The European Perspective
Germany’s Generational Fault Line
A deep fissure is splitting Germany’s ruling coalition, not over ideology, but arithmetic. The youth wing of the CDU/CSU, the Junge Union, is in open revolt against Chancellor Merz’s pension plan, arguing it saddles future generations with unsustainable costs. Tellingly, Economics Minister Katherina Reiche has voiced sympathy for the dissenters, admitting that working lives must get longer (ZDF). This isn’t just a political spat; it’s a cultural stress test of the post-war social contract. The conflict reveals the inevitable collision between demographic reality and politically expedient promises, a preview of battles to come across ageing European welfare states.
Italy’s Bid to End Clock Changes
A civic push against bureaucratic inertia is gaining traction in Italy, where a petition with over 350,000 signatures to make daylight saving time permanent has been formally lodged with parliament (Ansa). An official inquiry will now pave the way for a legislative proposal, targeting a final decision by June 2026. This is a quiet but significant demonstration of evidence-based activism, arguing for energy savings and public well-being over rigid tradition. Italy’s move could reignite the stalled EU-wide debate on scrapping the biannual clock change, a conversation that has been dormant since a 2018 public consultation.
Kyiv’s Drone War Doctrine
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister, Andrij Sybiha, has bluntly redefined the country’s defense strategy, declaring the “modern arms race is not about nuclear weapons, but about millions of inexpensive drones” (ZDF). This isn’t just rhetoric; it’s a strategic doctrine centered on economic attrition. Kyiv’s stated goal is to out-produce Russia, making the financial cost of continued aggression unbearable for the Kremlin. For European defense ministries, this is a crucial lesson in asymmetric warfare: agile, cost-effective innovation and scalable production can provide a powerful counter to a larger, conventional military force.
Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.
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