September 25, 2025: Sarkozy’s Corruption Verdict, Starmer’s Benefit Cap Crisis, VDL’s Deleted Texts, and Berlin’s Judge Election Stakes
Description
On this September 25th, the political fate of leaders and governments hangs in the balance across Europe's capitals.
In Paris, a French court is set to deliver its potentially historic verdict in the corruption trial of former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is prosecuted for charges including "corruption passive" and "financement illégal de campagne électorale". Simultaneously, the spotlight is on the German Bundestag for the critical Richterwahl (judge election), a high-stakes moment for the Schwarz-Rot coalition requiring a two-thirds majority to confirm the three nominees, including Sigrid Emmenegger, Günter Spinner, and Ann-Katrin Kaufhold. A failure to pass the election would be a political disaster for the government.
In Brussels, Commission President Ursula von der Leyen faces deepening scrutiny regarding transparency after the EU Ombudsman opened an investigation into requested messages (including those concerning the Mercosur trade deal). Her spokesperson explained that the messages are routinely "auto-deleted after a while, just for space reasons," a practice Transparency International warns is not transparent.
Finally, in London, Prime Minister Keir Starmer attempts to launch a major regeneration drive built on "deliverism", but his agenda is overshadowed by mounting pressure from 101 Labour MPs demanding the Chancellor fund the axing of the politically sensitive two-child benefit cap. The PM's internal troubles are compounded by the high-profile challenge from Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham (dubbed the "king of the north"), who is openly criticizing Starmer's No. 10 and positioning himself for a leadership challenge.