Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The EU Just Voted To End Daylight Saving Time—But That Was The Easy Part

The EU Just Voted To End Daylight Saving Time—But That Was The Easy Part
Sharon Lapkin / Getty Images

European Parliament has come one step closer to abolishing seasonal time changes throughout Europe. According to The Local's German division. MEPs (Member of European Parliament) on the Committee on Transport and Tourism voted 23-11 in favor of ending the EU's seasonal time changes in a vote on Monday.

This isn't the final say in the matter, however, as the Council of Member States must also vote to obtain a union-wide consensus. If the change is approved, it would be up to each Member State to determine whether to comply with the change. It also wouldn't go into effect until 2021.


There is also some disagreement as to how to implement the change, some supporting switching to Summer Time and others to Winter Time.

This change could have a major impact on air and rail travel, as well as other forms of transportation, and the shipping of goods.

This vote comes after an EU-wide poll showed that 84% of respondents supported ending the biannual time change.

Swedish MEP Marita Ulvskog gave a statement after the vote:

"We have decided to see that we don't go through this time change between the different seasonal periods. We don't have summer time and winter time, in the way we have today. That also means that the Member States can decide if they want to have permanent summer time or permanent winter time."
"Of course there has to be information and a system that works, so that you adjust to that because transports, flights, traffic, and lots of other things wouldn't work if we couldn't see to that you are well informed and you can adjust to this change."
"We will decide in the Parliament when we have our next session in late March and after that it is for the Council and the Member States to say how they want to end this journey."
"Because it's a journey. Lots of people have been travelling with us. More than 4 million Europeans have written to the European Union to say that they are not in favour of making those time changes every year."


Many people on Twitter seemed to support the decision.


Not everyone agrees with the decision, many citing ways it might make life more complicated.





Quite a few people from around the globe expressed interest in their countries making the change as well.




The EU has had unified summer time and winter time changes since 1980, when they were synchronized "in order to ensure a harmonised approach to time switching within the single market," according to a press release from the European Parliament. Any major changes in the way time is standardized within the EU must also be handled in a similarly harmonious fashion to avoid interruptions to European's daily lives.

More from News

Pope Leo XIV; 2005 World Series
Andrea Staccioli/Insidefoto/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Someone Found A Video Of Pope Leo At The World Series In 2005—And It's Truly Wild

You've probably heard that the new pope Robert Prevost, named Pope Leo XIV, is a Chicagoan, raised primarily in the southern suburb of Dolton.

And as a Southsider (or adjacent to one, anyway), that means he's a huge fan of the Chicago White Sox.

Keep Reading Show less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

RFK Jr. Blasted For Taking Grandkids To Swim In Sewage-Tainted Creek For Mother's Day

Sunday was Mother’s Day in the United States, so many families gathered to pay tribute to the moms in their lives.

People marked the occasion by attending church services, going out for Sunday brunch, gathering for family dinners, and violating national park regulations to go swimming in sewage tainted waterways.

Keep Reading Show less
Pope Leo XIV
Salvatore Laporta/KONTROLAB/LightRocket via Getty Images

Pope Leo's Brother Sparks Outrage Over Vile Posts About Nancy Pelosi And Parents Of Trans Kids

The brother of Robert Prevost, a Chicago-born Roman Catholic Augustine cleric who last week became the newly-elected Pope Leo XIV, is facing heated criticism after some of his older Facebook posts resurfaced and revealed that he'd shared a video calling Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi a "drunk c**nt" as well as a transphobic meme about transgender children.

For instance, in an April 23 post, Prevost claimed that former President Obama desired “the total destruction of our way of life” and aimed to turn the U.S. into a dictatorship, adding that it would be “a racist one on top of it.” He had previously pushed a conspiracy theory alleging that “OBAMA WAS A CIA ASSET, PUT IN PLACE TO DESTROY THE USA.”

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump; a street in Stockholm, Sweden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Pradeep Dambarage/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Stockholm Floored After Trump Administration Sends Letter Demanding They End DEI Programs

Swedish authorities in the capital of Stockholm criticized the Trump administration for sending a "bizarre" letter ordering that the city end its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.

The letter marked the latest step in President Donald Trump’s broader push to dismantle federal programs focused on diversity and inclusion—part of what he pledged in his inaugural address would be a campaign to stop attempts to “socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life.”

Keep Reading Show less
person using laptop computer and green stethoscope nearby
National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Doctors Divulge The Medical Questions They Wish Their Friends Hadn't Asked Them

Some professions seem to inspire people to ask for advice or insight. Medicine is high—if not at the top—on that list.

Once people find out a person is a medical professional, they often ask for an impromptu diagnosis or treatment recommendations.

Keep Reading Show less