WARSAW Polish MEP Grzegorz Braun (NI), who gained international notoriety for using a fire extinguisher to put out the Hanukkah candles in the Polish parliament as a protest against the celebration of the Jewish holiday in the country, this time lashed out at the LGBTQ+ community by spray-painting a Pride exhibition in Opole, southwestern Poland. Braun, who is running for president as the candidate of his Civic Union of the Polish Crown (KKP) movement and was expelled from the Civic Union party (ESN/PfE) for putting forward his candidacy despite the grouping having already nominated the younger and more moderate Sławomir Mentzen as its candidate, visited the city of Opole on 18 March. After seeing the exhibition of the NGO Rainbow Opole, entitled “There are more of us. Provoke equality with us,” which had been up for less than 24 hours and consisted of pictures taken during the Pride marches in Opole, Braun grabbed a spray can and vandalised it, as documented in a film posted on social media.When asked by the person behind the camera to stop, he replied that “he had already started” Unacceptable behaviour: Opole City Hall spokesman told the media that the city found such behavior “unacceptable” and would seek compensation from the MEP. He added that the damage had been estimated at around 35 thousand zlotys (8.4 thousand euros). Earlier this month, Braun announced that he had been punished for an incident in the European Parliament in January in which he repeatedly disrupted the proceedings of the chamber, including during a minute's silence to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust. He displayed a letter he had received from President Roberta Metsola (EPP). The MEP was excluded from plenary sessions for six months and was also fined 30 daily allowances. The daily rate is over €300, meaning Braun will lose €9,000. (Aleksandra Krzysztoszek | Euractiv.pl) /// PRAGUE EP legal affairs committee backs lifting immunity for Czech MEP Nagyová. The European Parliament’s Legal Affairs Committee (JURI) recommended lifting the immunity of Czech MEP Jana Nagyová from far-right the Patriots for Europe group, who faces charges in the Čapí hnízdo subsidy fraud case. The case involves allegations that former Czech PM Andrej Babiš and Nagyová misused €2 million in EU subsidies by falsely presenting a company as a small business. Nagyová has already been twice acquitted by Czech courts, but the verdicts were appealed. The trial was paused after her election to the European Parliament in June 2024, which brought with it parliamentary immunity. She insists the case is politically motivated and expects to be cleared again. (Aneta Zachová | Euractiv.cz) /// BUDAPEST Hungarian minister suggests Orbán may not back EU defence fund. In a Facebook post on Monday, EU parliamentary affairs secretary Barna Pál Zsigmond expressed Hungary's objection to the €150 billion defense plan tentatively agreed by EU leaders at their summit earlier this month. He criticised the EU for standing in line for "just a little sovereignty" and denounced Brussels itself for looking for "new resources to escalate the conflict." No plan which supplies arms to Ukraine or requires joint borrowing among member states would gain support from Hungary, Zsigmond said. Prime Minister Victor Orbán had supported the EU summit conclusions on the defence spending package earlier this month. The legal texts are due to be presented by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tomorrow, before EU leaders debate them on Thursday. (Telex.hu) /// BRATISLAVA Fico announces agreement with rebel MPs, securing more comfortable majority again. After weeks of uncertainty over the strength of support for Slovakia’s ruling coalition in parliament, Prime Minister Robert Fico announced he has reached an agreement with three rebel MPs. By securing their support, Fico’s government would get back to 79 votes in the 150-member parliament, up from the slimmest possible majority of just 76 until now. No further details about the content of the agreement were offered by Fico or the MPs, but Fico vowed they will be forthcoming in the next few days. Meet the team. The two MPs in question, Samuel Migaľ and Radomír Šalitroš, were elected on the list of Hlas-SD – Fico's junior coalition partner – but later broke ranks with the party criticizing its leadership and some actions of the government. As a result, they were expelled by the party. The third MP, Ján Ferenčák, was not formally expelled from Hlas-SD but has nevertheless been part of the rebel group, abstained from voting with the coalition while also remaining part of the ongoing negotiations within the coalition. (Zuzana Gabrižová | Euractiv.sk) |