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What Orbán’s departure means for Hungary and for Europe
Hungary’s voters have ended Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule. Tisza’s win is a unique chance to restore democracy – and a time-limited opportunity for the EU to emerge stronger. -
Energy shock 2.0: Lessons from 2022 for the Hormuz crisis
If the Strait of Hormuz stays closed, Europe will face as serious an energy crisis as it did in 2022. This time, energy poverty policies must be more targeted, and electrification more ambitious. -
One year liberation day: The delusion of transatlantic economic divorce
A year after Liberation Day, Washington and Brussels are still fighting each other – not China. -
WTO reform after Yaoundé: What next for the multilateral trade order?
The failure of the WTO’s ‘reform ministerial’ deepens the strain on the global trade system. But it also points to a possible path for future co-operation among coalitions of the willing. -
War in Iran: Who wins and who loses?
The attack on Iran by the US and Israel is good news for Russia but bad news for Europe, including Ukraine, and ultimately for the US itself. China could emerge as a long-term winner. Europeans must look after their own interests, regardless of Trump’s wrath.
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