Deadlock Looms After Italians Return Divided Parliament
Italy faces political paralysis as neither the left nor the right wins an absolute majority.
Italy faces political paralysis as neither the left nor the right wins an absolute majority.
Italy’s left-wing parties are ahead in the polls but may fall short of a majority.
Neither side in Syria’s civil war is interested in sitting down for peace talks.
The partnership with the United States remains the cornerstone of Japanese foreign policy.
The former Republican senator will have many fences to mend when he is confirmed.
The Netherlands’ ruling parties do not command a majority in the Senate.
Entrepreneurs profit from the lack of regulation in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square.
The European Union maintains its embargo on Syria, preventing weapons support.
German-speaking populists in Italy’s far north are critical of an electoral pact with the center-left.
The German finance minister urges Italians not to “repeat the error” of voting for Berlusconi.
They looked to government for solutions and the government got it wrong.
The White House and the Pentagon once again find themselves in disagreement over the war.
China expresses its dissatisfaction, but drags its heels on concrete action.
Integrating the North’s economy would be difficult but the South also stands to gain.
African power struggles are becoming less ideological in a multipolar world.