Center-Right Voters Eager to Govern in Germany, Center-Left Unsure
Conservative and liberal voters look forward to government. Social Democrats are split.
Conservative and liberal voters look forward to government. Social Democrats are split.
Pablo Iglesias accuses the prime minister of making the Catalan problem worse.
The problem isn’t insurance companies. It’s that 155 million Americans get insurance from their job.
Both governments try to stop independence referendums by legal means. Neither appears to be succeeding.
The president’s proposals contradict the “multispeed Europe” of France, Germany, Italy and Spain.
Arguments in favor are more emotional. Opponents point out concrete risks.
The Aranese, separated from the rest of Catalonia by the Pyrenees, are less supportive of independence.
Multi-member congressional districts would lead to more proportional representation and political moderation.
Spain considers an independence referendum illegal, but Catalans are determined to vote anyway.
There is room for compromise in the middle.
Mariano Rajoy vows to do “whatever is necessary” to stop Catalonia’s referendum.
Young Americans are losing faith. White Christians have become the minority. The Catholic Church is becoming Latino.
The debt ceiling serves no purpose other than to allow politicians to take the economy hostage.
Calling the French president a failure for doing what he was elected to do makes no sense.
Middle-class Americans have more in common with Democrats than with Donald Trump’s coalition of the left-behind.