BERLIN (Reuters) - The collapse of Germany's ruling coalition is set to bring more economic pain in the months ahead and just ...
"The early end of the coalition leaves Germany somewhat rudderless in what could be an exceptionally turbulent time right ...
Jörg Kukies was appointed as Germany's new finance minister on Thursday, as pressure mounts on Chancellor Olaf Scholz to call ...
High energy costs and an uncertain transition to cleaner fuels have been a key driver behind Germany’s exodus of industrial ...
A seismic selloff in Treasuries paused Thursday as investors’ attention turned from Donald Trump’s victory in the US ...
The collapse of Germany's ruling coalition is set to bring more economic pain in the months ahead and just a glimmer of hope ...
Chancellor Olaf Scholz is expected to lead the country with a minority government, but the opposition is calling for an immediate no-confidence vote.
In a dramatic political turn, Germany's coalition government disintegrated on Wednesday when Chancellor Olaf Scholz dismissed his Finance Minister, Christian Lindner. The move, coming shortly after ...
The German chancellor said he would call for a confidence vote on January 15, 2025, in the Bundestag, which could trigger a snap election before late March ...
European stocks traded higher on Thursday ahead of interest-rate decisions from the Bank of England and the U.S. Federal Reserve ...
German industry, reeling from high costs and fierce Asian competition, urged Berlin on Thursday to hold snap elections as ...
German stocks rose sharply on Thursday as investors digested the ramifications of political upheaval in the country. The German ...