The election successes of far-right parties in Germany and elsewhere is making it harder to solve social problems. Experts warn that this trend carries high costs, and not just for the economy.
It comes as Tesla battles falling sales and protests.
Although the AfD last month became the parliament’s second-largest party, she says scarcely any German reporters have talked to her. I spoke to five prominent Berlin-based journalists ...
A new T-Online poll found that of 100,000 Germans, 94 percent said they would not buy a Tesla. Only 3 percent said they'd ...
The multibillion-euro package loosens borrowing limits and allows new investments in defense, infrastructure and climate. The ...
Because Trump seems to believe he’s more pro-Israel than Schumer, he acts as if he has the right to weigh in on the validity ...
Germany’s Bundestag, or Lower House of Parliament, passed a historic bill allowing it to sidestep its strict rules on debt to ...
Middle powers, like Germany and South Africa, need to step up their collaboration while striving for a global order based on ...
A survey in Germany found that 94 per cent of the respondents would not purchase a Tesla, with Elon Musks political ...
Friedrich Merz, almost assured to be Germany’s next chancellor, is ignoring conventional wisdom when it comes to relations ...
Friedrich Merz's debt-funded investment package is still facing unknowns, that could sink the legislation and doom his ...