Share

Europod • News
Citizenship and workers’ rights on the ballot in Italy’s referendum
Season 1, Ep. 106
•
On Sunday and Monday, June 8 and 9, Italians are heading to the polls for five referendums. These are abrogative referendums, meaning citizens are being asked whether to repeal existing laws or parts of them.
And to be valid, turnout must reach 50% plus one of eligible voters. But what is at the core of these referendums and can they pass?
Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.
Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.
Follow us on:
More episodes
View all episodes
127. EU races to finalize trade deal as US proposes 10% tariff with strings attached
05:06||Season 1, Ep. 127So, time is ticking but there is still no trade agreement between the European Union and the Trump administration. Negotiations have intensified in recent days, but European Commission officials informed EU ambassadors yesterday that there’s no deal in place, not even an agreement in principle. What are the most plausible scenarios following these negotiations?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram126. Can Spain’s Sánchez survive the corruption scandal web?
04:53||Season 1, Ep. 126It’s been a turbulent few weeks in Spanish politics, with corruption scandals surfacing one after another. This past weekend was meant to be a reset for Sánchez’s Socialist party, the PSOE, a chance to move past the controversies. Instead, they found themselves facing yet another crisis. But, can Pedro Sánchez survive the growing web of corruption scandals engulfing his government, or is Spain’s last centre-left administration running out of political oxygen?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram125. Trump-Putin call and US military aid pause leave Ukraine in strategic limbo
04:42||Season 1, Ep. 125The United States has paused the delivery of key military systems to Ukraine, including Patriot air defense missiles, Stinger systems, and precision-guided munitions. This decision comes at a time when Russia is intensifying its military offensive along the 1,000-kilometer front line and increasing missile and drone strikes on Ukrainian cities. But what happens now and what can Zelenskyy expect from Europe?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram124. No-confidence vote against von der Leyen: High drama, low stakes?
04:48||Season 1, Ep. 124Next week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will stand before the European Parliament in Strasbourg to face a no-confidence vote. This is the first time in over a decade that a Commission president has been dragged into such a debate. And although the outcome is all but certain, the motion is very unlikely to pass, it’s more symbolic of the mounting pressure von der Leyen is under. But what triggered this?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram123. EU debates 90% emissions cut by 2040 amid record heat
04:58||Season 1, Ep. 123As much of Europe roasts under a heat dome, the EU’s top officials are sweating it out too but not just from the 40-degree temperatures. Today, the European Commission is meeting to decide how much the bloc should cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, a milestone on the road to net zero by 2050. But is Europe serious about tackling the climate crisis, or is it too hot for political courage?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram122. Denmark takes over the EU wheel: What’s at stake?
04:50||Season 1, Ep. 122As of today, Denmark holds the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union for the next six months, inheriting it from Poland. The official priorities for the Danes are security and defense, economic resilience and competitiveness. But why is this presidential term more important than ever before?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram121. Resignations and responsibility: Mitsotakis under fire over EU funds fraud
04:56||Season 1, Ep. 121Today’s Cabinet meeting in Greece is a real crisis management moment. Because over the past 72 hours, Greece has witnessed the resignation of one minister, Makis Voridis, three deputy ministers, and two senior party officials, all following allegations tied to a massive EU subsidy fraud. But what’s this scandal about and can Mitsotakis claim political responsibility while dodging legal accountability?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram120. Budapest pride ban and transparency law: What’s at Stake in Hungary? - with MEP Daniel Freund
12:02||Season 1, Ep. 120All eyes are on Budapest this weekend, where the annual Pride march has been banned by Hungarian authorities, citing laws against so-called “LGBTQ propaganda”. But the parade is going ahead anyway on Saturday, and so are the politics.Among those attending is MEP Daniel Freund, who has long criticised Viktor Orbán’s government for its attacks on democracy, civil society, and LGBTQ rights. In this episode, we speak to him about the proposed Transparency of Public Life law, the ban, what’s at stake for Hungary and the EU, and is Brussels finally ready to get serious?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram119. €72,461 per bed at Meloni’s offshore migrant hubs in Albania
04:52||Season 1, Ep. 119€72,461 per bed. That’s how much Italy is now spending to build offshore migrant centres in Albania, more than 11 times the cost of similar facilities at home according to an investigation published by Follow the Money. This was Giorgia Meloni’s grand plan: a tough-on-migration deal to transfer those intercepted at sea to Albania, fast-track their asylum claims, and repatriate them. Her government called it “extraordinary”, and the EU’s Ursula von der Leyen even praised it as “out-of-the-box thinking.”But why has Italy’s offshore migration policy evolved into a costly and legally questionable scheme?Join us on our journey through the events that shape the European continent and the European Union.Production: By Europod, in co production with Sphera Network.Follow us on:LinkedInInstagram