LATEST ARTICLES

US Senate rejects another war powers resolution to limit Trump on Iran | Donald Trump News

0

Washington, DC – A resolution to rein in US President Donald Trump’s authority to wage war with Iran has failed for the fourth time in the US Senate, where lawmakers have pledged to introduce the measure weekly.

The vote was the first since the US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire last week. Subsequent talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, failed to yield a more lasting agreement, although both sides have signalled they are open to a second round.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Prior to the fighting pause, US President Donald Trump had repeatedly threatened to strike civilian infrastructure in Iran. His threat on April 7 that a “whole civilisation will die tonight”, just hours before an agreement had been reached, stoked further calls for Congress to constrain Trump on the war.

As with past votes, the resolution on Wednesday failed mostly along party lines, 47-53, with one Republican, Rand Paul, voting in favour and one Democrat, John Fetterman, voting against.

Supporters of the resolution have maintained that Trump acted outside of constitutional authority in launching the war alongside Israel on February 28. The US Constitution reserves the decision to go to war for Congress, with presidents only able to unilaterally launch operations in instances of immediate self-defence.

The Trump administration, meanwhile, has offered a carousel of explanations for going to war, including arguing that the totality of Iran’s actions since the Islamic revolution in 1979 represented an imminent threat to the US.

Speaking before Wednesday’s vote, US Senator Chris Murphy called the conflict a “bungled, mismanaged war” that has failed to achieve several of the administration’s stated goals.

He further decried a lack of transparency from the Trump administration and oversight from Republicans in Congress.

“We should not fail to note how extraordinary it is that our Senate Republican leadership has declined to do any oversight of a war that is costing billions of dollars every week, that has already led to the loss of over a dozen American lives, that has erupted a regional war throughout the Middle East, and is literally melting down economies all over the world,” Murphy said.

Senator Jim Risch, a Republican, maintained Trump was acting within his authority as president, dismissing the measure as “a same old, same old”.

“It says President Trump: ‘Put your tail between your legs and run.’ That’s what this resolution says,” he said.

“Not only does [Trump] have the right to do this, he has the duty to do this. He took an oath to defend the people of the United States of America,” he said.

The US House of Representatives was expected to vote on its own resolution this week, with passage in the chamber considered more plausible, particularly given growing wariness of the war among some Republicans.

The success of the resolution in either chamber would be largely symbolic. Even if it passed both the House and the Senate, it could be vetoed by Trump. Both chambers would then need a likely insurmountable two-thirds vote to overcome the veto.

However, lawmakers could face a larger test at the end of April, when the war hits its 60-day mark. Under the War Powers Act of 1973, the US Congress must authorise the military action at that point or approve a 30-day extension.

Otherwise, Trump would be legally required to begin withdrawing forces.

US blockade continues

On Wednesday, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said that no ships entering or exiting Iranian ports had successfully crossed the US blockade in the Strait of Hormuz over the last 48 hours. CENTCOM said that nine vessels had complied with US military commands to turn around.

In a separate statement, the US Navy said it was warning ships that “vessels will be boarded for interdiction and seizure transiting to or from Iranian ports”.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, meanwhile, said Washington was preparing a new raft of actions that would be the “financial equivalent” of military attacks. The US had lifted some sanctions on Iran amid the war to lower soaring global energy prices.

Speaking to reporters, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the Trump administration had not formally requested an extension of the two-week ceasefire, which is set to end next week.

She struck an optimistic tone on the prospect of a second round of US-Iran talks in Islamabad.

“At this moment, we remain very much engaged in these negotiations, in these talks,” she said.

Meanwhile, Iran’s state-owned television channel reported that a high-level Pakistani delegation had arrived in Tehran to coordinate a new round of talks.

Still, Major-General Ali Abdollahi, the commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), warned that the ongoing naval blockade could end the fragile pause in fighting.

“If the aggressor and terrorist US seeks to continue its illegal action of imposing a naval blockade in the region and to create insecurity for Iran’s commercial vessels and oil tankers, this action by the US will constitute a prelude to a violation of the ceasefire,” he said.



Source link

Access Denied

0


Access Denied You don’t have permission to access “http://news.sky.com/story/small-boat-migrant-tried-to-break-into-londons-israeli-embassy-as-revenge-for-deaths-in-gaza-13532255” on this server.

Reference #18.c5d07868.1776284848.4db34505

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.c5d07868.1776284848.4db34505



Source link

Hunter Biden moved overseas, attorney reveals in court filing

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Former first son Hunter Biden has reportedly moved out of the United States just a year after his father left the presidential office in 2025. 

Hunter’s attorney, Barry Coburn, disclosed his client’s current living situation in an April 6 court filing tied to a civil lawsuit over unpaid legal fees.

“Mr. Biden lives abroad,” the document stated. “He cannot pay his current lawyers.” 

It remains unclear where Hunter Biden has relocated. However, he indicated late last year that he had been visiting Cape Town in South Africa, where his wife, Melissa Cohen Biden, is originally from.

PRESIDENT BIDEN PARDONS HIS SIBLINGS JUST MINUTES BEFORE LEAVING OFFICE 

Former President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden

Former President Joe Biden, left, and his son, Hunter Biden, stand side-by-side.  (Getty Images)

“When all of the political and personal stuff came to an end in the last six months, I had always promised that we would spend some time over here,” Biden said during an interview on The Wide Awake Podcast, based in South Africa. “We’re trying to be between Cape Town and the States, go back and forth.” 

“I’ve fallen madly in love with Cape Town,” he added. “You guys do not know how good you have it here. It’s the most beautiful city in the world.”

Hunter Biden, Jill Biden and Melissa Cohen Biden depart federal court.

First lady Jill Biden, Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, joined by his wife Melissa Cohen Biden, leave the J. Caleb Boggs Federal Building on June 11, 2024 in Wilmington, Delaware. A federal jury has convicted Hunter Biden on all three federal felony gun charges he faced.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

DAVID AXELROD QUESTIONS BIDEN’S MASCULINITY AFTER LAST-SECOND FAMILY PARDONS: ‘MAN UP’

The recent filing was submitted in a Washington, D.C., civil court by Winston & Strawn LLP, which is suing Hunter Biden for unpaid legal fees tied to its prior representation of him in a felony gun trial in Delaware and a tax crimes prosecution in California

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Former President Joe Biden pardoned him on all federal charges before leaving office in 2025. 



Source link

Us: America said – did not request to extend the ceasefire with Iran, next meeting will be held in Pakistan – Us Had Not Formally Requested Extension Of Ceasefire With Iran: White House

0

The United States said on Wednesday it has not made any formal request to extend the temporary ceasefire with Iran. This ceasefire declared on April 7 is going to end next Tuesday.



What did the White House press secretary say?
White House press secretary Carolyn Leavitt said there were some false reports this morning that we had made a formal request to extend the ceasefire. This is not true at this time. We are fully engaged in these talks. You’ve heard this week from the Vice President (JD Vance) and the President (Donald Trump) that these conversations are yielding results and continuing and that’s where we are right now. We see hope for a compromise. The President had also mentioned this in his interview yesterday. It is in Iran’s interest to accept the demands of the President (Trump). I believe that he has made his conditions clear to the other side in these talks. We will see further which direction the talks go.

Also read: Iran played a big bet: Amidst Pope-Trump controversy, made a funny proposal to Italy, shadow post on social media

When asked where the next peace talks would take place, Leavitt said the next meeting would most likely be held where the last one took place. Pakistan is the only mediator in this conversation, while many countries of the world are offering help. The President believes that it is important to take this dialogue forward through Pakistan and hence this process is ongoing.

Could the US oil blockade snuff out the Cuban cigar? | International Trade News

0

New pressures on a straining industry

Still, tobacco remains Cuba’s top export, and in 2024, its government reported record revenue from its sale: nearly $827m.

Lloyd Smith explained that the demand is linked to prestige. Around the globe, Habanos are considered a symbol of luxury.

“A lot of people, when they think of the cigar, they automatically think of Cuban cigars,” he said.

That reputation for exclusivity has been bolstered, in part, by the fact that Cuban cigars are illegal in the US due to a longstanding embargo.

The trade restrictions were largely a response to the 1959 Cuban Revolution, which ushered in the island’s communist government.

The new regime quickly nationalised the island’s industries, much to the ire of US authorities.

Traditional tobacco brands like Montecristo and Romeo y Julieta fell under state control, and new products were launched. They included the premium cigar brand Cohiba, a favourite of the late Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro.

A Havana local smokes a cigar whilst fishing on the Malecón. [Euan Wallace/ Al Jazeera]
A Havana resident smokes a cigar while fishing on the Malecon, the Havana seawall [Euan Wallace/Al Jazeera]

But experts say the US blockade has exacerbated the woes of a cigar industry that has faced multiple supply-side shocks in recent years.

In September 2022, Hurricane Ian ravaged Pinar del Rio, damaging as many as 90 percent of the province’s tobacco curing barns, where the leaves are dried.

That season saw just 5,150 hectares (13,725 acres) of tobacco planted, the lowest level since records began. Tobacco growth has remained sluggish in the years since.

Just last month, the Cuban government announced it had failed to meet its target for the 2025-2026 growing season, set at 12,152 hectares (30,028 acres). That goal had already been revised down in September due to heavy rains.

Those crises have lowered cigar supplies, both domestically and abroad.

In 2024, the island exported 50 million cigars, little more than half of the 93.9 million shipped abroad in 2018, according to Tabacuba, the state-owned tobacco company.

While Tabacuba has not shared data from the past year, industry insiders say exports have slowed even further in recent months.

Some cigar sellers have not received shipments of Habanos since last year, says Lloyd Smith, while others are getting smaller deliveries less often.

Chetan Seth, the president of India’s only Cuban cigar importer, Cingari, told Al Jazeera that “international logistics have slowed down the delivery of cigars”.

But, he added, “stocks are available”.



Source link

Windward AI says Iran bypasses US blockade via offshore oil networks

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Iran is moving tens of millions of barrels of oil through covert offshore networks to bypass the new U.S. blockade on its ports, maritime intelligence firm Windward AI says.

The blockade, which took effect April 13, came amid a two-week ceasefire and failed peace talks between the U.S. and Iran, and as President Donald Trump insisted the waterway must remain open, through which roughly 20% of the world’s oil passes.

“Iranian oil distribution continues through indirect routing and offshore transfer networks,” Windward told Fox News Digital.

“As of April 13, at least 11 tankers carrying approximately 20 million barrels of Iranian oil are positioned offshore Malaysia within a ship-to-ship transfer hub,” the firm determined.

TRUMP DETAILS SWEEPING ‘ALL OR NOTHING’ BLOCKADE OF STRAIT OF HORMUZ AFTER FAILED IRAN TALKS

Vessel passing through the Strait of Hormuz in Oman

A ship is seen passing through the Strait of Hormuz during a two-week temporary ceasefire between the United States and Iran on April 8, 2026. (Shady Alassar/Anadolu/Getty Images)

“These vessels are likely awaiting counterpart vessels for offloading or preparing for onward movement.”

Windward also clarified that the concentration highlights Iran’s “continued use of offshore storage and transfer mechanisms.”

This allows Iranian oil flows to “persist outside direct transit through the Strait.”

“Dark activity remains a central enabler of ongoing operations, supporting both post-transit port calls and broader evasion strategies,” Windward added.

“At the same time, Iranian oil flows are increasingly routed through offshore hubs, reducing reliance on direct Hormuz transit.”

U.S. forces began implementing the blockade at 10 a.m. ET April 13 after Trump vowed to block “any and all ships from trying to enter or leave” the strait, following weeks of pressure on Tehran.

IRAN THREATENS TO HALT RED SEA TRAFFIC IN RESPONSE TO US MILITARY BLOCKADE OF PORTS

Fishing boats and cargo ships sailing in the Arabian Gulf near the United Arab Emirates

Fishing boats dot the sea as cargo ships, in the background, sail through the Arabian Gulf toward the Strait of Hormuz off the United Arab Emirates, Friday, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo)

As previously reported by Fox News Digital, the U.S. military confirmed Wednesday it stopped nine oil tankers from attempting to breach the blockade.

“During the first 48 hours of the U.S. blockade on ships entering and exiting Iranian ports, no vessels have made it past U.S. forces,” U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said.

“Additionally, nine vessels have complied with direction from U.S. forces to turn around and return toward an Iranian port or coastal area,” CENTCOM wrote on X.

Fox News was also told all nine vessels were oil tankers. None of the vessels ordered to turn around needed to be boarded by U.S. forces, a senior U.S. defense official said.

On the first “full day” of the blockade, April 14, however, under active U.S. enforcement, Windward noted vessel behavior indicating “a fragmented and uneven response to the blockade.”

“Initial movements show a combination of continued transit, route deviation and potential evasion,” the firm said.

MORNING GLORY: THE US-IRAN NEGOTIATIONS IN ISLAMABAD BECAME REYKJAVÍK 2.0

An oil tanker waiting in a queue in the Persian Gulf near Iran.

This oil tanker is in a queue and is waiting for its turn to get loaded by barrels of oil. Here is the Persian Gulf in the south of Iran where there are numbers of Iranian and Arab oil and gas suppliers. (Farzad Frames/Getty Images)

“Sanctioned and falsely flagged vessels remain active, with some proceeding through the Strait while others delay, reverse course or adjust routing patterns.

“Iranian oil flows continue through indirect distribution networks, with significant volumes accumulating offshore rather than transiting directly through Hormuz.”

CENTCOM said the blockade would apply only to maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports.

It stressed that U.S. forces would not “impede freedom of navigation” for vessels transiting the strait to and from other destinations.

The blockade on the key trade route would be enforced “impartially” against any vessels entering or departing Iranian ports, including those in the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman.

So far, sanctioned and falsely flagged vessels continue to operate under evolving enforcement conditions.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Rich Starry, a U.S.-sanctioned handy-size tanker signaling laden status, resumed outbound transit after previously turning around.

Windward said that its routing did not follow the Larak Island corridor and instead aligned with the alternative outbound path proposed by Iran.

At the same time, Murlikishan, a U.S.-sanctioned chemical tanker, was also observed journeying inbound, Windward clarified.



Source link

Guterres urges end to arms flow as Sudan war enters fourth year | Sudan war

0

NewsFeed

The flow of weapons to Sudan must stop, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pleaded on the third anniversary of the country’s war, saying committing money to humanitarian programmes is not enough to stop the conflict.



Source link

Saudi Arabia Reportedly Set To Cut LIV Golf Funding, Putting League In Jeopardy

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

It appears Saudi Arabia has reached its spending limit on LIV Golf.

The Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (PIF), the sole funder of the breakaway golf circuit, announced a new five-year investment strategy on Wednesday with a focus on reprioritizing spending, and spending hundreds of millions more dollars on LIV Golf doesn’t seem to be part of the plan.

The Financial Times has reported that the PIF is “on the verge of cutting its support” for LIV Golf. An announcement regarding Saudi involvement – or lack thereof – with LIV could come as soon as Thursday, according to the report.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Bryson DeChambeau hits

Bryson DeChambeau of Crushers GC plays during day four of LIV Golf South Africa at The Club at Steyn City in Johannesburg, South Africa, on March 22, 2026. (Johan Rynners/Getty Images)

Author and longtime golf reporter Alan Shipnuck also relayed a message on X from a player’s agent that Mohammed bin Salman, the ruler of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, could look to use the ongoing war in Iran as a “force majeure” to cut off LIV’s funding.

LIV Golf’s immediate future would be entirely up in the air if the Saudi PIF were to cut off funding. How or if the league will continue to operate, and in what capacity, is the great unknown, as is what the future of its many players may look like.

The potentially sport-shifting news comes after many months of speculation that operationally – both front-facing and behind the scenes – things had reached a tipping point in terms of spending, big-name players leaving the circuit, and overall interest in LIV Golf hitting a standstill.

In late February, it was reported that LIV Golf’s net spending per month averaged $100 million in 2024 and 2025. For the 2026 season, LIV’s fifth, Saudi PIF Governor Yasir Al Rumayyan reportedly approved a fresh $266.6 million capital injection into the circuit, bringing the Saudi PIF’s cumulative investment in LIV Golf to $5.3 billion since 2021.

SERGIO GARCIA APOLOGIZES FOR HIS MASTERS MELTDOWN, SAYS HE REGRETS HIS ACTIONS

LIV Golf logo

A general view of the LIV GOLF logo during round 1 of the LIV Golf Invitational Series on July 29, 2022 at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey. (Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The Saudi PIF reportedly injected north of $1 billion into LIV Golf in 2021, 2022, 2024, and 2025. The $266 million injection to begin 2026, an increase in prize funds for the season, and the net spend of $100 million per month, the Saudi PIF’s cumulative investment was set to blow past $6 billion by the end of 2026.

While minor details compared to billions in spending, LIV shifted from its original tournament format of playing 54-hole events to 72-hole events beginning in 2026, resulting in the league being recognized by the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) system for the first time since its inception. Players receiving OWGR points made their paths into golf’s major championships more accessible. 

Five-time major champion Brooks Koepka, along with former Masters champion Patrick Reed, delivered a significant blow to LIV with surprising exits from the circuit in January 2026. Kopepka has already returned to the Tour via its Returning Members Program, while Reed is set to earn his Tour card back ahead of the 2027 PGA Tour season. 

Bryson DeChambeau, Phil Mickelson, Jon Rahm, Joaquin Niemann, and Tyrrell Hatton were the headline players for the circuit this season.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Brooks Koepka walks the 11th hole

Brooks Koepka on the 11th hole at The Old White at the Greenbrier on Aug. 18, 2024. (Bob Donnan/USA TODAY Sports)

LIV is set to host a tournament in Mexico City beginning on Thursday. As rumors of a bombshell announcement regarding the circuit’s future began to gain traction, a Wednesday report from The Telegraph explained that LIV Golf executives had been called to a meeting in New York, and none of the execs were on site in Mexico on Tuesday.

LIV Golf held its inaugural event in England in June 2022. After the PGA Tour spent the better part of a year distancing itself from the circuit in every conceivable way, the Tour announced a merger with LIV Golf three days ahead of the circuit’s one-year anniversary. The 2023 announcement signaled the start of a partnership that combined the Tour’s own business with the Saudi Public Investment Fund’s commercial businesses and rights (including LIV Golf) as well as the DP World Tour into a new, collectively owned, for-profit entity.

Aside from the announcement of the merger, there had been few updates on what the next steps would look like for the partnership. The Tour’s official statement announcing the merger read that LIV Golf would technically be dissolved, with the PIF picking up a very large seat at the table that operates the PGA Tour and professional golf.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



Source link

Allbirds shoe company moving to AI infra is the top • The Register

0

OPINION Back in December 2017, an obscure American soft drinks company changed its name from Long Island Iced Tea to Long Blockchain.

Never mind that the company had no background in technology. Forget about the strange borrowed name – Long Island iced tea was actually a generic name for a very strong cocktail that was popular in the 1980s (although growing up in Seattle, we always called it “Electric Iced Tea,” perhaps because we were so far away from New York that “Long Island” meant nothing to us). It didn’t matter! This was during the first crypto boomlet and the company’s shares more than tripled in value, giving the tiny company a market cap of over $90 million.

That turned out to be the peak of that particular bubble. Crypto prices headed off into their first crypto winter, with Bitcoin losing more than half its value by next September. That boom-bust cycle has repeated itself twice more at greater volume since then. Fortunes were won and lost, fraudsters went to jail and were pardoned, and there’s still no clear, obvious, technical use for the blockchain or cryptocurrency in general, apart from speculation and situations where you might otherwise be using a suitcase full of unmarked US dollar bills (illegal transactions, escaping countries with collapsing currencies, and so on).

History is repeating itself. On Wednesday, Allbirds, a venture-backed company that made woolen shoes for Silicon Valley hipsters and went public in 2021, announced that it was pivoting to AI infrastructure and changing its name to NewBird AI. This came weeks after the company, once valued at over $4 billion by stock traders, closed its US full-priced stores and sold its intellectual property and assets for $39 million.

Investors, seeing the word “AI,” bid the stock up more than 600 percent. Never mind that the company has zero experience in AI and is trying to compete with massively funded companies to “acquire high-performance GPU assets,” which it can then rent to customers. At least when the crypto miners pivoted to AI, they had some experience building and running datacenters filled with banks of computers.

History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. We’ve been seeing all kinds of signs that the financial underpinnings of the AI bubble are getting rickety. Reports abound that Anthropic is throttling throughput and compromising quality to save money. Investors are reportedly calling foul on OpenAI’s last announced valuation of eight hundred eleventy gazillion dollars, weeks after its most recent fundraising round opened investment to retail traders (translation: bag holders) through an exchange-traded fund. OpenAI itself is pulling back on its plan to build massive numbers of hypermegadatacenters to power the AI revolution, as partner Oracle seems to be developing chilly feet.

What difference does this make to the humble IT worker in the trenches? You’re not an investor or gambler or financial TV talking head. Financial bubbles come and go, but the server rooms and networks have to keep running, patches need to be deployed, and user tickets must be handled.

But financial bubbles can distort reality. When this many people have this much money riding on a particular technology, there will be a flood of hype around said technology. Keep your head on straight and ask yourself, really, is the set of software products that the industry is now calling “AI” helping you do new things, or is it simply shuffling work around to different people? Is it saving you time, or creating new messes that you (and other people) have to then clean up later? Is it actually delivering results? Is it worth what you’re paying for it?

Because if there is, in fact, an AI bubble, any of these products that have actual value may become a lot cheaper after it pops.

By the way, if you’re curious about whatever happened to Long Blockchain, the SEC delisted it in February 2021 and charged three people connected with insider trading. One of the defendants later settled with the SEC without admitting or denying the allegations. ®



Source link

Hungary’s Magyar urges president to quit, vows to overhaul state media | Politics News

0

Incoming Prime Minister Peter Magyar says his government could be formed by mid-May.

Hungary’s Prime Minister-elect Peter Magyar has announced plans to overhaul state media and called for the country’s president to resign, as he moves to form a new government following his party’s landmark election victory.

Magyar’s Tisza (Respect and Freedom) ⁠party won a landslide victory in Sunday’s election, ending right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s 16 years in power.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Magyar announced on Wednesday in interviews with state media outlets that one of his first acts in government will be to suspend public media news broadcasts.

Making a rare appearance on state television, his first in a year and a half, he clashed with anchors he accused of years of biased coverage, later describing the interview on X as witnessing “the last days of a propaganda machine”.

In a Facebook post, Magyar said employees of public broadcaster MTVA had “worked under total intimidation and political terror”, and alleged that shortly after his interview.

“Every Hungarian deserves a public service media that broadcasts the truth,” Magyar said on Kossuth state radio.

“We will need a little time to pass a new media law, a new media authority and setting up the professional conditions for state media to actually do what it is meant to do.”

Orban’s government oversaw the near-disappearance of independent media, with a conglomerate backed by his allies now controlling more than 400 outlets across Hungary.

Magyar also met President Tamas Sulyok at the Alexander Palace in Budapest, and said in a post on social media that Sulyok was “unworthy to embody the unity of the Hungarian nation”, demanding he leave office once the new government is formed.

Magyar faces a pressing economic challenge alongside his political one. More than 16 billion euros ($19bn) in European Union COVID-19 pandemic recovery funding remains blocked over rule-of-law concerns, with an end-of-August deadline to meet Brussels’ conditions or risk losing the money.

Hungary’s incoming PM said he had already spoken with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and agreed to begin informal consultations before the government is formally constituted in May.

“I explained it clearly to her as well, and we have made it clear before, that ‌we can only comply with conditions that are good for Hungarian people, good for Hungarian businesses and, in general, for our country.”

He outlined four priority reform areas: anti-corruption measures including joining the European Public Prosecutor’s Office, restoring judicial independence, and rebuilding media and academic freedoms.

Analysts warn that the reform path will be complicated, with Orban loyalists entrenched across key public institutions.



Source link