Rio Times · europe Intelligence
Key Facts
—Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann has resigned after the World Cup last-16 exit, with Jürgen Klopp now in the frame.
—Spain heat More than 1,000 heat-related deaths were recorded in June as a second heatwave builds.
—Google fine The EU’s top court made a 4.125-billion-euro Android penalty final, the biggest ever upheld.
—France probe European prosecutors searched firms linked to the far-right party days before a key court ruling.
—Rome concert Ultimo plays to 250,000 people on Saturday in Italy’s largest-ever paid concert.
—German polls The far-right party leads on 27 percent, ahead of the governing bloc on 22 percent.
Europe is caught between football joy and summer dread this Friday, as dramatic wins share the headlines with a returning heatwave and rising heat deaths. Behind the noise, courts and prosecutors are squaring up to Big Tech and the far right while governments push reforms few seem to trust.
Germany – Coach Quits After World Cup Shock
A sudden departure
The German football federation announced that national coach Julian Nagelsmann has resigned with immediate effect after the team’s early World Cup exit, a loss to Paraguay decided on penalties, 4-3.
The 38-year-old had a contract running to the 2028 European Championship, and his exit is reported to carry a payout of about 7 million euros.
Klopp in the frame
The federation is now seeking talks with Jürgen Klopp, the famous former Liverpool manager, who has signalled he is open to the job.
Klopp currently works for the Red Bull group under a deal running to 2029, so any move would need careful handling.
Germany – Reform Package Meets Doubt
Merz digs in
Chancellor Friedrich Merz insisted his coalition will push through a 34-point reform package, telling public television it fully intends to follow through.
The plan trims paperwork, loosens some labour rules and scraps sick-notes given by phone, and includes income-tax relief worth about 10 billion euros a year.
Economists unconvinced
Leading economists warned the package lacks fairness and will do little to spur growth, a sobering verdict for a struggling economy.
The government’s standing is fragile, with the far-right party at 27 percent in polls, ahead of the governing bloc on 22 percent.
Europe savours dramatic wins even as a returning heatwave, wildfires and heat deaths breed exhaustion from Iberia to France.
France – Far Right Faces Fresh Funds Probe
Searches across borders
European prosecutors carried out searches targeting communications firms linked to the far-right party over the suspected misuse of European Union money paid between 2019 and 2024.
The searches spanned France, Spain, Italy and Belgium, and party chief Jordan Bardella confirmed a coming judicial probe into himself, calling the timing political.
A looming ruling
The pressure comes just days before a Paris appeal court is due to rule, on July 7, on whether to confirm Marine Le Pen’s ban from standing for office.
The decision could reshape the run-up to France’s 2027 presidential election.
France – Heat, Fires and a Censure Motion
Bracing for more heat
Temperatures are set to climb again from the weekend after a deadly June, and fires are multiplying in the south of the country.
The prime minister promised to distribute nearly 30,000 air-conditioners to hospitals by the end of next week.
Political heat too
The Greens and the hard-left party have filed a censure motion in the National Assembly, a formal move to try to bring down the government.
The mood is weary and combative as the country juggles a health emergency with a political fight.
Spain – Second Heatwave, Grim June Toll
Warnings return
A mass of hot air is affecting the south and west, with orange warnings for temperatures of 40 to 42 degrees Celsius, and forecasters expect a new heatwave from the weekend.
June 2026 was the second-hottest June on record in Spain.
A heavy human cost
The campaign group Greenpeace said more than 1,000 people died from the heat in June, over 200 of them during the main heatwave.
It also noted that only 19 of 52 provincial capitals have cool public shelters, leaving many with nowhere to escape the heat.
Europe – Top Court Upholds Google Fine
A record penalty stands
The European Union’s highest court dismissed Google’s appeal, making a 4.125-billion-euro fine over its Android phone software final.
It is the largest such penalty ever upheld by the bloc’s courts, after judges found a single, continuous set of anti-competitive practices.
Winners on the ground
The Alphabet parent company faces joint liability of more than 1,520 million euros as part of the ruling.
Spanish developers and phone makers see stronger bargaining power, in a country where Android runs on around 70 percent of smartphones.
Italy – Rome Grips Record Concert and Diplomacy
A record night ahead
The singer-songwriter Ultimo plays a suburban Rome venue on Saturday in what will be Italy’s largest-ever paid concert, with 250,000 tickets sold.
Fans have camped for days under scorching heat, and the city will keep its three underground lines open all night with free shuttle buses.
A diplomatic thermometer
A US Independence Day reception in Rome became a test of ties with Washington after President Trump’s public jabs at Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Meloni stayed away while half her government attended, and the American ambassador insisted relations were among the best he has seen.
Low Countries – Guarding Tech, Fighting Nitrogen
A stake in drones
The Dutch defence ministry plans to work closely with an Amsterdam drone company and to seek a so-called golden share, a special stake giving the state a veto over key decisions.
The stated aim is to stop unique knowledge from leaving the country amid a wider debate on standing on one’s own feet in technology.
Belgium’s late escape
Belgium reached the World Cup last 16 with a dramatic 3-2 win over Senegal after extra time, coming back from two goals down.
Youri Tielemans converted a penalty in the very last minute of extra time to seal it before a Seattle crowd of 67,000.
The Bigger Picture
Europe today feels stretched between the thrill of football and the fear of the heat. Fans across the continent are celebrating late, dramatic wins even as families in Spain, Portugal and France count the cost of a summer that keeps turning deadly.
There is defiance in the mix too. Courts are confronting the world’s biggest technology firm and prosecutors are chasing suspected misuse of public money by the far right, while governments in Berlin and The Hague promise reforms that few voters seem to believe in.
Underneath it all runs a steady current of political fatigue. Germany’s wounded footballing pride, France’s censure fight and Italy’s careful thaw with Washington all point to a region searching for confidence in an uneasy, sweltering start to July.
What We Are Watching
Today – Final World Cup last-16 places decided, with no European teams playing.
Today – Portugal’s nationwide heat alert runs while Spain’s temperatures climb.
Saturday – Ultimo’s record concert in Rome and the Tour de France start in Barcelona.
Sunday – German cabinet prepares to approve the 2027 budget draft on Monday.
Monday – Spain face Portugal in an Iberian last-16 tie.
Monday – German cabinet to approve the 2027 budget draft.
Tuesday – Paris appeal court rules on Marine Le Pen’s ban from office.
This week – Spain’s heat expected to peak around Monday as fire risk stays high.
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