British Prime Minister Theresa May made it clear that she intends to move forward with Brexit.
A quick succession of events this morning means that Theresa May will become Britain’s Prime Minister far sooner than anticipated.
Regardless of the outcome of the Conservative Party’s leadership race, the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom will be a woman.
One week after the Brexit vote, both the Conservative and Labour parties find themselves in chaos.
Many pundits are arguing that the victory for ‘Leave’ presages good news for Trump in November, but there’s no reason to believe that.
By a narrow margin, British voters have chosen to send their nation, themselves, and indeed all of Europe into uncharted waters.
Voters in the United Kingdom are headed to the polls in a vote that will have widespread consequences.
With just over a week to go, the latest polling shows voters in the United Kingdom leaning toward leaving the European Union.
Bill Kristol’s plan to stop Donald Trump involves a long shot independent bid for the White House by someone most Americans have never heard of before.
If Donald Trump fails to get a majority to win the nomination on the first ballot in Cleveland, battles taking place behind the scenes now suggest that the floor fight in Cleveland could be long and contentious.
Britons will go to the polls in June to decide the future of their country’s relationship with the rest of Europe.
We will have a two party system for the foreseeable future.
If Donald Trump is going to win in early states like Iowa or New Hampshire, he needs a ground game that will get voters to the polls. It doesn’t seem like he has much of one right now.
Donald Trump’s plan to exclude Muslims from the United States is provoking condemnation, and confusion, around the world.
The British Parliament has approved expansion of that countries airstrikes into Syria, but it’s unclear just how much of an impact that will have on the ground.
A vote is still as much as two years away, and support for staying in the E.U. still has the most support, but support for the idea of a British exit from the European Union has grown in the past several months.
A political earthquake north of the border.
If pre-election polling is to be believed, Stephan Harper and Canada’s Conservative Party seem likely to lose power after Monday’s elections, but there are several reasons why this may not end up being the case.
Britain’s Labour Party has taken a hard tilt left with the election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader.
The events of the past two weeks could allow the Republican Party to move forward.
Republicans could learn a few things from the Tory victory in the recent British elections, but they are in danger of drawing the wrong conclusions.
Pollsters on both sides of the Atlantic have been trying to figure out why the polls released right up until the eve of the British General Election were so wrong. Here’s one theory, and it’s very compelling.
Fresh off an election victory, British Prime Minister David Cameron is set to propose a series of new measures to crackdown on extremism that raise serious civil liberties concerns.
The just-concluded British General Election was also a clash between two former top advisers to President Obama.
After weeks of polls predicting a political stalemate or worse, British voters delivered a strong win for David Cameron and the Tories.
The political outlook in the United Kingdom is as uncertain as it has ever been.
Great Britain heads to the polls in less than a week, and it remains unclear just what’s going to happen.
The sad truth is that the bipartisanship that led to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 no longer exists today.
The architect of President Obama’s re-election campaign is going to work for the Tories.
Social conservatives are seeing their clout slip away, but there’s not much they can do about it.
The GOP seems to be drawing all the wrong lessons from the 2012 elections.
The GOP seems to be backing away from a position on same-sex marriage that was a prominent part of its message only a short time ago.