Democrats are flummoxed at President Trump’s success, but recent elections around the world provide the answer: Voters want conservative, not leftist, populism.
Adrian Wooldridge is the global business columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. A former writer at the Economist, he is author of “The Aristocracy of Talent: How Meritocracy Made the Modern World.” ...
You are a finance minister after a decade of meagre economic growth, shocks from a financial crisis, a pandemic and sky-high energy prices. Public debt is worth more than your country’s gross domestic ...
Jared Abbott, the director of the Center for Working-Class Politics, discusses what it would take for Democrats to better ...
A new report from JPMorgan Chase warns that AI will shake up global alliances, stoke fresh populism and change the rules of war in the century ahead. Why it matters: The report, first seen by Axios, ...
LIVERPOOL, England—Keir Starmer was ushered into Downing Street last year with a big majority and the promise that a dry, pragmatic leader of a British center-left party could prove an antidote to a ...
David is joined by Richard Reinsch, the second guest to join Capital Record this year, for a discussion of the “new conservatives” and the “new right” movement toward populism. What you will hear in ...
The ESS identifies this pattern across several countries and survey years, highlighting that felt economic strain — rather ...
Journal Editorial Report: The week’s best and worst from Allysia Finley, Kyle Peterson and Kim Strassel. Something is stirring in Europe. Its leaders continue to talk in private about Donald Trump ...
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