
Free Trade Sank Europe’s Economy
Economic theory promised that free trade would bring new levels of prosperity to Europe. That did not happen. The continent needs a Trump-style rethinking of its economic future.

Economic theory promised that free trade would bring new levels of prosperity to Europe. That did not happen. The continent needs a Trump-style rethinking of its economic future.

The two blocs aim to lift barriers on 97% of exports, while Mercosur’s controversial EU deal remains stalled.

The free world should embrace the open flow of investment capital and business ideas, not stifle them with political suspicion.
The U.S. president says “many other deals are in serious stages of negotiation.”

A new UK-EU declaration could be the final nail in the coffin for those working to secure Britain’s borders.

The European Union is angry with Trump because its “protectionist racket has finally hit a wall.”

The success of the French-Polish opposition to Mercosur hinges on Meloni, but sources in Rome say they can’t rely on her this time.

France to present a united front in support of its farmers and against substandard South American food imports.

As the economic elite comes to Washington for the IMF-World Bank meetings, they cry about Trump’s idea for trade tariffs. Frankly, they have no idea what they are talking about.

National conservatives recognize national values. We recognize the limitations of capitalism and the free market. Economic trade is a national resource, but that is all it is.