Just seven months ago, the British government introduced the so-called “Drinking Banning Orders” that made it a crime for certain individuals to even set foot in a pub. But with the arrival of election season in Britain, politicians are positioning themselves as saviors to desperate drinkers across the country. (more)
I wasn’t going to write about President Obama’s new nuclear weapons strategy–a central tenet of which is that the U.S. would not authorize a nuclear strike against a nonnuclear country in retaliation for a chemical or biological attack if that country is in compliance with its nonproliferation obligations under the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT). (more)
Part four in our look at the 100 most conservative-friendly counties in the United States. (more)
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist suddenly is the underdog in a heated Republican primary race with rival Marco Rubio for a U.S. Senate seat, amid signs the Sunshine State is tilting more to the right. (more)
Together, President Barack Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were supposed to usher in a new era of liberal dominance. The defeated conservative remnant, it was predicted, would then turn against each other, bereft of ideas and reduced to cannibalizing their own movement. (more)
In a survey just published and available on the company’s website, but not yet publicized or reported, the left-leaning public opinion firm Democracy Corps confirms the dangers to Democrats in the 2010 midterm elections. (more)
LONDON (AP) — Conservative Party chief David Cameron is turning back to basics — focusing on marriage and education as Britain’s general election looms this spring. (more)
Telegraph.co.uk is presenting its second list of the 100 most influential conservatives and 100 most influential liberals in America a year after Barack Obama took office. The first lists, produced exactly a year before the 2008 election, sent then unprecedented traffic to the website and generated controversy that resonated on American cable television and talk radio for weeks. (more)
LONDON (AP) — The leader of Britain’s Conservatives said Friday that if elected he would be far more cautious than his predecessors in deciding to deploy British troops abroad. (more)
























