Hope for Reform UK?
Nigel Farage’s former political vehicle appears to have polished up its act.
Nigel Farage’s former political vehicle appears to have polished up its act.
The result also makes a new referendum on ditching of the monarchy highly unlikely.
The party is seeking closer ties with the EU following the “very, very bitter divorce” of Brexit.
Liberalism inherited a Christian psychology but, having jettisoned the Rock of Ages, built its political theory upon the sand.
There is a passivity about poll-watching, as if we were ancients reading the runes or chicken entrails in a bid to foretell a future that is beyond our control.
If what I am imagining to be Farage’s strategy is successful, he will have pulled off the most dramatic internal regime change in the history of the Conservative Party.
“Where the other parties talk about ‘coexistence’, we talk about assimilation and integration. Only in this way can conflict be avoided—everything else brings chaos and problems.”
Conservatives are about to realise that they have inherited an untenable philosophy for the world in which we find ourselves. On its current course, the Anglo-American tradition is doomed to fail.
Our Democracy Watch column tracks the battles between the EU elites and the peoples of Europe.
Financial ‘cancellation’ without criminal conviction increasingly common
European countries are slamming the door one after the other on the 2030 Agenda and progressivism. If Spain were to follow this trend, it would be a huge blow for progressives.
The bank claims that the decision to close the former UKIP leader’s account had nothing to do with his political views, but Farage believes their 40-page report says otherwise.
While French authorities assure the public that the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral was accidental, many right-wing pundits continue to speculate that it was, in fact, an Islamic attack.
Europe’s attempts to get its way have been complicated by the election of left-wing and Peronist governments across South America, most notably Lula da Silva’s Workers Party in Brazil and Alberto Fernández’s Justicialist Party in Argentina.
Storm clouds are gathering for exiled Catalan separatists as Madrid prepares to shift to the right next month and an EU Court ruling this week prepares the way for potential deportations back to Spain.
Despite denials from the White House, von der Leyen ticks all the boxes for Washington, and, for different reasons, is the preferred candidate for Germany and France in a career change that could alter the post-2024 political calculus of the EPP.
The 29-year-old criminal insisted that “not even the Prophet himself could prevent the Harka,” the name given to illegal immigration in Tunisia.
The plan has been a disaster from the start and has been criticised for missing the fundamental point that illegal crossings will only stop if the border is controlled, not merely through minor deportations.
Farage claims to have been rejected for an account at seven different banks in the UK after his decades-old account was shut down, seemingly without reason as the trend of “de-banking” of right-wing figures becomes more and more common.
Illegal immigrants get free healthcare, housing, and cash—that is no deterrent, but an open invitation to the UK and the EU, said businessman and former Brexit Party MEP Ben Habib.
Yousaf will help launch the basis of an independent Scottish diplomatic representation in Brussels this week as he tries to escape from the storm clouds gathering around the SNP at home over recent corruption scandals.
According to Le Monde’s sources, the EU’s Border and Coast Guard Agency
found Greece had failed to protect fundamental rights.
To submit a pitch for consideration:
submissions@
For subscription inquiries:
subscriptions@