What Can A Home Secretary Actually Do These Days?
As the case of Suella Braverman shows, the British government is unable to implement its voters’ wishes.
As the case of Suella Braverman shows, the British government is unable to implement its voters’ wishes.
EU countries spend billions on Russian liquified natural gas.
Congress is borrowing 26 cents of every dollar they spend. Only structural spending reforms can prevent a fiscal meltdown—and time is running out.
There is a clear desire on the part of the press and those in power to hide the terrorist’s not-very-French name.
AfD spokesman it was “brazen and ridiculous” to blame the party “for the lack of attractiveness of Germany as a [business] location.”
Asylum applications across the EU, meanwhile, have risen by 30% this year.
The incoming ombudsman has declared her support for ‘Rainbow Friday,’ a school-based LGBT celebration.
Kyiv’s premature EU accession “does not coincide” with Hungary’s interests, the prime minister says.
“Nuclear energy is back,” Emmanuel Macron declared.
What will it take to wake decent people up and take an active stand against this barbarism?