
First Mover, Last Forgiven: What the Cato Institute Gets Wrong on Hungary
Budapest’s real offence was not what it did, but that it did it first and said so loudly.

Budapest’s real offence was not what it did, but that it did it first and said so loudly.

Socialist Seguro and populist Ventura have advanced to the second round in the Portuguese presidential race.

Rising crime is dominating the campaign in the Latin-American country, boosting support for a hardline security agenda.

Rob Jetten admits forming a stable coalition will be difficult after his narrow election victory left Dutch politics deeply divided.

Being the first German chancellor in history who needed two rounds to be confirmed already casts doubts on the long-term viability of his government.

The German establishment’s panic over Elon Musk reveals its true fear of the electorate.

A symbolic gesture, perhaps, but it sends the clear message that British voters are fed up with what one commentator calls the “entire centre-left paradigm.”

The Social Democrats won the regional elections by a thin margin, but governing parties took a bashing.

This attempted murder may galvanize both Trump and a majority of the American people to deal with the Left decisively. We must hope so.

After a month of negotiations, there’s a new government of national unity in South Africa. But will it work?