
A Greek idea: ‘Let the Germans finally pay their World War 2 debts!’
By: N. Peter Kramer | Monday, February 9, 2015
The historian Albrecht Ritschl of the London School of Economics (LSE) and Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz share the opinion that such an adjustment is not a weird idea.

Greek blow for ‘Cold War-lord’ Tusk
By: N. Peter Kramer | Thursday, January 29, 2015
While the new Greek PM, Alexis Tsipras, was organising his government, Tusk published an EU statement claiming that all 28 EU-leaders had agreed that Russia bears responsibility for a rocket attack on the Ukrainian city of Mariupol and proposing new sanctions against Russia.

The price of no more Russian gas via Ukraine
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Political disputes between Kiev and Moscow have seen EU supplies interrupted on two occasions in recent years; with Moscow justifying the Turkey decision by saying Ukraine is ‘unreliable’.

European Central Bank split on buying government bonds
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, January 13, 2015
The ECB will have to decide how much of each eurozone country’s bonds to buy, a politically tricky task. As a genuine EU institution the ECB offers the usual theatre of differing views and opinions.

Germany split on how to handle Russia
By: N. Peter Kramer | Monday, January 5, 2015
Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel, the EU’s most powerful leader, was delighted with the first steps of her protégé Donald Tusk as new president of the European Council in December.

Jean-Claude Juncker: the man of 300 (?) billion
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, December 30, 2014
In the last week of November President Juncker presented his €315 billion programme, called the European Fund for Strategic Investments, for increasing small-business lending and investments in roads, renewable energy, schools and other public services.

The death of a gas pipeline
By: N. Peter Kramer | Friday, December 12, 2014
Seven EU member states - Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Romania, and Slovenia - which were to have hosted Russia’s South Stream gas pipeline have to start looking for other ways to improve their energy security.

The Pope, the European Parliament and the President of the Commission
By: N. Peter Kramer | Friday, November 28, 2014
When EP President Schulz invited the Pope to visit the Parliament, he probably forgot that the new Pope isn’t a European

US and China agree on cutting carbon pollution. The EU too!
By: N. Peter Kramer | Monday, November 17, 2014
Obviously Juncker and Rompuy hadn’t read the letter of US Secretary of State John Kerry in the New York Times, with the striking heading ‘China, America and a warming planet’.

LuxLeaks and EULEX: EU’s integrity is at stake!
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Two serious testcases for EU’s integrity and credibility

Jean-Claude Juncker and the seven vice-presidents (and a chef-de-cabinet!)
By: N. Peter Kramer | Monday, November 3, 2014
In the Berlaymont, the EU palace in Brussels where the European Commission sits, a change of guard has place. Controlfreak Barroso went out, bonvivant Juncker came in.

Outgoing Commission relents on Italian and French budgets
By: EBR | Thursday, October 30, 2014
The outgoing (on November 1) Commission avoided a political collision with the French and Italian governments, indicating that it approves the countries’ 2015 budgets after last minutes adjustments.

Is there a solution for EU’s problems?
By: N. Peter Kramer | Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Europe has already endured years of stagnation, high unemployment and a mounting public disillusionment that has fueled a political, often anti-European, backlash

Do Eastern and Central European countries care about climate change?
By: N. Peter Kramer | Friday, October 3, 2014
In an effort to limit global warming to no more than 2 degrees Celsius the European Commission proposed in the beginning of this year several targets for 2030.

EU Ombudsman attacks institutions non-transparency
By: N. Peter Kramer | Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Conflicts of interest is a strategic area O’Reilly is pursuing, after having looked at a sample of 54 EU officials who left their job for work in the private sector. She said the inquiry found ‘major deficiencies’ in the way the Commission justifies permissions to leave to a private sector job

Do US and EU want war with Russia?
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, September 16, 2014
While the ceasefire in East-Ukraine works, indeed more or less, the answer of the US and the EU on it is: more sanctions on Russia. Some EU member states trying to halt it were overruled by the hawkish colleagues from the Baltic and Poland for instance.

European Commissioner Oettinger and your hair dryer
By: N. Peter Kramer | Monday, September 8, 2014
Do you remember that ridiculous Commission proposal to ban open olive oil cans from restaurant tables? May be you also remember that the Commission let us abandon the old light bulbs and to replace these with a new kind that use less electricity?

The new EU leadership: liberals left in the cold. Christian Democrats and Socialists share the loot
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Poor Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the EU Liberals (ALDE). A few months ago he presented himself as the new President of the European Commission: ‘When this man speaks, Europe listens’ was the text in his commercial.

Welcome back from holiday!
By: N. Peter Kramer | Tuesday, August 19, 2014
2014 was forecasted to become the year the Eurozone’s economy would grow as much as 2 percent after a 0,4 decline last year.

Juncker for President? Who is Juncker?
By: EBR | Monday, June 16, 2014
German Chancellor Angela Merkel didn’t agree with the Spitzenkandidaten process from the start because she knew there would be no agreement in the European Council