“As of today, the EU is us,” proudly [proclaims Gazeta Wyborcza](http:// http://wyborcza.pl/prezydencja2011/1,111636,9874064,Od_dzis_Europa_to_my.html) on the front page. At exactly 12.00 noon in the Sejm, or Polish parliament, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban officially handed the EU rotating presidency over to Poland. The next-half year looks like a major test for both PM Donald Tusk’s centre-right cabinet and for the Polish political class as a whole. “If we manage, we’ll become one of the EU’s main pillars, like Germany and France”, affirms the Warsaw daily. Dziennik Gazeta Prawna warns, however, that the presidency is a “logistical and intellectual” challenge and that the trick is not to talk about several dozen priorities, but to “actually realise the few crucial ones”. Rzeczpospolita sounds a warning note, too, stressing that Warsaw takes over the EU presidency at a time when “Europe fears for its future” – an “informal state of emergency continues in Greece” while the Spanish and Portuguese have run out of holes to further tighten their belts. Meanwhile Polska The Times notes that, being a sworn advocate of European integration, Poland can play a pivotal role in Europe’s current “battle between Eurosceptics and Euro-optimists”.
A conversation with investigative reporters Stefano Valentino and Giorgio Michalopoulos, who have dissected the dark underbelly of green finance for Voxeurop and won several awards for their work.
Go to the event >