World
Brussels, my love? EU parks plans to promote animal welfare
In this edition of Brussels, my love?, we hear how the European Commission is juggling multiple files in the context of geopolitical turmoil.
This week we were joined by Ladislav Ilcic, a Croatian MEP from the European Conservatives and Reformists, Ciaran Cuffe, an Irish MEP from the Green party and Suzanna Carp, deputy director of Cleantech for Europe and co-founder of the think tank ECIT that works on EU citizenship.
As EU leaders gathered in Brussels for their October summit, panelists picked apart the European Commission’s working programme for 2024. With only a few months until the European Elections in 2024, the EU executive has had to choose what to focus on and what to shelve.
NGOs say issues like animal welfare slipped down the list of priorities even though according to a recent Eurobarometer, it is a priority for Europeans. NGOs like Four Paws hope the Commission will update animal welfare legislation. Sixty per cent of Eurobarometer respondents even say they would pay more for products sourced from animal welfare-friendly farming systems.
Panelists also discussed the ongoing row about whether or not to ban glyphosate, Europe’s addiction to fossil fuels and the challenges facing young people in Europe today.
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World
Trump setting up meeting with Putin, in communication with Xi
President-elect Donald Trump said Thursday that his team is in the works of setting up meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
“He wants to meet. And we’re setting it up,” he told reporters during a press conference from his Mar-a-Lago club regarding Putin. “President Xi – we’ve had a lot of communication. We have a lot of meetings set up with a lot of people.
“I’d rather wait until after the 20th,” he added in reference to his inauguration date later this month.
“President Putin wants to meet,” Trump added. “We have to get that war over.”
RUSSIA MONITORING TRUMP’S ‘DRAMATIC’ COMMENTS ON GREENLAND ACQUISITION
Trump pointed to the “staggering” casualty rates endured by both Russia and Ukraine and suggested the number of civilian casualties was also likely to be considerably higher than what has been reported.
The Kremlin confirmed Trump’s comments on Friday and said it was ready “to resolve problems through dialogue,” reported Russian news agency Tass.
The Trump-appointed special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, Gen. Keith Kellogg, told Fox News Digital that he has set a goal to end the war in Ukraine within 100 days of taking up the top job.
Kellogg described the war as “carnage” but said he was confident that Trump can end the war in the “near term.”
The retired three-star general told Fox News’ “America Reports” on Thursday that he and Trump are going to make sure the cease-fire agreement is “fair” and “equitable,” though he did not detail what this means as far as withdrawing Russian forces from Ukraine’s internationally recognized borders.
Trump has not detailed how he intends to end the three-year-long war, though he suggested he could support Putin’s demand that Ukraine be barred from entering the NATO alliance, and told reporters Thursday he “could understand [Putin’s] feeling about” not wanting NATO “on their doorstep.”
Prior to its invasion of Ukraine, Moscow already had four nations on its borders that were members of the international security alliance, including Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. Finland then joined NATO in 2023, applying for membership just 3 months after the Feb. 22, 2022 invasion.
Moscow and Kyiv have made clear that stipulations surrounding Ukraine’s NATO membership are non-negotiable.
NATO LEADERS PREDICT ERA OF 2% DEFENSE SPENDING ‘PROBABLY HISTORY’ AS TRUMP REPORTEDLY FLOATS HIGHER TARGET
Trump did not detail when he could meet with the Chinese president, and it remains unclear if Xi has plans to meet personally with him.
Trump reportedly invited Xi to his inauguration ceremony, though Beijing said it would instead send a top-level envoy, which is more inline with tradition.
In his final meeting with President Biden in November, Xi had expressed a willingness to work with the former and soon-to-be president of the United States.
However, Trump, who once said he and Xi “love each other,” in late-November promised to hit China with 60% tariffs and then this week said he would consider using military action to seize the Panama Canal, which the U.S. returned to Panama in 1979 before then ending its partnership over control of the strategic thoroughfare in 1999.
“The Panama Canal is vital to our country and its being operated by China – China. We gave the Panama Canal to Panama – we didn’t give it to China,” he added.
Fox News Digital could not immediately reach the Panama Embassy in Washington, D.C., for comment.
The Trump transition team did not respond to questions by Fox News Digital over concerns of sparking a military confrontation with China in Panama.
World
Brussels, my love? Poland's New Year's resolution
In this edition, we ask if Poland’s Donald Tusk can steer Europe to safety as he takes on the rotating presidency of the EU’s Council; and whether the extraordinary interventions of Elon Musk make him the king of free speech — or a threat to democracy.
We are joined by Antonios Nestoras, founder of think tank EPIC, Dorota Bawolek, Brussels correspondent for Poland’s TVP and Euronews senior reporter Jack Schickler.
In the first ‘Brussels, my love?’ episode of 2025, we look ahead to the challenges likely to be faced this year in Europe and the world.
The panel looks at the implications of a new Presidency for the EU’s Council, after Warsaw took over the reins chairing ministerial meetings as of 1 January.
Dorota Bawolek says the EU will be in safe hands with Prime Minister Donald Tusk at the helm.
“The Polish government at the moment is the most stable one in Europe,” she said, citing a governing coalition of social democrats, liberals and the centre-right. “Europe is lucky to have Poland driving her for the next six months.”
Antonios Nestoras said he’s happy to see Poland take over from Hungary, and welcomes Warsaw’s pledge to “make Europe strong again”.
“If the EU cannot provide security, then what the hell are we doing here?”, he said.
The panel also reacted to Elon Musk’s fervent support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in upcoming elections, and his attacks on UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Jack Schickler called it an “extraordinary intervention”.
“Russia isn’t the only place with oligarchs: the US has some of its own,” he said, though “I doubt that we’ll see sanctions”.
Antonios Nestoras says Elon Musk has a brilliant mind but should stay out of politics.
“He is really naïve if he thinks that the twentieth century divisive politics that AfD stands for is the solution for the future that can save Germany,” he said. “None of the European countries can be saved by themselves: we need Europe”.
Watch ‘Brussels, my love?’ in the player above.
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