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The EU’s geopolitical dream is dying in its own neighbourhood
Erik writes for the LSE European Politics and Policy Blog (europpblog) on the EU's loss of power to turn its economic weight into geopolitical influence.
Defending American Tech in Global Markets
ECIPE studies, "EU Export of Regulatory Overreach: The Case of the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and "The Economic Losses from Ending the WTO Moratorium on Electronic Transmissions" are referenced in the ITIF Policy Brief.
Everything Brussels really thinks about the UK
David Henig writes for Encompass about how Brussels prioritises issues beyond UK relations, with mutual suspicion post-Brexit.
Who killed Europe’s single market dream?
Matthias Bauer comments for an FT Briefing on the Single Market.
Spain accelerates its leap into the quantum economy: from the laboratory to the market with the impetus of the CDTI Innovation
ECIPE study, "Benchmarking quantum technology performance: Governments, industry, academia and their role in shaping our technological future", referenced in CDTI's public briefing.
Future-proofing the Quantum Europe Strategy for 2040
ECIPE studies, "Quantum Technology: A Policy Primer for EU Policymakers" and "Benchmarking Quantum Technology Performance: Governments, Industry, Academia and their Role in Shaping our Technological Future," referenced in the European Parliament's Quantum Briefing.
Tras bambalinas: el papel de China
(Spanish) Renata Zilli argues for El Universal that the USMCA review faces two main issues: US-China relations and that 2026 will be a renegotiation, not just a review, amid global economic shifts.
Don’t bank on Britain’s post-Brexit trade deals to save the economy
David Henig comments via POLITICO Europe that the new post-Brexit trade deals with Australia and New Zealand have not meaningfully impacted the UK economy or permanently increased trade so far.
Perspectives: The EU is not a trade superpower – how to make the best of it
David Henig writes for Borderlex on global trade tensions challenging the EU's effectiveness, requiring honest reflection, institutional reform, prioritised strategies, and stronger, more genuine global partnerships for future stability.