Trump, Europe and Greenland
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Last January, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he was eager to have an ally in the White House to go after foreign regulations “pushing” American tech firms “to censor more” content.
T HE EUROPEAN UNION and Mercosur, a bloc of South American countries, first started negotiating their trade deal last century. In 1999 Bill Clinton was in the White House, Boris Yeltsin was stumbling around the Kremlin and China had yet to join the World Trade Organisation.
The accord is expected to add only 0.05 percent to the EU’s economy and has ignited political upheaval across Europe.
Europe's latest measures to expand domestic critical minerals supplies lack the funding tools needed to spur investment and wrestle supplies from dominant countries like China.
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The protests touch on multiple hot-topic issues for Europeans including geopolitical instability, unpredictable energy markets, nuclear containment and fears related to mass migration.
President Donald Trump is not the first U.S. government official interested in Greenland. The first major attempt to control the island was in 1868.
After two years of significant underperformance, the European automotive sector is finally showing signs of a turnaround. Could this much-hated sector become an outperformer in 2026?
Their defense is two dog sleds,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday. But his derisive comments aren’t quite the full picture. Danish officials acknowledge Copenhagen has not “sufficiently” funded defense in Greenland but say the country has surged military spending for the island.