00:00موسيقى
00:09موسيقى
00:15يهربة الجزء 22 يومي
00:18هذا هو مجرده
00:19موسيقى
00:20مرده المنزل
00:22يحصل إلى الأهندس
00:23ويبدأتون برسل
00:24بحضرًا
00:25المترجم للقناة
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06:03well it currently goes
06:05so to say within the historical range
06:07of this time of the
06:10year that's something we
06:11in any case need to do we need to prepare
06:13ourselves for the next winter
06:14but you don't feel blackout so you don't fear
06:17that once again as we talked
06:19about in 2022 there was a real fear
06:21that Europe would come to a halt
06:23it will grind to a halt that the industry
06:25would not be able to operate because of a shortage
06:27of supplies you don't expect that
06:29to be the case by the end of the year
06:31no we do not expect
06:32هذا يمكن أن يكون هذه المقاة الآن.
06:36أجل هناك في المنطقة في 2022
06:40أو في 2022 إلى 2023
06:42نفسه ، نحن نقارق ، نحن نقارقه في السياسات
06:46لن يجب أن نصل نحن ذلك.
06:48هذا موضوع ، جيداً رئيسة للمعارضة إلى المعارضة
06:52قبل الآن ، كيفية أن تقلقها
06:54المعارضة لا تتعرفها سرعيساً
06:57سيقولها بأنها تكون هذه أقل الأساسية مقالية لتحركة
07:01what are you going to offer the Italian prime minister
07:03that is going to placate her anger
07:05because by now it's clear they are not satisfied
07:07with the measures you provided
07:08we are obviously now looking at policy options
07:14and also our fiscal policy response
07:16but the main message in the case remains
07:19that the support measures need to be temporary and targeted
07:23the ones which are not sustaining or increasing demand
07:26for fossil fuels
07:28so on one hand not just to perpetuate higher energy demand
07:33and thus higher global energy prices
07:36because we are facing supply shock
07:38so we cannot resolve it by stimulating demand
07:41and second we must keep in mind also
07:46more limited fiscal room of maneuver
07:50and also flexibilities already existing in our fiscal framework
07:54we have a number of automatic stabilizers which can play out
07:58which allows for in a sense certain fiscal buffer
08:00before even member states come with the discretionary measures
08:04but we are doing this assessment and preparing it
08:06so you're listening to her concerns
08:08well we certainly are listening to the concerns of member states
08:13and looking appropriate policy response
08:17that was the european commissioner for the economy
08:20valdus dombrowskis speaking to maria tadeo
08:23now moving on hungarian prime minister peter madjar
08:26is pushing to revive the so-called vicegrad or v4 group
08:31which brings together poland slovakia the czech republic and hungary
08:34madjar has even pitched expanding the group
08:37jacob janis tells us more
08:41peter madjar's first official foreign trip to poland wrapped up yesterday
08:45and now when the diplomatic dust is settling
08:47all eyes are now on the sudden resurrection of the group called vicegrad 4
08:51and if you are a bit unsure what this shift actually means for europe
08:55or even what the group is about
08:57let's break it down together
09:00the v4 was set up in the early 1990s to guide these post-communist neighbors into the west
09:05but beyond geography poland czechia slovakia and hungary
09:09are bound by the same massive central european automotive and manufacturing supply chains
09:14but also a shared goal to protect billions in eu cohesion funding
09:19and their most significant political impact came over 10 years ago in 2015
09:23when their coordinated resistance forced brussels to abandon mandatory migration quarters
09:29and what's interesting this is no longer the poor relation of western europe
09:34central europe enters this new chapter with economic strength
09:38just look at the data
09:40last year poland led the continent with a booming 4 percent real household income growth
09:45while germany lagged at 0.6 percent
09:48and austria's household income even declined
09:51and this wealth flip gives the region confidence
09:54magia is even pitching a bold plan to merge the v4 with austria
09:58with reports suggesting vienna is receptive to a benelux-style alliance
10:02but let's be realistic
10:04can this block actually deliver anything tangible
10:07critics point out that the v4 group has historically struggled
10:10to look beyond its own internal divisions
10:13and in the past cooperation was derailed by fears of revived austrian hegemony
10:18and even today old bilateral disputes between neighbors like slovakia and hungary
10:22still cause friction
10:24and acting as one voice in brussels will not be seamless
10:27and while the countries aim to cooperate on a regional energy and transport infrastructure
10:32geopolitical fault lines remain
10:35hungary czechia and slovakia unlike poland are opting out of eu's 90 billion euro loan package for ukraine
10:41so will potential divisions stop this block from making a real impact
10:45only time will tell
10:47but with Magyar finally in default
10:49it turns out the three musketeers were just waiting for their fourth
10:59now for more on this i'm joined by our hungarian correspondent
11:02Sandor Syros
11:03Sandor good to see you
11:04tell us what's Magyar's strategy here
11:08what is he trying to achieve
11:09well as mentioned it was his first visit to poland
11:12and he had two messages first of all
11:15he said that he's conducting foreign trips in a very different way
11:20it was a big show what he did
11:22he went on a commercial plane
11:25then he took the train
11:27he did a lot of selfies on the streets of warsaw
11:30so it's a different feeling after orban
11:33and the political message was that he wants to revive
11:36polish hungarian ties
11:38which were stuck during the orban era
11:42there was a lot of diplomatic tensions because of orban's ties to russia
11:47and he wants to revive also the visegrad 4
11:50which is a key in central european cooperation
11:54in warsaw he also said that you know
11:56maybe this group should extend beyond these four countries
12:00hungary slovakia czechia and poland
12:03to austria and to even further
12:05let's take a look of what he said
12:08i am personally ready and consider it important
12:14to extend the cooperation of the visegrad 4
12:17whether with our scandinavian friends
12:19or with austria croatia slovenia romania
12:23or the western balkan countries
12:25that have not yet joined the eu
12:27the heart of europe beats in central europe today
12:36it's clearly ambitious sandor but realistically can this
12:39block become a powerful one also here in brussels
12:42we will see it in the coming years
12:45the big problem for the visegrad 4 right now is that
12:48you know 10 years ago they had one major common topic
12:52migration
12:53they were fighting against the mandatory relocation quotas of
12:57the european union now you know this issue is completely mainstream
13:01and what connects these four countries is you know infrastructure
13:06economy business and there is one thing that
13:10could potentially unite them is to fight against
13:14the green deal of the european union and to preserve
13:18car industry which is really strong in all of those countries
13:22okay sandor we keep an eye out for that of course thank you
13:26now moving on later today the mexican president claudia sheinbaum will
13:30receive the presidents of the european commission and council
13:33ursula von derlein and antonio costa
13:35for the eighth eu mexico summit they're expected to ink a revamped
13:39trade deal to replace the previous pact struck 25 years ago
13:43it's set to slash tariffs on a range of goods including agricultural products
13:48also in mexico is javi lopez the european parliament's vice president
13:52who has been part of these negotiations i spoke to him in an interview and
13:56started by asking him what the deal offers for both sides
14:01first after 10 years of negotiation and after 10 years without summits at the
14:05high level that we will have it uh tomorrow we are able to modernize the
14:10global agreement with mexico after 25 years working in uh with the current
14:15agreement with this we are uh doing uh more on uh trade especially in
14:21predictable uh trade with high standards but also we are reinforcing our
14:25geopolitical alliance with one g20 a giant culturally demographically
14:31economically and in a work in a in a world where i all um of the rest big
14:37actors are using trade uh as a coercive force and we are working for
14:44predictable uh trade agreements so is it fair to say this agreement is more
14:47than anything a reaction against the unpredictability perhaps of trump's america
14:52we know both mexico and the eu have been targeted by aggressive trade policies from
14:58the us and is that going to work because some would look at the agreement that the
15:03eu has signed with the us the trade agreement i would say well actually trump is
15:08calling the shots no i think we are working in the right direction we are
15:12working in the direction of diversification of our uh economic
15:16relations in the world trying to reduce dependencies also dependencies coming from
15:21the united states this is the reality risking our dependencies in trade also in
15:26security and on that we are having a group a mix of important association
15:32agreements we have mercosur that it's a game changer with the region we have the
15:35modernization of mexico and also we will have india and it's three big
15:41examples of this offensive uh foreign action uh foreign policy that we are having
15:46you mentioned mercosur and obviously that was a big step forward but could you argue
15:50also that the eu has been a little bit slow to deepen ties with latin america and we're
15:56now seeing of course president trump trying to reassert his sphere of influence over the
16:00western hemisphere has the eu been a little bit too negligent in the relationship it's
16:05it's true that it was during a lot of years not in the radar of the priorities of the eu
16:09and we
16:10were extremely focused in our neighborhoods also we had good reasons to do that but at the same time
16:16now after the crane war i will say but after uh the rise of trump too to the white house
16:22we are
16:23forced to think more strategically and act more mature in the world and our relations with latino
16:28america especially our strategical relations it's the biggest partner in the world where we can
16:33work together for a multilateral um dialogue working with the same agenda climate change
16:40gender equality inclusive growth uh also defending international law and the chapter of united
16:47nations and on that we are working with this association agreements that are key to reinforce
16:53and are real game changers in the region
16:59now as the can film festival draws to a close the red carpet has this year become a battleground
17:06over politics ideology and artistic freedom artists have been weighing in on issues from the war in gaza
17:12to gender roles a feud has also erupted over the influence of conservative billionaire valse
17:18over canal plus french cinema's biggest funder for more we can cross over to can now and to jada
17:26yuan a journalist and writer who is at the festival jada great to see you and to have you with
17:31us on europe
17:32today um i guess politics always permeates into this festival and i would say perhaps that this year
17:39has been no exception absolutely it is one of the most political i've been at i i would say
17:49last year was also incredibly political uh robert de niro came out in in his opening speech called
17:55trump america's philistine president but uh the difference is that every single day when a when
18:04something screens and the canal plus logo comes up the audience will boo even if it's a gala premiere
18:11and of course on that jada canal plus there's been a big dispute 600 prominent figures from the film
18:18industry writing an open letter against the conservative billionaire who's its main shareholder
18:24and this is creating quite a stir yes and it's also because the ceo of canal plus here at can
18:31after
18:32that letter came out um basically said that they would blackball anybody who was on that letter
18:38so they so they they said they will blackball all of these um 600 uh artists including julia binoche
18:45um and uh yeah the controversy just continues okay well jada will keep an eye out on the action from
18:56can
18:56over the weekend thank you so much for joining us this morning on europe today and that's it from us
19:02for
19:02today and for this week we'll be back on tuesday next week as we're taking a break on monday
19:07remember to get in touch with us with your questions and feedback email us at europe today
19:12at euronews.com and in the meantime have a great weekend
19:27and i'll move on right now
19:30and the way
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