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‘National-conservative’ CPAC convenes in Budapest

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The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), the standard-bearer of the global “national-conservative” movement, will convene tomorrow in Budapest.

The CPAC Hungary event aims to mark the European right’s “transition to activism and proactivity.” This statement was made by the director of the “Center for Fundamental Rights,” the organizer of CPAC Hungary.

Speakers at the event, established in 2022 as an extension of CPAC in the US, include leaders of the right-wing alliance Patriots for Europe (PfE), which currently forms the third-largest group in the European Parliament and includes the French National Rally (RN), the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ), the Italian Lega, and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s party Fidesz.

Right-wing politicians from North and South America, Australia, and Israel are also expected to attend the event. Among its aims is the creation of a global network. This year’s CPAC, emboldened by the prospect of Trump’s return to the White House, has declared its goal to “conquer Brussels” after the White House.

CPAC: From a marginal Republican organization to a global network

CPAC has been organized by a Republican group in the US since 1974.

Initially designed as a networking meeting with a limited number of participants, the conference transformed into a major event with thousands of guests starting in the 2000s.

Aligned with Trumpian Republicans for over a decade, the conference offers its activists and supporters an opportunity to come together, exchange ideas, and develop relationships.

Since the beginning of US President Donald Trump’s first term in 2017, the event’s organizers have been working to expand their structures worldwide.

CPAC was established in Japan in 2017, in South Korea, Australia, and Brazil in 2019, in Mexico and Israel in 2022, and in Argentina in 2024.

In 2019, the organizers of the original CPAC began exploring Budapest to create an impact in Europe, and the first CPAC Hungary finally took place in 2022.

Organized by the Center for Fundamental Rights (Alapjogokért Központ) in Budapest, the event is held annually. Founded in 2013, the Center for Fundamental Rights operates on the basis of “national identity, sovereignty, and Christian traditions” and is an organization close to Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

Conquering Brussels after the White House

While CPAC Hungary has primarily focused on bringing together right-wing activists, publicists, and politicians from around the world, things seem to be starting to change.

While the events in 2022 and 2023 primarily aimed at strengthening and connecting their own structures (the slogan for 2023 was “Together we are strong”), CPAC 2024 is cautiously signaling a move towards an offensive.

Miklós Szánthó, director of the Center for Fundamental Rights, the organizer of CPAC Hungary, explains that under the slogan “Woke slayers – let’s drain the swamp,” the organization has become “a bit more combative,” and the focus has shifted to “a transition to activism and proactivity.”

Szánthó states, “We must take the lead… . We must disrupt the liberals’ plans.” Regarding this year’s CPAC and its slogan (“The Age of Patriots”), Szánthó argues that “they must usher in the age of patriots, and they can only do this together.”

The Hungarian organizer, pointing out that a social concept they believe in has reached the White House across the Atlantic, also notes that in Europe, there is now a “very distinct right-wing movement” that is no longer limited to “small or even fragmented parties.”

Recalling that these parties are already in power in Italy, Szánthó emphasizes that there is also a strong right-wing current in Spain, France, and Germany, and underlines that their goal is the “conquest of Brussels.”

Ensuring the right’s victory as the status quo collapses

Szánthó explains that this year’s CPAC Hungary is taking place in a “new situation,” referring to the rise of the right in Europe and other Western countries.

“The status quo is collapsing,” says the Hungarian official, arguing that this situation clearly stems from the “Trump tsunami.”

“Our American friends are currently at the forefront of changing the status quo,” says Szánthó, while also pointing out the importance of Americans understanding that the strengthening of the European right in alliance with them is in their own interest.

According to Szánthó, the victory of the European right also guarantees the success of the American right.

Europe’s new right meets

Among the right-wing forces within the EU, CPAC Hungary is particularly close to the Patriots for Europe (PfE) party. PfE is the third-largest faction in the European Parliament with 84 members.

Politicians from various PfE member parties have been announced as speakers at CPAC Hungary. These include former Frontex head Fabrice Leggeri, who is a member of the French RN, Herbert Kickl, the leader of the Austrian right-wing FPÖ, Santiago Abascal from Spain’s Vox party, and Afrodíti Latinopoúlou from Greece’s Foní Logikís party.

Former Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki (PiS) and former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš (ANO) will also attend the conference. Additionally, Krzysztof Bosak, Deputy Marshal of the Sejm from Poland’s Konfederacja (Confederation) party, will be present.

Hungary will be represented by several government members, including Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó. Many Republican politicians from the US will also attend the conference. Among the Americans are well-known publicists like Ben Shapiro.

Israel’s Likud party to be in Budapest

Israeli politicians have also been announced to speak at CPAC Hungary. At the PfE summit held in February, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s party, Likud, received official observer status in PfE.

According to CPAC, Israeli Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli will travel to Budapest. Chikli caused protests in Europe in July 2024 by speaking in favor of Marine Le Pen and her party RN before the French parliamentary elections.

In early December, he also caused great outrage by expressing sympathy for right-wing candidate Călin Georgescu, who, after the first round of presidential elections in Romania, announced that he would move his country’s embassy to Jerusalem if he won.

Georgescu had praised Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, the historical leader of Romanian fascists, as a “hero”; Codreanu’s Legionary Movement was involved in numerous murders, including the massacre of Romanian Jews.

Other speakers include the prime minister’s son, Jair Netanyahu, and Likud MK Ariel Kallner.

Following the October 7 Al-Aqsa Flood Operation, Kallner had called for a “Gaza Nakba” that would “overshadow the Nakba of ’48.”

Latin America’s dictatorship sympathizers also come to Europe

Other notorious right-wingers are also attending the event. The participation of José António Kast from Chile’s “far-right” Partido Republicano de Chile has also been announced.

Kast is considered the Chilean political counterpart of Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro and Argentina’s Javier Milei. The Chilean right-winger has expressed sympathy for former dictator Augusto Pinochet in the past and received more than 44% of the votes in the second round of the presidential elections in Chile in 2021.

Kast will run again in the next presidential elections at the end of this year.

Among those planning to attend in Budapest are Raúl Latorre, President of the Paraguayan Chamber of Deputies and member of the conservative Partido Colorado, and right-wing Argentine journalist Agustín Laje, who is close to Milei.

Europe

Germany’s SPD faces ‘Russia rebellion’ at party congress

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Divisions within Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) over rearmament and relations with Russia are set to culminate at its upcoming congress, where party leader and finance minister Lars Klingbeil faces backlash from a faction within his party.

According to a report in the Financial Times, one of the critics of the SPD leadership is the eldest son of former SPD Chancellor Willy Brandt, who still holds significant influence over the party with his Ostpolitik (Eastern Policy), a policy of rapprochement with the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War.

Peter Brandt, a 76-year-old historian, has co-signed an SPD motion criticizing the government’s rearmament plans and advocating for “de-escalation and a gradual return to cooperation with Russia.”

The manifesto, published ahead of this week’s SPD party conference, states, “There is a long road ahead to return to a stable order of peace and security in Europe.”

While acknowledging that strengthening the defense capabilities of Germany and Europe is “necessary,” the authors emphasize that these efforts must be “part of a strategy aimed at de-escalation and the gradual restoration of trust, not a new arms race.”

Peter Brandt told the Financial Times that Klingbeil approved the new defense spending increase “without checking if it was the majority view.” He added, “This is a problem. There isn’t as clear a stance among the members as is reflected in the leadership.”

The criticism comes as Klingbeil, deputy chancellor in the coalition government led by Christian Democrat Friedrich Merz, prepares a major “funding injection” for the military, aiming to increase the country’s defense budget by 70% by 2029.

Brandt’s words are a reminder that many Social Democrats remain reluctant to fully embrace the country’s “Zeitenwende” (turning point) in defense policy, announced by former SPD Chancellor Olaf Scholz following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

The internal rebellion could create problems for Klingbeil, who negotiated the coalition agreement with Merz after the SPD’s worst-ever election result in February. The dissenters could make it difficult for the government, which holds a slim majority of just 13 seats, to pass legislation on the budget, arms deliveries, and the planned return to compulsory military service.

Uwe Jun, a political scientist at the University of Trier, noted that while the rebels are not a majority in the SPD, they are not a small minority either. “There is a long tradition in the SPD of people who came from the peace movement of the 1970s and 1980s,” he said. “They are critical of anything related to the military.”

Klingbeil’s reorganization of the party leadership following the election fiasco has further fueled the controversy. The 47-year-old politician is accused of consolidating his power after replacing 66-year-old Rolf Mützenich as the head of the SPD parliamentary group. Mützenich is also a signatory of the manifesto.

“Personal and political tensions are also playing a role,” said Gesine Schwan, a political scientist and SPD member who was asked to sign the motion but declined.

Klingbeil, who grew up after the fall of the Berlin Wall, has tried to shift the party’s foreign policy stance. In a series of speeches and editorials in 2022, he admitted that the party had “failed to realize that things in Russia had already been moving in a very different direction.”

The manifesto’s signatories argue that the pursuit of peace must be the priority. Ralf Stegner, who helped draft the text, caused controversy last month when it was revealed he had traveled to Azerbaijan in April to meet with Russian officials, including one under EU sanctions.

Stegner, 65, who at the time served on the parliamentary committee overseeing Germany’s intelligence service, defended the meeting, stating that MPs from Merz’s CDU had also attended to keep communication channels with Moscow open.

“You have to keep talking to everyone,” Stegner told the Financial Times. “The insinuation that this means agreeing with what others say or being a secret agent for a third party is, of course, complete nonsense.”

Stegner’s stance reflects the continued nostalgia within the SPD for Willy Brandt’s Ostpolitik. According to a party insider, members who joined the SPD under Brandt’s leadership, now in their 60s, make up 58% of the membership.

Peter Brandt, who said he never fully shared his father’s views, explained that he signed the manifesto because he believes the Russian threat is exaggerated.

“I do not agree with the idea that Russia will attack NATO,” said the younger Brandt. “The Russian army has shown weakness in the Ukraine war.”

He added that NATO is “currently superior to the Russian army in conventional terms, even without the Americans,” and called NATO’s goal of dedicating 5% of GDP to defense “unreasonable.”

Klingbeil, however, pointed out that Willy Brandt, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1971, also oversaw large defense budgets exceeding 3.5% of GDP.

“And ultimately, I don’t think anyone would associate Willy Brandt with someone who focused solely on military matters,” the SPD leader remarked.

Jun said Klingbeil symbolizes the “new school of thought within the party,” adding that the SPD’s younger MPs are “quite pragmatic” on Russia.

But Schwan believes Klingbeil will have to contend with the “old guard” for a while longer. “De-escalation, security, and peace policy are still part of the SPD’s DNA,” she said.

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New MI6 chief’s grandfather was a Nazi collaborator known as ‘The Butcher’

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The grandfather of the new head of MI6 was reportedly a Nazi spy known as “The Butcher” in German-occupied Chernihiv.

Blaise Metreweli was appointed earlier this month as the first female spy chief in the 116-year history of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6).

According to documents cited by the Daily Mail, Metreweli’s grandfather, Constantine Dobrowolski, was a Nazi collaborator who boasted of killing Jews.

The newspaper reports that Dobrowolski, a Ukrainian, defected from the Red Army to become a chief informant for the Nazis and Adolf Hitler in the Chernihiv region.

Metreweli, 47, never knew her grandfather. He remained in Nazi-occupied Ukraine when his family fled in 1943 as the Red Army liberated the area.

Documents found in German archives reveal that Dobrowolski was known to the Nazis as “Agent No. 30.”

At one point, the Soviet Union placed a 50,000-ruble bounty on Dobrowolski’s head (approximately £200,000 today), labeling him “the greatest enemy of the Ukrainian people.”

According to the newspaper, Dobrowolski sought revenge against Russia for killing his family and confiscating their property during the 1917 revolution.

One file reportedly contains a handwritten letter from Dobrowolski to his Nazi superiors, signed “Heil Hitler.”

In another file, he is said to have boasted that he “personally participated in the destruction of the Jews” and had killed hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers.

A spokesperson for the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office commented on the allegations, stating, “Blaise Metreweli did not know and had never met her father’s father. Blaise’s ancestors are characterized by conflict and division, and like many with Eastern European roots, she has a history that is only partially understood.”

The spokesperson suggested that it is “precisely this complex heritage” that “contributes to Blaise’s determination to prevent conflict and protect the British people from the modern threats of hostile states” as the next head of MI6.

Metreweli grew up abroad before studying anthropology at Cambridge, where she was part of the winning team in the 1997 Boat Race.

Joining MI6 in 1999, Metreweli served for two decades in Europe and the Middle East.

Metreweli currently holds the position of “Q,” the head of the technical section of MI6, made famous by the James Bond films.

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Merz urges Brussels to secure a US trade deal within days

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is demanding that Brussels sign a trade deal with the US within days.

Bringing the issue to the agenda of today’s EU leaders’ summit, Merz described the European Commission’s negotiating strategy this week as “too complex.”

Calling for greater urgency and focus in negotiations with the US president, Merz said he would convey this demand to other EU leaders, alongside Emmanuel Macron and Giorgia Meloni.

The leaders are eagerly awaiting an update from the EU’s executive body during dinner on its talks with the Trump administration.

Concerns are growing that if Brussels and Washington fail to reach an agreement, “reciprocal” 50% tariffs will be imposed on all goods starting July 9.

The bloc, which had previously dismissed the recent UK-US trade deal—a pact that imposed a 10% baseline tariff while offering some relief for car and steel exports—is now coming to terms with the reality that securing a better outcome will be challenging.

“I still hope that a trading power like the EU, with its 450 million people, will have more leverage than the UK,” a senior EU diplomat said on Wednesday.

The German chancellor stated that the priority must be to protect Europe’s key industries—particularly Germany’s automotive, manufacturing, semiconductor, pharmaceutical, steel, and aluminum sectors—from the sector-specific tariffs that Trump has either imposed or threatened to impose.

However, Trump is heavily reliant on these tariffs, having implemented the highest rates since the Great Depression of the 1930s to compel manufacturers to move production to the US and close the nation’s trillion-dollar trade deficit.

The US trade deficit with the 27 EU member states reached a total of $232 billion in 2025, accounting for approximately 19% of the total figure.

Underpinning Merz’s demands is a persistent concern that Brussels might establish a broad framework centered on a flat 10% tariff for most common goods, rather than isolating sectoral tariffs on items like cars, which he argues harms German exporters.

Another EU diplomat noted that keeping a broad-based tariff in place was “not a task we gave the European Commission,” adding, “We hope the Commission will try to find a solution for the most at-risk sectors.”

Merz’s call to “get the job done” faces two primary obstacles. First, the EU negotiating team has warned that Washington will likely offer only minor concessions, such as limited tariff reductions tied to restrictive quotas, after which full tariff rates would apply.

This is a far cry from the zero-tariff agreement Merz had initially hoped to achieve and closely resembles the UK deal, the only one struck with Trump so far.

Meanwhile, negotiations with the US on Germany’s biggest demand—automobiles—are proving particularly difficult.

Merz and German automakers are pushing for a mechanism that would allow them to offset their vehicle imports into the US with models they export from their American production facilities.

Economy Minister Katharina Reiche presented such a proposal during her visit to the US earlier this month. Both BMW and Mercedes-Benz operate large factories in the US that produce certain models for global export. However, considering the EU exports over 750,000 vehicles to the US annually, it remains unclear how much relief a limited quota agreement would provide to car manufacturers if Trump rejects this proposal.

Brussels, on the other hand, is hopeful that Trump’s long-standing desire for the EU to align with US automotive regulations will serve as a strong enough bargaining chip to ease the pressure on the auto sector.

In a scoping paper sent to member states in May, the Commission revealed it had offered to align with US regulations on autonomous vehicles. This is seen as a major concession, especially after similar discussions on automotive reciprocity led to the collapse of a transatlantic trade deal a decade ago.

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