Europe.Table

Migration: Why Spain is taking a new approach to immigration – and what the rest of Europe can learn from it

Rather than relying on deterrence and isolation, Spain is pursuing the regularization of migrants. Unlike many of its European neighbors, the country has recognized the benefits of immigration and is using arrivals to address its structural challenges.

By Judith Kohlenberger

Judith Kohlenberger

Critical raw materials

Raw materials: Auditors warn of bottlenecks for the energy transition

According to the European Court of Auditors, the EU has made little progress toward independence in critical raw materials, raising doubts about whether new agreements with alternative supplier countries will deliver.

By Manuel Berkel

Christoph Bufe, industrial mechanic, inspects a stack on the day of the inauguration of an electrolysis competence centre at Andritz Schuler GmbH. A state-of-the-art assembly plant for electrolyser stacks has been built at the industrial site in Erfurt, which is over 100 years old. Electrolysers are crucial for the production of green hydrogen.

Europe.Table

France’s national budget: Lecornu emerges as an increasingly independent prime minister

After months of arduous negotiations, the approval of France’s national budget on Monday evening has granted President Emmanuel Macron a brief – if fragile – window of political stability, brokered by Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu.

By Claire Stam

Results on No-Confidence Motions at the National Assembly - Paris French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu waves after the results appearing on a screen of the vote on no-confidence motions against the 2026 finance bill, after the government triggered Article 49.3 of the Constitution, at the National Assembly in Paris on February 2, 2026

MFR

MFF: France pushes to anchor European preference criteria

Disagreements among member states over “Buy European” clauses in the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) are deepening, as French demands exacerbate the divide between countries with and without a strong industrial base.

By János Allenbach-Ammann

Netherlands

New coalition government in The Hague: A plan to make Europe stronger

The incoming coalition in The Hague seeks to reassert the Netherlands’ influence within the European Union. Under its plans, strengthening Europe will depend on deeper cooperation in defense, energy, and key technologies, combined with a tougher and more consistent response to violations of the rule of law across the bloc.

By Stephan Israel

EVP

EPP: EU member states should provide military help to each other

At its Leaders’ Retreat in Zagreb, the European People’s Party (EPP) decided to strengthen military cohesion within the European Union. The group’s leader, Manfred Weber, has been tasked with developing a concept for an expanded defense union.

By Markus Grabitz

EU internal market

Competitiveness: EU Commission sounds the alarm in Single Market Report

The EU is on track to achieve its competitiveness targets for only a few key figures. This is according to a draft of the Single Market Report, which is to be presented on Friday.

By János Allenbach-Ammann

Stéphane Séjourné at the podium, during a press conference on the Clean Industrial Deal Implementation package

EU enlargement

Why admitting the Western Balkan states would be financially advantageous for the European Union

A study by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation finds that the cost of admitting the Western Balkan states to the European Union would be negligible for the Union’s budget. At the same time, accession would deliver a substantial economic boost to the six candidate countries.

By Stephan Israel

EU-Western Balkans Summit December 2025

Elections

Bulgaria: Former president aims to become head of government

As president, Bulgaria’s head of state Rumen Radev had accused his country’s political class of oligarchy. Now Radev hopes to become the elected head of government. But the opposition calls him a “servant of the Kremlin.”

By Frank Stier

India

India: What concessions the EU Commission is making for the trade deal

Given India’s sheer size, the European Commission was willing to make concessions it would not have accepted in other negotiations. Even so, most reactions to the free trade agreement have been positive.

By János Allenbach-Ammann, Markus Grabitz, Lukas Knigge and Julia Dahm

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Essential intelligence for navigating European policy, regulation, and geopolitics—delivered direct from Brussels, Berlin, and EU capitals. Europe.Table provides in-depth analysis, exclusive reporting, and actionable insight on the Green Deal, the single market, and the forces shaping Europe’s future. Trusted by decision-makers in government, business, and civil society. Receive the latest issue free of charge and with no obligation.

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