Author: Press Room

Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

By&nbspEuronews Published on 22/03/2026 – 12:42 GMT+1 Polling stations across Italy opened on Sunday for a two-day referendum on judicial reform, which would split the career paths of judges and prosecutors, a reform that has sharpened political divisions and unified the centre-left opposition. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT At 12:00 PM, according to the Interior Ministry’s Eligendo portal, voter turnout reached 14.88% of eligible voters. This figure is double the turnout recorded at 12:00 PM for the 2025 citizenship referendum and is also the highest for any referendum in the past 23 years. The reform already passed parliament in October, but failed to…

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Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

Published on 20/03/2026 – 14:39 GMT+1 French President Emmanuel Macron urged Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to step up enforcement of EU digital regulations to combat foreign election interference ahead of key elections in 2026 and 2027, according to a letter dated March 16 and seen by Euronews. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The call comes as concerns grow in France about potential election meddling before next year’s presidential race. French security services have identified several interference cases —including from Russia— during the ongoing municipal campaign, with the second round set for Sunday. “In a geopolitical context marked by a multiplication of…

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Curro Rodríguez: from bankruptcy to global water empire

Published on 20/03/2026 – 15:00 GMT+1 From a start-up founded in Malaga in 2015 with a few thousand euros, Ly Company has become one of Europe’s fastest-growing multinationals, and a global leader in the sustainable water packaging sector. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT With ten factories located across Europe, Latin America and the Middle East, Ly Company produces about 10 million bottles of water in cardboard packaging per month. Unlike most competitors, Ly Company doesn’t owe its success to mass retail firms. It sells personalised products to more than 3,000 brands, ranging from airlines and hotel chains to private transport companies and major…

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Fact check: Are Pokémon GO players unwittingly helping to train AI?

Following its launch in 2016, Pokémon Go quickly became a phenomenon in Europe and around the world, turning streets of Brussels, Paris and Rome into augmented reality playgrounds where players could hunt virtual creatures such as Pikachu, Dragonite or Eevee. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The app is still popular today (with more than 100 million players in 2024, according to Scopely, parent company of game developer Niantic), generating headlines and, in some instances, dubious claims online. According to MIT Technology Review, Niantic’s AI-focused division, Niantic Spatial, has used images collected through gameplay to help train its systems, which are designed to build…

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Podcast: Is Europe’s biggest political party shifting too far to the right?

France’s local elections and the leaked communication between centre-right and far-right parties in the European Parliament have brought the issue of political polarisation in the European Union back to the forefront. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Brussels, My Love? explored these topics with the French-German researcher Sophie Pornschlegel, Svenska Dagbladet’s correspondent Teresa Küchler, and Euronews’ Stefan Grobe. The right-wing group chat According to an investigation by the German news agency dpa, the centre-right, pro-EU European People’s Party (EPP) has been collaborating with far-right parties, including Alternative for Germany (AfD), on tougher EU migration laws, with communication happening on a WhatsApp group. Manfred Weber,…

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After a year of Trump’s cuts to foreign aid, has humanitarian funding suffered?

Humanitarian funding has been declining since 2023, showing how vulnerable it is to the political whims of the day. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The biggest blow to overseas spending happened in 2025, when US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that 83% of programmes by USAid — the country’s international development agency — would be cancelled. It’s a similar story around the world: between 2025 and 2026, total global humanitarian funding plummeted from around €23.97 billion ($27.60 billion) to approximately €7.34 billion ($8 billion), according to the latest data from the Financial Tracking Service (FTS). Currently, the EU and its member states…

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‘Nobody can blackmail us’: Leaders excoriate Orbán’s veto as he tests EU limits

Fury over Viktor Orbán’s decision to veto the European Union’s €90 billion loan for Ukraine burst into the open on Thursday as leaders castigated, one by one, in the harshest terms yet the “unacceptable” behaviour of the Hungarian prime minister. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The condemnation was led by António Costa, the usually mild-mannered president of the European Council, whose authority is being directly challenged by Orbán’s disruption. “The leaders took the floor to condemn the attitude from Viktor Orbán, to remember that a deal is a deal and all the leaders need to honour that word,” Costa said at the end…

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Energy crisis hits Europe – Who pays the price? MEPs clash in The Ring

Across the European Union, energy prices remain highly sensitive to global instability — and recent developments are adding new pressure. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT The Ring turns its attention to the ripple effects of escalating tensions in the Middle East, where disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz are tightening global oil supply. The United States has broadened a sanctions waiver allowing all countries to purchase Russian oil currently stranded at sea. This decision has prompted unease among European leaders, who fear it could weaken efforts to isolate Moscow. How should the EU respond to rising costs while staying aligned with its political…

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Russia pocketing billions from two weeks of war in Iran, data shows

Russia’s oil earnings have increased since the start of the war in Iran, data shows, as the ongoing conflict has halted oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz and raised global energy prices. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Data from the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) shows that Russia has already increased its profits from oil and fossil fuels in general, two weeks into the conflict, which has spilt over into other countries in the Middle East. In the first 15 days of March, Moscow pocketed around €372 million a day from oil exports, around 14% higher than its…

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Special Report: A crunch EU summit torn between two wars and a looming energy crisis

Published on 19/03/2026 – 17:47 GMT+1 We debrief the key issues from the European Council summit underway in Brussels— leaders scramble to find a response to a fresh energy shock as the war in the Middle East escalates and grapple with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s veto on a critical loan for Ukraine. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Interviews with former Trump adviser John Bolton, former Italian prime minister Enrico Letta, Ukraine’s finance minister Serhiy Marchenko, Israel’s Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon, and Bulgaria’s Prime Minister Andrey Gyurov. Live updates from our correspondents on the ground, Shona Murray and Mared Gwyn. When…

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