Search

Results 161 to 170 out of 610. RSS
  1. SYRIZA stumbles again on way to May elections

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    by their religion, not ethnicity. The challenging of the status quo set by the treaty is an extremely sensitive

    7%
  2. The rise of a "Spanish SYRIZA" transform’s country’s politics
    Photo by Podemos Uviéu via Flickr https://flic.kr/p/nyP4KA

    Agora

    status quo of Spanish politics and, more importantly, the three-decade-long duopoly of today’s ruling

    7%
  3. Tsipras still hopes he can avoid being part of coalition government
    Photo by Myrto Papadopoulos [www.myrtopapadopoulos.com]

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    labelled centrist To Potami as looking too favourably towards the “status quo of the [EU-IMF] memorandums

    7%
  4. Understanding the German approach towards Greece
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Agora

    is the best hope to secure a meaningful quid-pro-quo on the pace of fiscal consolidation and debt re

    7%
  5. Tsipras briefing suggests he is still searching for deal with lenders
    Photo by MacroPolis

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    ' wishes on the issue of labour market reform. The institutions' proposals call for the status quo

    7%
  6. Parliament's budget office rings alarm bell on economic prospects

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    to a partial change in the status quo meaning that the distortions of the current institutional structure

    7%
  7. Newsletter 42 - 11/09/2015

    Newsletters

    to challenge the political status quo in the eurozone. Given the numerous and simultaneous policy challenges

    7%
  8. Looking in on the Greek elections from the outside
    Photo by MacroPolis

    Agora

    or left-leaning parties that are willing to challenge the political status quo in the eurozone

    7%
  9. Tsipras sees political mileage in bill for broadcasting licences

    PoliticsGreek Politics

    the message that they want to defend the status quo. The bill contains 58 articles and stipulates that any

    7%
  10. No one has won in Spain
    Photo by Jordi Boixareu via Flickr https://flic.kr/p/CjfJBK

    Agora

    Spain is not Portugal, although we cannot completely rule it out. Brussels and Frankfurt want Spain to look like Germany. A grosse coalition will reassure the markets, guarantee the prevalence of budgetary orthodoxy and, on the surface, maintain at least the status quo, something very important

    7%