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      Von der Leyen criticises European far right for being ‘Putin’s proxies’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 20:38

    Commission president, who is seeking another term, took aim at group that includes AfD and National Rally in pre-election debate

    The European Commission’s president, Ursula Von der Leyen, has criticised the far-right as “Putin’s proxies”, while refusing to rule out working with other rightwing nationalists, as campaigning began ahead of June’s European elections.

    Von der Leyen is seeking a second five-year term leading the commission, in the looming reshuffle of EU top jobs that follows the European elections.

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      Europe live: Ursula von der Leyen accused of watering down green deal for farmers in European Commission presidential debate

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 17:51

    Ursula von der Leyen takes part alongside representatives from seven other parties as EU gears up for European parliament elections

    The far-right Identity and Democracy’s representative, Anders Vistisen , wrote on social media ahead of the debate:

    “The entire EU system has tried to prevent me and the right wing from participating in the EU top candidate debate tonight. They want to exclude right wing votes! They didn’t succeed - so tonight I will tell the truth about the EU’s disaster course directly to Ursula and the rest of the EU!”

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      Sunak rejects offer of mobility scheme for young people between EU and UK

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 19 April - 16:49

    Labour has also rejected European Commission’s proposal which would have allowed young people to live, work or study in the bloc

    Rishi Sunak has rejected an EU offer to strike a post-Brexit deal to allow young Britons to live, study or work in the bloc for up to four years.

    The prime minister declined the European Commission’s surprise proposal of a youth mobility scheme for those aged between 18 and 30 on Friday, after Labour had already knocked back the suggestion back on Thursday night – while noting it would “seek to improve the UK’s working relationship with the EU within our red lines”.

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      Broadcom says “many” VMware perpetual licenses got support extensions

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 17 April - 16:44

    The logo of American cloud computing and virtualization technology company VMware is seen at the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry's biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona on March 2, 2023.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Broadcom CEO Hock Tan this week publicized some concessions aimed at helping customers and partners ease into VMware’s recent business model changes. Tan reiterated that the controversial changes, like the end of perpetual licensing, aren't going away . But amid questioning from antitrust officials in the European Union (EU), Tan announced that the company has already given support extensions for some VMware perpetual license holders.

    Broadcom closed its $69 billion VMware acquisition in November. One of its first moves was ending VMware perpetual license sales in favor of subscriptions. Since December, Broadcom also hasn't sold Support and Subscription renewals for VMware perpetual licenses.

    In a blog post on Monday, Tan admitted that this shift requires "a change in the timing of customers' expenditures and the balance of those expenditures between capital and operating spending." As a result, Broadcom has "given support extensions to many customers who came up for renewal while these changes were rolling out." Tan didn't specify how Broadcom determined who is eligible for an extension or for how long. However, the executive's blog is the first time Broadcom has announced such extensions and opens the door to more extension requests.

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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      Ursula von der Leyen’s controversial EU envoy pick quits at last minute

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 09:16

    Markus Pieper resigns from €17k-a-month role hours before he was due to start amid claims of favouritism

    A row threatening to overshadow Ursula von der Leyen’s campaign for a second term as European Commission president has ended after a German colleague in her Christian Democratic Union party quit his new role as her special envoy for small businesses.

    Markus Pieper resigned from the €17,000-a-month (£14,500) role hours before he was due to start on Tuesday after pressure from MEPs and European commissioners who had raised allegations of favouritism.

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      Von der Leyen’s re-election chances hit over €17k-a-month job for ally

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 5 April - 10:47

    European Commission defends appointing adviser Markus Pieper after selection process is questioned

    Ursula von der Leyen’s bid for a second term in one of the most powerful jobs in Brussels, the presidency of the European Commission, has been dented after accusations of favouritism in the selection of a fellow party member to a lucrative new job.

    Four of some of the highest ranking people in Brussels, including the EU’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, and the French commissioner Thierry Breton, have written to her to complain that the appointment of German MEP Markus Pieper as a special adviser “has triggered questions about the transparency and impartiality of the nomination process”.

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      UN names veteran EU official Astrid Schomaker as new biodiversity chief

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 3 April - 16:53

    German’s appointment to head Convention on Biological Diversity follows global failure to meet any targets on protecting ecosystems

    The next UN biodiversity chief will be Astrid Schomaker, an EU civil servant who will be entrusted with helping the world confront the ongoing catastrophic loss of nature.

    Schomaker has been a career official with the EU commission for 30 years. A surprise appointment, she will be tasked with corralling governments to make good on their commitments to protect life on Earth – something they have not done in more than 30 years since the UN biodiversity convention was created.

    Find more age of extinction coverage here , and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X for all the latest news and features

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      EU nature restoration laws in balance as member states withdraw support

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 25 March - 13:41

    Brussels vote was cancelled after it became clear law would not pass final stage with majority vote

    The EU’s nature restoration laws are hanging in the balance after a number of member states, including Hungary and Italy, withdrew support for the legislation.

    Spain’s environment minister, Teresa Ribera, said it would be “enormously irresponsible” for countries to drop the laws, which have been two years in the making and are designed to reverse decades of damage to biodiversity on land and in waterways.

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      Ireland opens its arms to tech titans, yet shuts its eyes to failing public services | John Naughton

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 23 March - 16:00 · 1 minute

    Tax revenues from Silicon Valley giants have made the republic wealthy on paper, but housing and healthcare crises persist

    In 1956, a chap named TK “Ken” Whitaker , an Irish civil servant who had trained as an economist, was appointed permanent secretary of the finance department in Dublin at the relatively young age of 39. From his vantage point at the top of his country’s treasury, the view was bleak. The Irish republic was, economically and socially, in deep trouble. It had no natural resources, very little industry and was mired in a deep depression. Inflation and unemployment were high. Ireland’s main export was its young people, who were fleeing in thousands every year, seeking work and better lives elsewhere. The proud dream of Irish independence had produced a poor, priest-ridden statelet on the brink of failure.

    Whitaker immediately put together a team of younger officials who did a critical analysis of the country’s economic failings and came up with a set of policies for rescuing it. The resulting report, entitled First Programme for Economic Expansion, was published in November 1958, and after Seán Lemass was elected taoiseach (prime minister) in 1959, it became Ireland’s strategy for survival.

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