Macron’s Party Is Up, But So Is the Left
The French president may defend his majority in parliament after all.
The French president may defend his majority in parliament after all.
Far from trusting the market, politicians won’t leave housing alone.
Encouraging local zoning reform. Ending discrimination against prefabricated homes.
Both are insecure.
Without a majority in the National Assembly, the president can still make foreign policy.
Power-sharing kept the peace for 25 years. Now it’s making it harder to govern.
It’s one of the few things politicians can do to make life cheaper.
Florida’s retaliation against Disney marks an escalation.
Banning the sale of cannabis could cause a surge in street crime.
The only thing worse than two-party polarization is permanent rule by the center.
And what it can learn from the Dutch.
The president’s second term could be a lot harder than his first.
Emmanuel Macron is the first French president in twenty years to win reelection.
Charles de Gaulle’s two-party system has broken down.
Voters feel the party is drifting too far to the left.