New Europe (newspaper)

New Europe is a newspaper published in Brussels, Belgium, the de facto capital of the European Union.[1] It was founded in 1993 by Basil Coronakis, the former ambassador of the Regional Cooperation Council, as an independent English weekly newspaper.

New Europe
Front page of New Europe (January 2009)
TypeWeekly
Political alignmentIndependent
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersBrussels
ISSN1106-8299
Websitewww.neweurope.eu

The paper reports on the activities of the European Union institutions, including the European Commission, European Parliament, and Council of Ministers, as well as NATO. The paper is available to the European Union Institutions free-of-charge and can be bought via subscription or by direct sale from newsstands in Brussels, Belgium. The paper edition can also be found in hotels and universities in Belgium.

Presentation

Former New Europe senior editor Andy Dabilis interviewing former President of the European Commission Jacques Santer during the European People's Party Congress in Warsaw in April 2009

New Europe is politically independent. Its main focus is the affairs of the European Union (EU) and the Eurozone, with the majority of the paper's articles covering the day-to-day business of EU policy-making and the relations of the EU with other global actors.

In addition to having a widely read online digital presence, the paper's weekly 24-page print edition has a circulation of 66,000 copies.[2]

The print edition includes a special back page section known as Kassandra, which reports on cases of mismanagement and wrongdoing across Europe and the EU institutions.[3]

Web-only material includes video interviews, news articles, commentaries, as well as policy analysis by some of the leading members of the European character than the opinion pieces within the newspaper.

Since 2012, New Europe has published an annual Our World edition [4] which features commentaries about the year ahead from policy official, experts, and lawmakers from Europe and the wider international community, including Jean-Claude Juncker, Thorbjørn Jagland, Dimitris Avramopoulos, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Benigno S. Aquino III, Joseph Daul, Corina Crețu, Manfred Weber, Gianni Pittella, and Christine Lagarde.[5]

See also

References

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