UK Tories at Odds Over Rwanda Migration Plan
A vote this evening could make or break Rishi Sunak’s premiership.
A vote this evening could make or break Rishi Sunak’s premiership.
We should insist that it is not ‘far right,’ racist, or extreme to worry about the effects of migration in Europe today.
There have been mutterings that Sunak has just days to save his premiership.
After more than a decade in office, the Conservative Party remains unable to work out how tough it wants to be on immigration.
As the case of Suella Braverman shows, the British government is unable to implement its voters’ wishes.
Some conservatives may sniff and say that there is more to a country’s welfare than its growth rate. They are right. But without prosperity, life is to varying degrees unpleasant.
What would happen if enough people stopped believing the narratives promulgated by the ruling class and its media?
Tusk has publicly referred to the plans as “stupid” and declared that almost all MEPs in the Polish delegation would oppose the federalist push on the grounds of national sovereignty.
The Palestinian cause has become a fashionable pretext for all those who despise Western democracy.
Commission targeted X users based on religion and political beliefs to promote controversial data surveillance regulation.
Tories accuse Labour of ceding additional power to Brussels
Starmer claims that “smashing” criminal gangs sneaking people across the Channel should be treated “on a par” with terrorism. However, it’s hard to avoid the suspicion that the violence of his rhetoric is directly proportionate to his lack of sincerity.
The Tories have criticised a new blueprint for failing to lower migration numbers, after failing to do so themselves.
You can’t escape the terribly inconvenient truth: if these illegal migrants had weapons, their hostile trespass onto the sovereign lands of others would be unambiguously seen as an act of war.
Authorities suspect weapons were to be used for an imminent plot to attack police.
Irish PM affirms decision is Brussels’—not Dublin’s—to make.
Is Europe’s ‘digital transition’ a sign of ‘progress,’ as its proponents claim, or an overreaching exercise of power by the state?
Tony Blair’s consultancy focuses on combatting what it calls “frightening authoritarian populism.”
Even Euroskeptic papers have blindly called Britain rejoining an initiative to strengthen EU a “victory.”
The technocratic crusade against so-called disinformation is in fact nakedly political and anti-democratic.
To evolve from libertarian icon to statesman, the Argentinian candidate needs to think beyond the material.
According to leaked memos obtained by the British press commission, officials threw out the prospect of a return to the Dublin Agreement, leading Tory backbenchers to call for more hardline actions against the influx.
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