“Instead of endless theoretical debates on ‘more Europe’ or ‘less Europe’, we need to focus on ‘better Europe’,” they wrote. “We were happy to share the power,” Hungary’s justice minister, László Trócsányi, told the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper in a recent interview. • Jarosław Kaczyński is not Poland’s justice minister as we said in this article, he is the chairman of the Law and Justice party. But the coming half-year could also be a chance for these central European countries – members of the Visegrád group – to have their voices more clearly heard in the EU than ever before. “No one saw it coming,” said Dariusz Kałan, central European analyst at the Polish Institute of International Affairs.
Source: The Guardian July 04, 2016 12:11 UTC