Tag: Jorge González-Gallarza

VOX’s Bridge to Nowhere

VOX’s no-confidence motion to oust PM Pedro Sánchez amounts to little more than a gimmick.

Spain’s European Moment

Spain’s upcoming turn at holding the EU Council Presidency is a high-stakes opportunity likely to be missed.

When Israel Is Too Real

Could Fauda prove the clearest testament yet to the Palestinian question’s irreducible unsolvability?

Irreverent Shofet

Fresh off forming Israel’s most right-wing government ever, Bibi Netanyahu appears in his recently published memoir as the Jewish people’s shrewdest leader since King Solomon.

Shoulder-Shrugging Conservatism

If they wish to be governing forces like in Hungary and Israel, conservatives must not mind being hated.

The Spanish Samuel Paty

If the open-air killing of a clergyman by an Islamist doesn’t prompt a reckoning, it’s hard to see what will.

Cuban Dissident

A Pulitzer-prize winner chronicles Oswaldo Payá’s lifelong struggle to bring democracy to Cuba.

The Politics of the Passion

Jesus Christ died unlike he had lived: politically. D. L. Dusenbury urges us to reassess the gospels.

Ever-Closer Disunion

The EU’s business model has been to put the age-old laws of politics to the test, argues Stefan Auer in his latest book. To survive, it needs to heed them instead.