24/10/23View in Browser

 Moving on from Fridays For Future

By Nikolaus J. Kurmayer | @NKurmayer

With Fridays For Future becoming embroiled in the social media storm that has accompanied the outbreak of violence in the Middle East, some supporters who marched along to the tune of climate action are beginning to look elsewhere. Is the group becoming unfit to provide the impulse necessary for the 2020s?

Fridays For Future, the movement sparked by a Swedish teen who felt that governments worldwide weren’t doing enough to combat climate change, dominated Europe’s media landscape for years.

The green wave that swept EU Parliament and policy was partly a response to, and legitimised by, scores of similarly-minded young taking to the streets.

Yet the movement’s founding figure, Greta Thunberg, has recently come under fire in Germany.

Likely with little ill intention, the figurehead of the Fridays movement waded into a profoundly complex issue where grievances run deep on both sides. “Today we strike in solidarity with Palestine and Gaza,” she said during a rally, dedicating her 270th Friday to the cause.

It may seem innocuous, but critics quickly pointed out that she had not made similar calls when Israel was subject to a Hamas terrorist attack. And while support for Palestine does not equate to anti-Semitism, the damage was already done in such a febrile and incendiary information environment.

“Fridays for Future will not solve the Middle East conflict – and should not even try,” said the green EU lawmaker Erik Marquardt.

Thunberg recommended a set of social media handles her 5.6 million followers on X could go to for information on the conflict, resulting in left-wing media Volksverpetzer titling its most-read article from 20 October with “Greta Thunberg recommends accounts that support terrorism”.

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Photo of the day

French President Emmanuel Macron (L) shakes hands with Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid before their talks in Jerusalem, 24 October 2023. Macron is traveling to Israel to show France's solidarity with the country and further work on the release of hostages who are being held in Gaza. EPA-EFE/CHRISTOPHE ENA / POOL MAXPPP OUT

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The Roundup

During a visit to Israel, French President Emmanuel Macron floated the idea of a coalition to fight Hamas modelled on the one that already exists against Daesh, a radical Muslim organisation that says it represents the Islamic State in the Middle East.

The European Commission has put forward a package of non-binding measures designed to aid the bloc’s beleaguered wind turbine makers, who are under pressure from its cheaper competitors abroad.

The European Parliament’s Environment Committee voted Tuesday (24 October) to support Commission targets to reduce the carbon footprint of heavy-duty vehicles (HDVs), making it a near certainty that clean trucks will make up the majority of new HDVs post-2040.

And don’t forget to check out our Transport Brief: Threat of higher fuel prices resurrects Yellow Vest fears.

Look out for…

  • Commission Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič receives Moldovan PM Dorin Recean on Wednesday.
  • Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivers opening speech at Global Gateway Forum in Brussels on Wednesday.
  • Agriculture Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski receives Albanian PM Edi Rama on Wednesday.
  • Commissioner Nicolas Schmit attends the Tripartite Social Summit.

Views are the author’s

[Edited byAlice Taylor/Zoran Radosavljevic]

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