FEPS Newsletter 14 April 2026 – 🌹 FEPS at the Global Progressive Mobilisation

Join FEPS’ fringe events & workshops – If you have problems displaying this email, follow […]

14/04/2026
Join FEPS’ fringe events & workshops –

If you have problems displaying this email, follow this link

FEPS at the Global Progressive Mobilisation
 

FEPS at the Global Progressive Mobilisation

Uniting the world’s progressive forces

 

The Global Progressive Mobilisation (GPM) in Barcelona will be a moment of collective construction which will foster common reflection and coordinated action on key challenges of our time.

 

On Friday, 17 April, FEPS will take part in the GPM with a series of fringe events with live translation into Spanish!

 
Join FEPS Fringe events
 

11:00 – 12:00 – Hannah Ardent room – By FEPS, in collaboration with Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) Madrid and FES Vienna

Young men are moving right, young women are moving left. This is a familiar claim in emerging academic analysis and media narratives about Generation Z’s political attitudes and voting behaviour. This panel takes that assumption as a starting point for a discussion of what actually holds up, what doesn’t, and why, when it comes to Gen Z’s “gender divide”. It will bring together researchers from FEPS’ project EqualiZe with leading policymakers working on gender equality and young progressive activists.

12:00 – 13:00  – Hannah Ardent room – By FEPS, in collaboration with Global Progress Foundation

A conversation between Teresa Ribera, Executive Vice-President of the European Commission for a Clean, Just and Competitive Transition and FEPS Progressive Person of the Year 2023-2024, and Mariana Mazzucato, Professor at University College London, Founding Director of the UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose and FEPS Progressive Person of the Year 2025-2026.

13:00 – 14:00  – Hannah Ardent room 

With initiatives announced in Australia, Denmark, Spain, Germany and France to introduce a minimum digital age for social media, discussions should move beyond the question of “ban or not to ban”. It should instead explore which supporting measures are needed, while anticipating the unintended consequences of minimum age laws and how to avoid alienating young people when progressives need to expand their electorate.

14:00 – 15:00  – Hannah Ardent room – By FEPS, in collaboration with FES Just Climate and SOLIDAR

It is time to develop a renewed and inspiring eco-social leadership that weaves climate action, social protection and economic prosperity into a forward-looking vision. How can we achieve this? The session will explore the different forms of leadership that can reinvigorate the progressives’ climate engagement and rebuild trust with citizens and workers.

15:00 – 16:00  – Hannah Ardent room

The international order is facing profound uncertainty. Rising protectionism, democratic backsliding, blatant disregard of the international rules-based order, and the erosion of multilateral frameworks are reshaping global politics. In this context, cooperation between the European Union and Latin America is more vital than ever. Beyond the risks, the current moment presents an opportunity to strengthen progressive alliances and renew multilateralism. How can they effectively mobilise global action for a reformed and revitalised rules-based multilateral order? 

16:00 – 17:00  – Hannah Ardent room – By FEPS, in collaboration with Karl-Renner-Institut and with the support of Rafael Campalans Foundation

In contemporary reality, democratic politics and parties often find themselves in a position where they feel compelled to protect, defend and react. And yet, when they do, they are often perceived as too distant or reacting too late. This workshop will examine trends in societies amid the grand unravelling, disruptions and wars across two dimensions: socio-economic and international. It will explore what they reveal and what the centre-left can learn from them as they forge their own path in the short- and mid-term. 

16:00 – 17:00  – Anna Lindh room – By FEPS, in collaboration with Party of European Socialists

Attempts to normalise punitive and exclusionary approaches to migration are increasing. The hardline anti-migration practices pursued by many right-wing governments are also eroding long-standing taboos and human rights-focused approaches in Europe. However, the evidence is clear: inclusive, rights-based migration and integration policies work. How can progressives reclaim the narrative and build public confidence in inclusive policies that reflect the diverse and dynamic societies we are building?

Nelson Mandela room – By FEPS, in collaboration with Foundation Max Van der Stoel and Karl-Renner-Institut

 

Sharpen your political toolkit in just 45 minutes. These fast-paced, hands-on sessions will give participants everything they need to train in three crucial skills for our movement’s present and future. Skill Boosters energise the message, strengthen the impact and help turn progressive ideas into real change.

 

 – How to talk about politics… with ordinary people?  (11:00 – 12:00)
 – Beyond the echo chambers: Building alliances for progressive change (13:00 – 14:00)
 – Mind the movement: Practical tools for activists’ mental health (18:00 – 19:00)

 

Was this email forwarded to you?

Copyright © 2026 FEPS Europe, All rights reserved.

You are receiving this email because you participated in one of FEPS’ events and/or have registered for FEPS’ newsletter.

If you wish not to receive FEPS’ communications anymore, please click here: unsubscribe now

 

Foundation for European Progressive Studies
Avenue des Arts, 46 – 1000 Bruxelles

+32 223 46 900 – info@feps-europe.eu

Find all related Progressive Post
Progressive Post
22/04/2026

The European Green Deal was under siege in 2025, but it is still standing

2025 was a hard year for the European Green Deal, with far more steps backwards […]
16/04/2026

Orbán ousted by a landslide: time for a rethink

With an unprecedented voter turnout of almost 80 per cent, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán […]
Find all related Magazine
Magazine
  • cover book

    Issue #30 Progressive Post

Issue #30

In geopolitics, 2026 is challenging our certainties: from the abduction of the Venezuelan president, over […]
  • cover book

    # Issue 29 Progressive Post

# Issue 29

From the war in Ukraine to the devastation of Gaza since 2023, the words ‘war’ […]
  • cover book

    # Issue 28 Progressive Post

# Issue 28

European Social Democracy at historical crossroads
Find all related publications
Publications
17/04/2026

The open future and its enemies

How we can protect free society from AI dictatorship
17/04/2026

EqualiZe

A new political gender divide is often said to be defining Gen Z in Europe: […]
27/03/2026

Laboratories of counter-hegemony

Orbán, Trump and the transatlantic far-right ecosystem
25/03/2026

The European Green Deal tracker

How well is your member state implementing key policies of the Green Deal? The European […]
Find all related news
News
13/04/2026

Hungary’s civic revolution

FEPS' commentary on the outcomes of the Hungarian election
05/03/2026

FFPPVC commentary on the new EU Gender Equality Strategy 2026-2030

Commentary by the Feminist Foreign Policy Progressive Voices Collective (FFPPVC)
03/03/2026

Wag the dog?

FEPS commentary on the US-Israel attack on Iran
03/03/2026

Closing ceremony of the Progressive Ukraine programme

The graduation ceremony completed the programme which was part of the Open Progressive University (OPU).
Find all related in the media
In the media

Orban loses despite Trump backing

by The Point 21/04/2026
FEPS SecGen Dr Laszlo Andor discusses with Dr Swasti Rao onto The Worldview to break down a dramatic political turning point. following the Hungarian election.

Orban loses despite Trump backing: Hungary enters a new era with a landslide win for Peter Magyar

by The Print India 16/04/2026
Watch FEPS SecGen László Andor's interview on the election in Hungary and the defeat of Viktor Orbán, despite visible support from JD Vance. What drove this shift? Why did international backing from US and Russia fail to move the needle? And what does this result signal for Hungary’s future and the broader European political landscape?

What next for Olivér Várhelyi, Orbán’s last man standing in Brussels?

by EURACTIV 14/04/2026
FEPS Secretary General László Andor discusses the potential impact of the HUngarian election result on EU Commissioner, Olivér Várhely

EU relieved to see back of Orbán but Magyar’s Hungary may still present problems

by The Guardian 14/04/2026
FEPS Secretary General László Andor comments on Hungary's future following the outcome of the 2026 general election