Recent elections have elevated far-right parties all over the world. And the worst is perhaps yet to come.
Recent elections have elevated far-right parties all over the world. And the worst is perhaps yet to come.
The far right showed disturbing strength in the European Parliament elections, but there’s nothing inevitable about a far right wave. To win, the left needs to stick to principles — and stick together.
The recent electoral victories of Javier Milei in Argentina and Geert Wilders in the Netherlands suggest that the world has not yet reached peak populism.
When it comes to U.S. security, Americans are more of a threat than the Chinese or the Russians.
There’s an urgent need to stop funding wars and human rights abuses abroad and to free up funding for human needs at home. The Freedom Caucus can’t be counted on for either.
Lula knows better than most how to fight for the interconnected goals of democracy and economic justice. Little did Lula know how soon that fight would come.
Forget the deplorables and focus instead on the persuadables.
The intellectual godfathers of the “alt right” and their descendants are on a fool’s errand: to rationalize irrational hatreds.
A let-the-rich-be government has opened the doors to the smiling heirs of Italy’s neofascist factions.
Why has the American far right adopted an anti-American conspiracy theory as its rallying cry?