
Ireland Shows Europe’s Silenced Majority Spoiling for a Fight
The “staggering” number of spoilt votes in the Irish presidential election is another sign of the widening gap between the people and the EU elites.

The “staggering” number of spoilt votes in the Irish presidential election is another sign of the widening gap between the people and the EU elites.

Sovereignty-first movements dominate the polls—but establishment parties are trying their best to keep them out of power.

“If journalists like the election result, it’s democracy. If they don’t, it’s populism,” the former Austrian chancellor said in an interview.

We are force-fed with “good lies” on every important issue of our times: from preaching that the imposition of Net Zero policies is good for us to insisting that women can have a penis.

Europe’s young people don’t want to ditch democracy, as some claim, they are just losing faith in the political status quo.

One year on, the Labour government has little to celebrate, except for how effectively it has exposed the emptiness of technocratic rule.

New initiative aims to counter ‘disinformation’—that is, populism and national conservatism.

This is about more than words. The ‘far right’ slander is being used by the authorities to justify far-reaching attacks on democracy.

The mere possibility that today’s populists might stand on the side of justice in the fight for Freyheit terrifies their opponents.
Manfred Weber reveals his plan to exploit national conservatives while keeping them out of office.