Dutch, German Leaders Criticized for Greek Debt Deal
Opposition parties in the two countries have little faith in the latest agreement with Greece.
Opposition parties in the two countries have little faith in the latest agreement with Greece.
Turkey is expected to request the deployment of missile systems on its border with Syria.
Labor may be less Euroskeptic, but the Netherlands is likely to maintain its hard line.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte is close to forming a coalition government with his formal rivals.
Lawmakers in the Netherlands are fed up.
English-language news media don’t recognize that Northern Europeans’ patience is wearing thin.
The two rival parties will try to put together a government, probably with centrist support.
The liberal party leader beats his Labor opponent in an extremely right race.
The two northern European countries reject the possibility of a third Greek bailout.
The Netherlands’ two left-wing parties unexpectedly find themselves in competition.
The Netherlands’ ruling liberal party would create more jobs than the opposition Socialists, a report shows.
The Greek prime minister wants two more years to achieve his nation’s deficit target.
Left-wing opposition parties and most Dutch voters don’t mind deeper defense cuts.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s liberals are neck in neck with the far-left Socialists in the polls.
European officials criticize the “obstructive” role of Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte.