Rio Times · europe Intelligence
Key Facts
—Germany tax Ten billion euros of income-tax relief will begin on 1 January 2027.
—Italy tech Bending Spoons closed its first day up nearly 40 percent, worth over 24 billion dollars.
—France heat A fresh heat spell builds from Thursday after France’s hottest days ever recorded.
—Netherlands Oranje are out of the World Cup on penalties for the seventh time at a major event.
—Spain PSOE calls snap party votes, with a first round set for 19 July.
—Portugal Twelve districts are on red heat warnings from Thursday to Saturday.
Europe is torn between pride and dread today, cheering an Italian tech triumph while bracing for another punishing heat spell in the south. Governments in Berlin and Madrid try to project control, but weary and sceptical publics are not easily won over.
Football deepens the mood, with Dutch heartbreak and German embarrassment set against celebration elsewhere. Behind the headlines runs a quiet worry that record heat is becoming the new normal.
Germany – A Reform Leap Forward
An overnight deal
Germany’s governing coalition, led by Chancellor Friedrich Merz, agreed overnight on a sweeping package covering income taxes, pensions and cuts to red tape. The details were unveiled at a 9 am press conference and hailed as a big leap forward.
At the heart sits ten billion euros in income-tax relief starting on 1 January 2027, easing the load for low and middle earners. A typical family could keep up to 600 euros more each year.
The catch that stings
Not everyone is cheering, as telephone sick-notes will be scrapped and a doctor’s certificate required from the very first day of illness. Family doctors called that change catastrophic.
The small-job flat tax will rise from two to five percent, and a planned savings-based pension could lift contributions by up to two percentage points. Unions attacked wider use of short-term work contracts as an unnecessary cut.
Italy – A Global Tech Champion
A blockbuster debut
Milan-based software firm Bending Spoons made a dazzling entrance on the Nasdaq, the American technology stock market. It priced its shares at 29 dollars each, above the expected range, and raised about 1.68 billion dollars.
The shares then jumped, closing the first day up nearly 40 percent at 40.50 dollars. That pushed the company’s value past 24 billion dollars.
Why it matters
It is billed as the first fully digital Italian software firm to list on the Nasdaq, and many see it as proof that Italy can build a global technology champion. National pride is running high.
The four founders keep about 48 percent of the company and 82 percent of the voting power through special shares. Chief executive Luca Ferrari led the effort.
A right-wing head of state is ‘no longer a taboo’ — Giorgia Meloni.
France – Bracing For More Heat
A record spell ends
France is finally leaving behind a brutal heat spell that ran from 17 June to 2 July. The 24th and 25th of June were the hottest days ever recorded there, with the daily average first reaching 30 degrees.
Saintes hit a peak of 43.8 degrees, and the strain on health has been severe. Heat claimed 5,722 lives in France in 2025.
No respite in sight
The national weather service warns temperatures will climb again from Thursday in the south, spreading nationwide by the weekend. At some supermarkets, shoppers rushed in near-chaotic scenes to buy air conditioners before the next hot stretch.
Fires have flared, with a blaze in the Minervois area spreading to nearly 950 hectares. Exhaustion and anxiety are settling in as this feels like the new normal.
Netherlands – Penalty Heartbreak Returns
Out on spot-kicks
The Dutch national team crashed out of the World Cup, losing a penalty shootout to Morocco after a 1-1 draw. Kluivert, Timber and Summerville all missed from the spot.
It is the seventh time the team has been knocked out of a major tournament on penalties. The pain of an old wound has reopened.
A coach in doubt
Afterwards, coach Ronald Koeman openly questioned his own future. The mood in the football world turned to self-criticism and gloom.
Fans in Amsterdam drifted home disillusioned, while Moroccan supporters celebrated in a lively district of The Hague. The country is half-mourning a golden generation.
Spain – Party Locked Down
Snap internal votes
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s party has called quick internal elections in five regional branches plus Madrid, to be held in July. The aim is to shield candidates loyal to the leadership before the 2027 vote.
The move followed a surprise Madrid bid by Enma Lopez, which led to her forced departure from the party’s national executive. A first round is set for 19 July, with a possible run-off on 26 July.
Courts circle the family
Meanwhile, prosecutors opposed a request by the prime minister’s wife, Begona Gomez, to travel abroad from 7 to 10 July, citing a risk she might flee justice. She wants to join him at a summit in Ankara and attend her daughter’s graduation in London.
A judge had earlier taken her passport and barred her from leaving Spain ahead of a jury trial on four alleged offences. Separately, police searched a provincial-council building in Cadiz over secret contracts.
Germany – Doctors And Unions Push Back
A revolt over sick-notes
Family doctors branded the plan to require a certificate from the first day of illness absolutely catastrophic. The change is the most contested part of the new package.
The country’s main union group attacked the widened use of short-term job contracts as an unnecessary cut. Such contracts could be extended up to six times and last up to 48 months until the end of 2030.
Football under a cloud
Separately, prosecutors launched nationwide raids over suspected corruption tied to discounted football tickets. The inquiry centres on tickets allegedly sold at preferential prices.
It lands amid heavy coverage of Germany’s own World Cup exit to Paraguay. The timing has deepened a sense of embarrassment around the game.
Portugal – On Edge Under Red Alerts
Fire fears mount
Twelve districts have been placed on red heat warnings from Thursday to Saturday as temperatures climb. Authorities warned the conditions for severe fires are enormous.
Air-force planes have been sent to help stand ready. The public is wary and on edge.
A sour note in sport
A refereeing scandal has shaken Portuguese football, with the resignation of official Duarte Gomes and the opening of an inquiry. It has soured an already tense mood.
The combination of heat fear and sporting controversy leaves the country uneasy. Summer here feels heavy this year.
Italy – The Presidency Becomes A Battle
A taboo lifted
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni argued on television that a right-wing head of state is no longer a taboo if her side wins again. She framed the 2029 presidential vote as a live campaign fight.
Names such as Mantovano and Crosetto are already circulating as possible centre-right contenders. Her trust rating stands at 42 percent, with 61 percent approving her foreign policy.
The opposition fires back
Opposition figures accused her of unmasking a real aim to seize the presidency. Former prime minister Matteo Renzi vowed to stop her run, calling her ministers unfit and pledging to send her home.
The exchange has turned bitter and personal. Italy’s politics now feel like a permanent campaign.
The Bigger Picture
Europe today is a study in contrasts, with Italy basking in the glow of a global tech success while much of the south braces for yet another spell of extreme heat. That heat, following the most intense western European heatwave on record, is feeding a deeper anxiety that such summers are here to stay.
Governments are trying to look steady. Berlin promotes a bold reform as a leap forward even as doctors and unions object, while Madrid rallies its party as courts investigate the prime minister’s family.
In both cases, the public feels weary and doubtful rather than reassured.
Football, as so often, mirrors the emotional swing of the continent. Dutch heartbreak and lingering German embarrassment sit alongside pride and celebration elsewhere, a reminder of how closely the game is woven into national feeling.
What We Are Watching
Today – Germany’s coalition presents the full reform detail, reshaping household finances from 2027.
Today – Bending Spoons trading continues on the Nasdaq after its near-40 percent first-day jump.
Today – Spain and France play World Cup knockout matches that will swing national moods.
This week – A new heat spell builds over France, Spain and Portugal, with red alerts spreading.
This week – The contested travel window for Begona Gomez around 7 to 10 July tests a judge’s limits.
This week – The Spanish party’s signature-collection window for its snap votes opens from 4 July.
19 July – First round of the Spanish party’s snap internal elections, notably in Madrid.
End of 2026 – Germany aims to pass pension recommendations, including a savings-based pension, into law.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much money will German workers actually save under the new tax deal?
Low and middle earners will get ten billion euros in income-tax relief starting 1 January 2027, and a typical family could keep up to 600 euros more each year.
How did Bending Spoons' stock market debut go?
The Milan-based software firm priced its shares at 29 dollars each, then closed its first day on the Nasdaq up nearly 40 percent at 40.50 dollars, pushing its total value past 24 billion dollars.
How bad has the heat been in France this summer?
The 24th and 25th of June were the hottest days ever recorded in France, with Saintes hitting a peak of 43.8 degrees, and heat claimed 5,722 lives there in 2025.
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