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Strasbourg suffers as coronavirus keeps Parliament awayL [url=https://www.cup-stanley.de]stanley isolierkanne[/url] ocal businesses lose out as MEPs skip monthly trips to French city.ListenAI generated Text-to-speechCopy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInEuropean Parliament has once again cancelled its trip to Strasbourg | Patrick Hertzog/AFP via Getty Ima [url=https://www.stanleycups.at]stanley flasche[/url] gesSeptember 15, 20204:58 am CETBy Ma茂a de La BaumeNot everyone at the European Parliament is missing Strasbourg 鈥?but Strasbourg is missing them.The French city should be basking in the political spotlight this week as Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivers her first State of the European Union address from its European Parliament chamber.But von der Leyen will instead make her speech in Brussels, after the Parliament once again canceled its monthly pilgrimage to Strasbourg due to worries about the coronavirus.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Parliament has not held a plenary session in Strasbourg since February 鈥?its longest-ever absence from the picturesque Alsatian city that remains its official seat, even if most of its work is now done in Brussels. And Strasbourg is feeling the economic pain, particularly its taxi drivers, restauranteurs and hoteliers.The city had hoped to welcome the Parliament back this month, having put in place a special health plan to minimize coronavirus risks. But the Parliament leaders weren ;t convinced.Many MEPs are not fans of th [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley termoska[/url] e monthly upheaval and have voted on multiple occasions to scrap t Kcuq Trade unions protest against austerity measures
Coopers mini-manifesto for Europe: beer, sausages and plenty of MonnetThe Breaking of Nations: Order and Chaos in the Twenty-First Century. By Robert Cooper Atlantic Books, approx 鈧?8 .Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailSha [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley spain[/url] re on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInNovember 19, 20035:00 pm CETDont be put off by the rather forbidding title.Robert Coopers account of the post-Cold War world, and the EUs place in it in particular, is a rivetting read.The author, head of external and politico-military affairs at the Council of Ministers, has been hailed as Europes pre-eminent scholar-diplomat by Robert Kagan, no less.AdvertisementAdvertisementCooper is also a former policy advisor to Tony Blair: perhaps it was in this role he learnt to write so persuasively and economically.Though short, this book is packed with insight and ought to be required reading for every diplomat.Cooper divides the worlds nations into three categories: lawless, pre-modern states eg Afghanistan ; modern states opposed to external interference in their domestic affairs eg China and India ; and post-modern states, epitomized by the EU, which operate a highly developed system for mutual interference in each others domestic affairs, right down to beer and sausages . Sovereignty is a seat at the table with the post-moderns achieving progress, albeit slowly, as a result of international [url=https://www.cups-stanley.de]stanley cup deutschland[/url] socialization .EU members solve seemingly intr [url=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk]stanley cups uk[/url] actable problems by adopting Jean Monnets maxim of enlarging the context ie by t
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