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- 1From:National Review (Vol. 75, Issue 4)In the aftermath of the 2016 election, the conservative coalition has seemed badly frayed and unable to reach a consensus on what it ought to stand for. Fortunately, Robert P. George, the conservative gadfly of Princeton...
- 2From:Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Vol. 42, Issue 2)THE DRAMA SURROUNDING Rep. Kevin McCarthy's (R-CA) election as Speaker of the House showcased the many ways the conservative movement has evolved (or fractured) over the past decade. While conservative rabble-rousers in...
- 3From:Country Report: BrazilThe wafer-thin victory of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of the left-wing Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT) in last year's presidential race shook Brazil's right wing, which had been in power since 2019. Following his defeat the...
- 4From:Country Report: ItalyWhat's happened? On February 12th regional elections were held in Lombardy (in the north) and Lazio (in the centre), with the right-wing national government alliance winning comfortably in both regions. Voter turnout...
- 5From:The EconomistThere are two ways to interpret the raucous cheering that erupted in Kochi's Sridhar cinema at the sight of Deepika Padukone wearing a saffron bikini. One is that the mostly male audience, gathered one evening last week...
- 6From:The EconomistThat those who lean to opposite ends of the political spectrum think differently from each other is obvious. That such differences show up in brain scans is intriguing. Brain scanning is a low-resolution approach to...
- 7From:National Review (Vol. 75, Issue 1)Since the publication of Patrick Deneen's Why Liberalism Failed in 2018, a small but growing number of religious conservatives have been reevaluating the place of classical liberalism in America's political culture....
- 8From:National Review (Vol. 75, Issue 1)Among the many unwelcome legacies of Donald Trump's random walk through foreign and defense policy during his presidency, the resurgence of isolationism and know-nothingism in the Republican Party is among the most...
- 9From:The EconomistGermany and Poland should be happy neighbours. Bound by close personal ties as well as ?150bn ($159bn) in yearly trade, the two are key members of both the European Union and NATO. As Russia's invasion confronts Europe...
- 10From:New Statesman (Vol. 152, Issue 5698)Last year was a bad one for the right of the Conservatives. Despite its dominance of the parliamentary party and, to an even greater extent, the party membership, it managed to lose not one but two leaders it had...
- 11From:The American Conservative (Vol. 22, Issue 1)The most famous academic event of the culture wars of the 1980s took place at Stanford University in January 1987 on Martin Luther King Day. Jesse Jackson came to The Farm, delivered a Rainbow Coalition speech, then led...
- 12From:Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (Vol. 42, Issue 1)MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND isn't the first and won't be the last community to pass a resolution that redefines anti-Semitism to include criticisms of Israel. However, the unanimous passage by the County Council on Nov....
- 13From:National Review (Vol. 74, Issue 23)Prominent voices have suggested that we're past peak campus wokeness--that the tide has turned and is starting to recede. If true, that's all to the good. It does seem that the pace of assaults on conservative speakers...
- 14From:National Review (Vol. 74, Issue 23)The night after the polls closed in this midterm, when it was increasingly clear that a bold Republican victory would not be in the offing, I joined a few friends for some dinner and commiseration. As we discussed the...
- 15From:New Statesman (Vol. 151, Issue 5697)Britain is becoming less religious and less white. These were two significant findings from the 2021 census published by the Office for National Statistics in November. For many on the right of politics, this is a...
- 16From:The CriticDavid Starkey 20 OCTOBER 2022 IS A DATE I SHALL NOT FORGET. It’s the day when Liz Truss stood outside Downing Street to announce her resignation — the fourth Conservative prime minister to be hounded from office by...
- 17From:The Progressive (Vol. 86, Issue 6)It seems like ages since so many of us suddenly had to take a crash course in critical race theory (CRT). Then, seemingly five minutes later, just as Christopher Rufo, a fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute,...
- 18From:National Review (Vol. 74, Issue 22)For much of the history of the American conservative movement, limiting the size and scope of government has stood as one of its central goals. But as traditional political alliances have fractured in the earthquake and...
- 19From:The EconomistIt is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of Tory rule T HE BEST guide to British politics today was written 13 years ago and features the Marxist analysis of Slavoj Zizek applied to the Disney film...
- 20From:National Review (Vol. 74, Issue 21)Mike Pence gave a sober and thoughtful speech at the Heritage Foundation, advocating a synthesis of traditional Reagan conservatism and populism as the way ahead for the Right. This approach would absorb certain changes...