From WestMonster, young Italians voted overwhelmingly for Eurosceptic and anti-mass-migration political parties. (via Voice Of Europe)
From the Express, no matter what happens next in Italy, the E.U. is in "big trouble".
From The Local IT, what the elections reveal about the north-south divide in Italy.
From Voice Of Europe, Hungarian spokesman Zoltan Kovacs calls immigration "expensive" and integration "impossible".
From El País, a poll finds that one in three Spanish women has felt sexually harassed at some point in her life.
From France24, eight northern E.U. countries warn against "radical" reform.
From the NL Times, Dutch politicians want to scrap the E.U. anti-fake-news task force.
From Breitbart London, in response to the court ordered removal of a cross from a statue of Pope John Paul II, the statue has been sold by the French town of Ploërmel to the Catholic church.
From Christian Today, Christian asylum seekers in Sweden have been victimized by violence. (via Voice Of Europe)
From Sputnik International, the E.U. parliament demands money from a Eurosceptic party.
From Human Rights Watch, 13,000 asylum seekers are trapped on the Greek islands.
From Agence France Presse, the E.U. Commission criticizes seven countries over their "aggressive" tax policies.
From Al Jazeera, a group of Muslims, including Linda Sarsour, are arrested at the office of House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis). (via Yahoo and Gateway Pundit)
From Behind The News, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu promises to "stop Iran" and tells Palestinian leader Abbas to "stop paying terrorists". (H/T luchadora for the Tweet)
From AhlulBayt News Agency, Iran's supreme leader plants trees.
From The Hollywood Reporter, the Playboy Mansion will be preserved due to an agreement between Los Angeles and its new owner. (via The Daily Caller)
From The Daily Signal, President Trump's amnesty proposals could repeat the mistakes made by President Reagan in 1986. (One lesson Trump could learn from Reagan's mistakes is that an "amnesty first" deal will quickly evolve into an "amnesty only" deal.)
From The Washington Free Beacon, Mayor Megan Barry (D) of Nashville, Tennessee resigns while admitting to theft and to having an affair with her bodyguard.
From FrontpageMag and the "what else in new?" department, Farrakhan blames the Jews.
From Townhall, some perspective on recent warm temperatures in the Arctic.
From ABC (the Australian site), an Australian woman finds the world's oldest message in a bottle. (The story comes via the New York Post. I wonder what the Police think of this.)
From the New York Post, for an upcoming concert, Saudi Arabia says "no dancing".
From Newsweek, small marks on Martian rocks could indicate the past presence of water.
And from Rolling Stone, a flashback to Weird Al's first polka medley.
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