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Hi Donald, it’s Ursula: Von der Leyen opens crucial hotline to Trump

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Once the reporter finished her question on the the GPS jamming, Trump continued: “Nobody knows where it came from, but they did take away her ability to use the phone.” He added: “You know, sometimes that’s a good thing. Sometimes if it happened to me, I’d be very happy.”

Beneath the joke, he was unexpectedly au fait with von der Leyen’s phone reception problems, and there was a clear suggestion the two had been unable to get in touch. It was more evidence that the Commission president was increasingly, if only for now, nearing that holy grail of EU leaders — a default European interlocutor for a U.S. president.

Streamlined comms

Within the famously messy hierarchies of EU leadership — spread across numerous national governments and Brussels institutions — von der Leyen has won through.

During the August visit of European leaders to the White House, she was the only EU institutional figure to show up. Gone was the usual two-for-one combo with the European Council president.

The message was clear: Brussels is streamlining its transatlantic voice. Von der Leyen may not speak for all of Europe — but she’s increasingly the one who picks up the phone. And the one whom Trump calls back.

It wasn’t always this smooth. Early efforts to engage with Trump’s team were clunky, the two EU officials admitted — not helped by the revolving doors in the U.S. administration during his first months in office.

EU Affairs

Naming and shaming doping athletes is against EU law, says top lawyer

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Publishing the name of a professional athlete online because they have broken anti-doping rules is against the EU’s privacy laws, a top EU lawyer has said.

The fresh opinion from Advocate General Dean Spielmann weighs a case taking place in Austria, where four professional athletes who have broken anti-doping rules are arguing that publication of their details online would breach the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.

Austrian law requires details including the athletes’ names, sporting discipline, duration of their exclusion and the reasons for that exclusion to be published on the websites of the Austrian anti-doping agency and an associated legal committee.

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EU Affairs

Sarkozy found guilty in Gadhafi case

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Sarkozy, 70, is still awaiting sentencing but is expected to be able to walk out of court a free man by appealing the verdict, which would push sentencing until after the appeal. 

Sarkozy has repeatedly professed his innocence and claimed to be the victim of a smear campaign coordinated by Gadhafi’s allies after the former French president led the NATO effort  to overthrow the Libyan dictator in 2011. 

The conservative Sarkozy has had repeated run-ins with the law since leaving office — including one corruption case in which he was found guilty and has exhausted his appeals. But the Libyan case contained the most egregious charges and heaviest potential penalties. 

This developing story will be updated.

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German recovery still on ‘shaky ground’, economic institutes say

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The German economy should grow again for the first time in three years this year, but its long-term prospects remain challenging, five leading economic institutes said in a new forecast.

Europe’s largest economy is expected to grow by 0.2 percent this year, before accelerating to 1.3 percent in 2026 and 1.4 percent in 2027, primarily driven by the federal government’s expansionary fiscal policy.  The forecasts are largely unchanged from the institutes’ spring forecast round.

“The German economy is still on shaky ground,” said Geraldine Dany-Knedlik, head of Forecasting and Economic Policy at the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin). While growth will strengthen over the next two years, she warned that “this momentum will not last,” given persistent structural weaknesses.

Latest survey data suggests that expectations of a near-term pick-up in growth may indeed be optimistic, as both the Ifo Business Climate index and S&P Global’s purchasing managers index showed companies turning more pessimistic about the outlook.

Looking ahead, the institutes warn that the economy is exposed to significant risks. “The trade dispute between the United States and the EU carries considerable potential for escalation, particularly if the EU fails to deliver on its commitments,” they wrote. “In addition, the overall economic impact of the expansionary fiscal policy is difficult to assess and depends heavily on its specific design.”

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