Miliband Succession Pits Blairites Against Labour Left
Should Britain’s Labour Party move further to the left or pick a leader who can appeal to the center?
Should Britain’s Labour Party move further to the left or pick a leader who can appeal to the center?
A politically inexperienced delegation in Westminster finds itself without influence.
Senate Republicans are fighting reform efforts that would weaken the NSA’s powers.
David Cameron stays prime minister while his rivals step down.
Ed Miliband didn’t even try to woo English and Welsh voters who mistrusted his party on the economy.
Prime Minister David Cameron wins an absolute majority in Parliament.
Benjamin Netanyahu returns for a fourth term as prime minister but with the smallest possible majority.
The former Arkansas governor could split the right-wing vote and energize economic populists.
If the election result is only a few percentage points different from the polls, it could change the whole outcome.
American policy may have compelled the Arabs and Turks to set aside their differences in Syria.
Centrists are channeling Spanish anger in the direction of sensible, liberal economic reforms.
An overhaul of the voting system should make it easier for the social democrat to win reelection.
The two largest parties in the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group seldom vote the same way.
Prince Mohammad now commands the desert kingdom’s two pillars of power: oil and weapons.
The Atlantic Sentinel would like to see five more years of coalition government in the United Kingdom.