Europe’s crisis & what to do with the refugees – Speaking in Hannover, 12/4
Filed under: DiEM, European Crisis
Filed under: DiEM, European Crisis
Filed under: DiEM, European Crisis, Politics and Economics
This panel, organised by the House of Ambrosetti (Cernobbio), included: Martin Wolf (Chair), Jyrki Katainejn (Vice President of the European Commission), Yves Mersch (ECB Executive Board Member), Yanis Varoufakis (DiEM25), Jens Spahn (State Minister, Finance Ministry, Germany)Filed under: DiEM, European Crisis, Modest Proposal, Post-MinFin … Continue reading →
When Syriza won the elections in Greece in January 2015, the Slovenian right wing leader, obviously afraid that Slovenia’s New Left could follow its steps, said: Luckily this experiment will fail in Greece and will not be put into practice … Continue reading →
For the Der Spiegel site click here. Otherwise… The feud between the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European side of Greece’s troika of creditors is old news. However, Wikileaks’ publication of a dialogue between key IMF players suggests that … Continue reading →
For the site of The Irish Times click here. Otherwise… Eight months after his abrupt resignation as Greece’s finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis is back in the thick of things, leading a new pan-European political movement and promoting a new book … Continue reading →
To listen to the debate, click For THE GUARDIAN site, click here. Otherwise… Yanis Varoufakis has appealed for the UK to remain in the European Union because leaving would hasten the disintegration of the 28-nation bloc. The former Greek finance … Continue reading →
Click here for a pdf of Michael Gove’s review of And The Weak Suffer What They Must? Filed under: And the Weak Suffer What They Must? - the book, DiEM, European Crisis, Politics and Economics, Post-MinFin missives
Review by Paul Mason At the battle of Gettysburg, the defence of the Union army’s flank was entrusted to a man whose biggest responsibility until then had been as professor of rhetoric at an east coast university. In the 1993 … Continue reading →
5th April 2016. For The Guardian site, click here. Otherwise… The first German word I ever learned was Siemens. It was emblazoned on our sturdy 1950s fridge, our washing machine, the vacuum cleaner – on almost every appliance in my … Continue reading →