go Back
In a world gripped by far-right populism, Spain's progressive government proves that advancing the welfare state—not merely defending it—is the best vaccine against reactionary politics.
In a world gripped by far-right populism, Spain's progressive government proves that advancing the welfare state—not merely defending it—is the best vaccine against reactionary politics.
Economics assumes we behave like chimps, but humans are far more cooperative—and our economic models must catch up.
As Europe races to digitalise its social protection systems, the promise of efficiency collides with the reality of exclusion—creating a paradox where the most vulnerable risk being left furthest behind.
The centre-left's millennial triumph marked not a new dawn but the beginning of a long decline into cautious centrism.
The ruling preserves key provisions on wage adequacy and collective bargaining, revealing how employer lobbying inadvertently expanded EU social policy powers.
Against the populist darkness threatening democracy, Europeans must remember that enlightenment principles require active defence—and the courage to confront bullies.
Efficiency without empathy risks turning citizens into data points—Estonia's digital frontier reveals the human limits of technological perfection.
Algorithmic power threatens the foundations of democratic oversight—and Sweden's experience shows why Europe must act now.
"Abundance" sounds appealing, but institutional competence and economic wisdom matter more than uplifting slogans.
As Europe faces mounting global challenges, its distinctive social framework may hold the answer to achieving both economic competitiveness and social cohesion.
Bold industrial strategy must combine green transformation with social justice to secure Europe's economic future.
The soaring costs of city life appear to be sending urban voters toward progressive leaders who promise relief, both in the U.S. and globally.
As emergencies mount and extremism feeds on paralysis, democratic forces need more than lowest-common-denominator coalitions to break the cycle of political decay.
Bold reforms and EU progress ring hollow when inequality deepens and Albanians choose to leave the country.
The United States is dismantling the very institutions designed to solve its problems—a paradox that reveals a deeper conflict between democratic will and liberal principles.