Tesla experienced a sharp decline in sales across Germany and other parts of Europe in February, a downturn that has affected its stock price and drawn attention to the political controversies surrounding CEO Elon Musk.
Sooner or later, The New York Times catches on to the news. In the case of immigration policy, the news it has caught up with is that mass immigration, legal and illegal, from less-developed
Danish Migration Minister Kaare Dybvad Bek has called on Germany to cooperate in finding joint solutions to Europe's migration challenges, criticizing the current asylum system as ineffective and exploitative,
February numbers show the U.S. electric-car maker is struggling to attract buyers in the region. Mr. Musk’s politics aren’t helping.
A spokesperson told BI that buyers had asked for greater clarity, but weren't rejecting US goods. It comes amid tensions over Trump's statements.
Across Western Europe, overall support for Ukraine "until it wins" has declined, as a YouGov poll conducted in December 2024 found that public desire to continue backing Ukraine until victory in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Denmark and the U.K. dropped in the last year, according to the Guardian.