Slightly old now, but Macron won re-election in France, as I'm sure people have seen: so no great change there. I know some people are pointing to Marine Le Pen's 42% as a sign of the inexorable rise of the far right there, but I think it's equally likely to be a high water-mark: there's only so many defeats you can take as a politician, it's not clear that MLP will have another run and it's not clear that the National Rally have enough of a bench to back her up. Parliamentary elections coming up in June could be more of an issue for Macron... except that in France's two-round system, being the centre party often means you only need to come second in R1 to win the seat with supporters from the right or left switching against your opponent in R2. The Macron project has been quite effectively designed to game all the issues with single-member runoff voting as a system, and whilst there are pretty deep issues with it (I'm certainly no fan of the man), one has to admit that it's largely worked so far, making him the only actual governing president (that is, with his own parliamentary majority) to ever win re-election in the modern French system.
Also a much more liberal party is going to lead a new coalition in Slovenia. Generally east-central Europe has shifted to a sharply more liberal position in recent years with more centre-authoritarian leaders losing power in Czechia (to a centre-right liberal coalition) and Slovakia (to a pretty dodgy mix of centre-right liberals, anti-corruption populists, and some pretty nasty elements, though they also have a more progressive-liberal president). Poland and Hungary are still very illiberal, of course... but now have a massive wedge between them over the issue of Ukraine as noted above.
We've also got Australia's election looming, and the Philippine presidential election coming up: the former seems like it might be going to return Labor to power after most of a decade in opposition (since 2013). In the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte, the current president who is very openly in favour of extrajudicial killings of criminals, can't run again, but a ticket with an equally controversial populist and son of a human-rights-abusing former president running alongside Duterte's daughter is a probable favourite to replace him. Duterte's vice-president, who isn't from his party (the Philippines elects the posts separately) is probably the second most likely contender, with a running mate from the social-liberal Liberal party and a platform of toning down the extremes of the Duterte drug war.