News Round-Up
26 July 2024
Government Has Just Declared War on Free Speech
26 July 2024
by Toby Young
In the midst of a political storm, Rishi Sunak is banking on convincing Tory MPs that the economy is turning a corner, aiming to quell party infighting and a potential leadership challenge.
George Galloway and Lee Anderson are exactly what Westminster has been claiming to want and need for the past 15 years. And yet both have now been made political outlaws for patently obscure reasons, says J. Sorel.
It is tiring to be accused of being 'far-Right' by people doing the bidding of the corporations and investors who recently made a killing on Covid, says Dr David Bell. What happened to the Left's rage against the machine?
There's a palpable sense of anger in the electorates of many Western democracies after decades of being ignored by political elites pursuing their own agendas. It's time to give power back to the people, says Neil Oliver.
Facing economic challenges, personal controversies and divisive policy decisions, the popularity of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has plummeted; his Liberal Party is on course to lose the next election.
Theresa May became Prime Minister in July 2016 and no rise to power has been as swift or unanimous. May did not have a policy but a personality – and it inaugurated a new era which we have not yet left.
We're publishing an essay on the Daily Sceptic today by historian Guy de la Bédoyère about the risk that Australia may actually break apart as a result of its political leaders' mismanagement of the coronavirus crisis.
© Skeptics Ltd.