News Round-Up
26 July 2024
Government Has Just Declared War on Free Speech
26 July 2024
by Toby Young
After carefully avoiding interviews with even friendly reporters, the White House realised that some serious damage control was required. But Biden's comeback interview backfired badly, says Haven Pell.
One of Germany's largest political parties, Alternative for Germany, has been debanked by a major banking chain following a campaign by activist group Grandmothers Against the Right.
Labour previously endorsed Gordon Brown's plan to renew Britain's constitution with a strongly Left-wing flavour. David McGrogan has had a look and is stunned by the sheer incompetence on display.
Keir Starmer's 'loveless landslide' and 'meh-jority' is slammed as the most distorted election result ever as just 20% of eligible voters cast a ballot for the party that now controls 64% of Parliament.
Le Pen scored a huge victory in the first round of France's elections, but her opponents are hoping to keep out her party by teaming up with antisemites, Islamists, antifa and terror apologists, says Robert Kogon.
Labour is set to win a landslide with a majority of 170 for Starmer on 410 seats, the exit poll shows. Conservatives slump to 131, Reform on 13 and the Lib Dems on 61. A new Labour era dawns. God help us all.
The Tories are going down and many on the Left and Right are rejoicing. But Labour will be worse and this election must not be just about destruction, says Dr Hugh Willbourn: we should vote for what we believe in.
The 2024 General Election is probably the first time that we have seen an Islamic agenda openly influencing an election in the U.K., says Tim Dieppe. What are the ramifications for British democracy?
We should vote Conservative to keep out the Trots and their permanent revolution, says Peter Hitchens. No no no, that just ratifies the Uniparty, says Matt Goodwin. Professor James Alexander ponders the dilemma.
Labour will win because the public are rejecting the Tories' failed attempt at technocratic government, says Dr David McGrogan. But they will soon reject Labour's technocracy too. A new kind of government is needed.
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