- Maxey leads 76ers past Lakers, surging Rockets hold off Hawks
- Sony names new CEO in management reshuffle
- Climate activists appeal long UK jail terms for 'peaceful protest'
- UK eyes third Heathrow runway in growth takeoff bid
- Kirsty Coventry hopes to make waves in IOC presidential race
- Man Utd, Spurs seek Europa League last 16 and much-needed rest
- Japan #MeToo survivor says media are failing in wake of Fuji TV scandal
- Trump invited to Japan for 80th anniversary of A-bombs
- New sumo grand master vows best behaviour after promotion
- Asian markets track Wall St bounce as Fed decision looms
- SpaceX mission to return US astronauts to happen 'soon': Trump
- Rwanda, DR Congo leaders in crisis summit as Goma's fate hangs in balance
- North Korea's Kim vows nuclear programme to continue: state media
- 15 dead in India stampede at Hindu mega-festival
- Influential podcasts fuel 'harmful' health misinformation
- Beyonce and the Grammys: a tense relationship again at a head
- Facing Bolivia's economic crunch with toy houses, fake banknotes
- Blurred posts, banned accounts: Abortion groups decry Meta 'suppression'
- Who might buy TikTok in the US?
- Fire-hardened house offers lessons on rebuilding Los Angeles
- Trump crackdown spurs migrants to seek refuge in Mexico
- 15 dead in India after stampede at Hindu mega-festival
- Starbucks profits fall but points to progress in turnaround
- OpenAI tailors version of ChatGPT for US government
- McIlroy eyes majors, Ryder Cup in 'pivotal' 2025
- Real Madrid 'yet to show their best', warns Ancelotti
- Key DR Congo city on brink as pro-Rwanda forces take airport
- Nvidia, US stocks close higher after Chinese AI shock
- Putin says talks with Ukraine possible, but not with Zelensky
- Owner Textor says Fonseca will be next Lyon coach
- 'No way out': Grim conditions in El Salvador's mega-prison for gangs
- UN warns of ethnic attacks in eastern DR Congo
- Steen Olsen wins Schladming giant slalom
- Hundreds of millions in Asia celebrate Year of the Snake
- Rodgers hoping to complete Celtic swoop for Arsenal's Tierney
- Trump federal spending freeze sparks confusion, fury
- Netherlands' Bol to skip most of indoor athletics season
- New film explores radicalization from perspective of IS 'Brides'
- Serbia's students vow more anti-graft protests despite PM resignation
- White House urges TikTokers to apply for press passes
- Ex-Belgium midfielder Nainggolan charged in drug trafficking probe
- New backlash over Trump plan to move Palestinians out of Gaza
- Santos president tells Neymar it's 'time to come home'
- GM 2025 profit forecast clouded by Trump policy unknowns
- DeepSeek shock shows Europe not out of AI race: experts
- Arteta delighted as Arsenal win appeal over Lewis-Skelly red card
- Thousands rally in Burkina, Mali and Niger to cheer ECOWAS exit
- Arsenal win appeal over controversial Lewis-Skelly red card
- UN confirms US demand to withdrawal from Paris climate deal
- European watchdog takes aim at online gambling, gaming among youths
EU's largest far-right bloc to rally in Madrid next week
The European Parliament's largest far-right bloc will hold its first summit in Madrid next week with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and France's Marine Le Pen in attendance, Spanish party Vox said on Monday.
Patriots for Europe will meet on February 7 and 8 under the presidency of Vox leader Santiago Abascal to outline their strategy for the coming months, party spokesman Jose Antonio Fuster told reporters.
The group has realigned the EU far right and became the parliament's third-largest force after Orban helped launched it last year to shift Brussels rightwards.
Its 84 lawmakers include France's National Rally, the Party for Freedom of Dutch anti-Islam firebrand Geert Wilders, Vox, Austria's Freedom Party and Chega from Portugal.
The bloc overtook the European Conservatives and Reformists, associated with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's Brothers of Italy party, after last year's EU elections where the far right performed strongly in several countries.
Fuster said there was an alternative to the coalition between the European People's Party of European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and the Socialists and Democrats.
Slamming "their climate fanaticism and their open-door policies to mass immigration", Fuster said his group "represents millions of Europeans who want common sense to return to European institutions".
M.Furrer--BTB