Trump sought Greenland during his first term in office, saying in 2019 that it was “hurting Denmark very badly” by costing the nation $700 million a year. He said the United States could scoop it up.
Social conservatives across Europe see President Donald Trump’s decisive victory as the beginning of a larger global campaign to undo decades of progressive policies in Western nations.
Brando Benifei, Bernd Lange, Eva Maydell, Sophie Wilmès and David McAllister — all lawmakers belonging to the Parliament’s centrist parties — will be attending, according to two MEPs and one official. But they are late to the party. Far-right factions, traditionally sidelined from Parliament’s business by the mainstream, are beating them to it.
Anders Vitisen, a member of the right-wing Danish People's Party hit out at the US new president for his continued desire to purchase Greenland.
While Europe's military heavyweights have already said that meeting President Donald Trump's potential challenge to spend up to 5% of their economic output on security won't be easy, it would be an especially tall order for Spain.
BRUSSELS, Jan 23 (Bernama-dpa) -- The European Commission has rejected US President Donald Trump's claims that the United States runs a trade deficit of US$350 billion with the European Union, reported German news agency dpa.
Donald Trump's presidency in the United States will trigger a new right-wing surge in Europe, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Monday, launching what he called an offensive to "occupy" Brussels.
President Donald Trump is acting on his campaign promises at the fastest clip in modern memory — sending almost hourly shockwaves through the government, the legal system, the science community and around the world.
Ukraine welcomes Trump’s threat to sanction Russian oil and gas even harder - US president says no desire to hurt Russia but asks Mr Putin to ‘settle now and stop this ridiculous war’
United States President Donald Trump is right when it comes to Europe's responsibility to significantly boost its own defense spending, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Wednesday in the European Parliament. "If Europe is to survive, it needs to be armed," he said.
As the Commission struggles to find new outlets for its exports, the question of whether this will be enough in the face of the tariffs Donald Trump is threatening to impose remains open. #EuropeNews