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Europe had barely switched off its out-of-office replies before geopolitics came
roaring back.
In the first days of January, events in Caracas — and rhetoric from Washington —
jolted Brussels out of its post-holiday slumber and straight back into crisis
mode. A U.S. special forces operation captured Venezuela’s president, Nicolás
Maduro, and left more than 100 people dead, reopening old questions about power,
sovereignty and just how reliable an ally the United States really is.
This week on EU Confidential, host Sarah Wheaton is joined by Allison Hoffman,
Nick Vinocur, Eva Hartog and Bartosz Brzeziński to unpack what Donald Trump’s
moves in Venezuela reveal about the world he’s shaping — and the uncomfortable
position they leave Europe in.
They dig into Moscow’s humiliation — and the opportunities it may see in chaos —
renewed U.S. pressure over Greenland, Europe’s mounting doubts about American
security guarantees for Ukraine, and how Brussels is trying to navigate a world
where raw power seems to be back in fashion.
Tag - EU Confidential
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He’s not even European — yet Donald Trump has topped POLITICO’s annual P28
ranking of the most powerful people who will shape Europe in 2026.
EU Confidential host Sarah Wheaton takes you inside the gala in Brussels — where
commissioners, MEPs, diplomats, lobbyists and journalists packed into a
glittering room, even as the mood underneath the sparkle felt unusually tense.
At the event, Ursula von der Leyen sat down with Carrie Budoff Brown, POLITICO’s
executive editor, for an exclusive on-stage conversation — offering one of her
first public reactions to Trump’s sharp criticism of EU leaders as “weak,” and
Washington’s dramatic new security strategy, which seeks to undermine them.
Be sure to check out the full 2026 ranking here.
Plus, we bring you Sarah’s conversation with Balázs Orbán, the Hungarian prime
minister’s political director, who offers a perspective far outside the Brussels
mainstream — on Ukraine, on Europe’s political direction, and on where he
believes the EU keeps going wrong.
And finally, we have a taste of Anne McElvoy’s interview with Nick
Thomas-Symonds, the U.K.’s minister for European relations (for more, head to:
Politics at Sam and Anne’s ).
And if you haven’t yet, listen to the exclusive interview our colleague Dasha
Burns did with Donald Trump on our sister podcast The Conversation.
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Washington–Moscow peace maneuvers caught Europe off guard this week — raising
questions about the EU’s continued relevance and readiness at a pivotal moment
for Ukraine.
Nick Vinocur, one of our regular guests, takes the host seat this time to speak
with Veronika Melkozerova in Kyiv about how these peace talks look from inside a
country still under attack.
Then POLITICO’s finance reporter Bjarke Smith-Meyer and Wouter Verschelden,
author of Belgium’s influential political newsletter W16, break down the EU’s
internal fight over Russia’s frozen assets — arguably Europe’s strongest
political and financial leverage in the peace-talk moment — and examine why
Belgium continues to block the reparations loan Ukraine urgently needs.
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Europe faces a growing dilemma: how to protect children online without breaking
digital privacy for everyone.
A new report from the Internet Watch Foundation found that 62 percent of
all child sexual abuse material discovered online last year was hosted on EU
servers. It’s a shocking statistic that has left Brussels locked in a heated
debate over how far new regulations should go — and whether scanning encrypted
messages could be justified, even at the cost of privacy and the risk of mass
surveillance.
Host Sarah Wheaton is joined by POLITICO’s Sam Clark, Eliza Gkritsi and Océane
Herrero to unpack Europe’s child safety regulations — and the balance between
protecting kids, protecting privacy and policing platforms. The conversation
also touches on the latest controversy out of France, involving Shein — the
fast-fashion giant caught selling childlike sex dolls online.
Then, from Europe’s digital dilemmas to Albania’s digital experiment: Gordon
Repinski, host of POLITICO’s Berlin Playbook podcast, sits down with Albanian
Prime Minister Edi Rama, who has appointed the world’s first artificial
intelligence minister — a virtual woman named Diella. Rama explains why he
believes Diella could help fight corruption, cut bureaucracy and speed up
Albania’s path toward EU membership.
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Is it enough to come first in an election?
In the Netherlands, you hear that centrist Rob Jetten won big and Geert Wilders’
far right lost a lot — even though either one could still turn out to be No. 1
when all the votes are counted.
Eva Hartog breaks down the results of the Dutch election with host Sarah
Wheaton, and Max Griera reflects on what Frans Timmermans’ defeat means for
social democrats all over Europe.
Then, our Berlaymont Who’s Who series is back, with an introduction to Vice
President of the European Commission Roxana Mînzatu of Romania.
Finally, Shawn Pogatchnik takes us through last week’s Irish presidential
election, which was, in contrast to the Dutch vote, a bright spot for the
political left.
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The EU wants to lend €140 billion in cash from frozen Russian funds to Ukraine;
Belgium is afraid it will be the one on the hook for paying it back. That’s just
one of the tough topics EU leaders discussed as they gathered in Brussels at a
meeting devoted to fighting the external threat from Russian President Vladimir
Putin — and the internal threat from the far right.
POLITICO’s Gregorio Sorgi breaks down why lending Russian frozen assets is so
tricky, while host Sarah Wheaton catches up with colleagues Zia Weise, Gabriel
Gavin, Nick Vinocur and Tim Ross on the ground at the European Council summit to
get a handle on how debates over climate, sanctions and deregulation played
out.
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French President Emmanuel Macron has gone from “Mr. Europe” eight years ago to
the solitary man by the Seine. At the same time, ex-German Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s legacy is also going through a sudden and sharp downgrade. How did
these centrist pillars of Europe tank so quickly? With parties on the far right
and far left rising up in their place, are citizens actually becoming more
extreme — or are they just fed up?
To discuss these questions, host Sarah Wheaton was joined by John Kampfner — an
expert on Germany, Nick Vinocour — our chief foreign affairs correspondent, and
Clea Caulcutt — our senior correspondent in Paris. Plus, we dive into the
alleged espionage scandal facing Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and Commissioner Olivér
Várhelyi.
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“Europe is in a fight.”
With those words, Ursula von der Leyen set the tone for her State of the
European Union speech — framing this as Europe’s “Independence Moment.” She
proposed sanctions on extremist Israeli ministers over Gaza; floated using
frozen Russian assets for Ukraine; and backed calls for a drone wall to protect
the bloc’s eastern flank against Russia. She also pledged action on jobs,
poverty and housing.
But were those fighting words enough to bridge the gap between promises and
reality — or did they simply paper over a fraying coalition?
Host Sarah Wheaton is joined by Rym Momtaz, editor-in-chief of Carnegie Europe’s
Strategic Europe blog; Carsten Brzeski, ING’s global head of macro research; and
Sorcha Edwards, secretary general of Housing Europe, to unpack the geopolitics,
economics and social policy in the speech. We’ll also hear from POLITICO’s Max
Griera in Strasbourg, with on-the-ground reactions from MEPs — and look across
the border to France, where President Emmanuel Macron faces fresh political
turmoil after the government of Prime Minister François Bayrou collapsed.
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Under the jackhammers on Schuman, Brussels is filling back up for the rentrée —
and the fault lines are showing.
Host Sarah Wheaton is joined by colleagues Clea Caulcutt, Nick Vinocur and Paul
Dallison to unpack a cliff-edge week: France’s confidence vote on an austerity
budget that could topple Prime Minister François Bayrou and push Paris back into
chaos; Europe’s next moves on Ukraine; and Ursula von der Leyen’s big address in
Strasbourg on the EU’s place in a shifting world. It’s a tough speech to
deliver, with few clear wins to trumpet.
Plus, our resident comedian brings von der Leyen bingo back: Place your bets on
how many times she will say “competitiveness.”
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From a picturesque mountain resort in Austria, at the European Forum Alpbach,
host Sarah Wheaton unpacks fresh threats by the U.S. to hit countries with
tariffs over their digital rules — drawing instant reactions from the European
Commission’s Sabine Weyand and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz. She then sits
down with former Spanish Foreign Minister — now dean of the Paris School of
International Affairs at Sciences Po — Arancha González Laya, to ask how Europe
can move from “limping along” to setting the pace on trade, tech and alliances.