Trump Would Be Terrible at Managing the Presidency
His shambolic campaign operation suggests Donald Trump would be awful at running the government.
Nick Ottens is a public affairs officer for the Dutch Animal Coalition and a board member for Liberal Green, the sustainability network of the Dutch liberal party VVD. He is a former political risk consultant and a former research manager for XPRIZE, where he designed prize competitions to incentivize breakthrough innovation in agriculture, food and health care. He has also worked as a journalist in Amsterdam, Barcelona and New York for EUobserver, NRC, Trouw, World Politics Review and Wynia’s Week, among others.
His shambolic campaign operation suggests Donald Trump would be awful at running the government.
The Italian prime minister’s supporters suffer in local elections as reforms have yet to pay off.
It looks like the Russian leader is worried enough about his position to take preemptive action.
The Republican’s insinuations against an Hispanic judge who is hearing a case against him are the final straw.
The speaker claims he and Donald Trump have “more common ground than disagreement.”
There is no moral equivalence between the candidates. Journalists shouldn’t try to establish one.
The Democrat warns that her opponent could start a war “just because somebody got under his skin.”
Conservative-leaning Middle England holds the balance in Britain’s European Union referendum.
Mitch McConnell reproaches the purists who refuse to accept anything short of total victory.
Bernie Sanders only appears more electable because his supporters are unwilling to vote for Hillary Clinton.
The European Commission slaps the government in Warsaw on the wrist for undermining the judiciary.
The idea that American foreign policy is in retreat is a myth fabricated by Barack Obama’s opponents.
This time, it’s slow growth in China that supposedly justifies delaying an increase in the sales tax.
Euroskeptics would dethrone the man who has won them two elections in a row.
A third party will try to draw support away from both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump in the election.