Poll: Nearly Half of Voters Say Joe Biden Spends ‘Too Much’ Money Defending Ukraine’s Border
The poll suggests shrinking support for Biden’s priority of defending Ukraine’s border instead of defending the U.S. southern border against invasion.
The poll suggests shrinking support for Biden’s priority of defending Ukraine’s border instead of defending the U.S. southern border against invasion.
Left-wing publisher issued an apology amid allegations that it had covered up sexual harassment by a prominent columnist.
Following political pushback over the environment, social, and governance (ESG) investing and a rocky market, sustainable funds and ETFs (exchange-traded funds) saw a major hit in last year’s fourth quarter, according to a report.
The EU is haemorrhaging goodwill over its handling of the corona vaccine, as pro-Brussels outlets line up to criticise the bloc’s leadership.
Facebook has struck a deal that will see the mainstream media in Britain rake in millions, as it again prioritises the corporate press.
The EU’s investment pact with the China has been characterised as a “real setback for the free world” by the founder of Hong Kong Watch
Just three years from now he plans to make it illegal to install a gas boiler in any new home. It might sound innocuous enough…
LONDON (AP) — Environmental activists have blockaded two British printing plants, disrupting the distribution of several national newspapers on Saturday.
This month marks the tenth anniversary of Climategate — the biggest scandal in the brief, ignominious history of “climate science”. So naturally, the left-wing media has commemorated the occasion with a series of articles and a documentary which could all have been titled: ‘Move along, nothing to see here.’
The Chinese Communist Party is preparing a plan to remove Carrie Lam, the least popular chief executive in Hong Kong history, but will wait some time so as to not appear to be ceding to protests, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.
A New York Times deputy managing editor denied the paper’s status as a prominent “anti-Trump” publication during a FT Future of News event Thursday.
The Financial Times has admitted that the European working class have seen few gains from the post-crash recovery, fuelling a continued sense of grievance against the political establishment ahead of the European Parliament elections.
A crafty op-ed in the Financial Times may be a guide to China’s thinking right now.
The Hungarian government has hit out at the Financial Times naming George Soros their “Person of the Year”.
The FT noted George Soros’s work for liberal democracy, but ignored critics who claim that groups he sponsors are actually eroding liberal democracy today by promoting left-wing extremism and undermining national sovereignty.
Hong Kong authorities stepped up their war against Financial Times editor Victor Mallet on Thursday by refusing to allow him to enter the city as a visitor.
Over a dozen Hong Kong lawmakers staged a protest in the legislature on Wednesday, chanting “Protect press freedom!” and holding up placards reading “Free Press, No Persecution,” until security guards escorted them from the chamber.
Multiple media outlets falsely reported or dodged facts surrounding Sunday’s presidential in Venezuela, where socialist dictator Nicolás Maduro successfully orchestrated another electoral fraud.
Anti-mass migration policies “clearly resonate with large numbers of voters” and will remain highly politically relevant as “migratory pressures build over the next decades”, reports the Financial Times in an important concession for the globalist, establishment newspaper.
Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon has described “three converging forces” shaping world politics: populist nationalism, the emergence of blockchain and cryptocurrency, and the movement for “digital sovereignty” in the face of overmighty tech firms.
From the Financial Times: Facebook is hardly the first company to harvest customer data and resell it. Neither does this practice always have a nefarious odour. Many of us still have a little card hanging from our key chains. It
If 2016 represented a shock year of victories for populist nationalism, while 2017 established the battle lines, then 2018 will surely be the first year the true war is fought between these competing world views
Neoliberals are pretty much just mad they couldn’t find a way to marry philosophy and popularity, while it would seem the right has.
Over the last year, I’ve written quite a bit about how the entire global warming industry is basically a junk-science-fuelled scam and the biggest financial and scientific scandal in the history of the world.
EU loyalists and Remain-supporting media outlets are struggling to process news that “Russian trolls” spent less than a dollar on Facebook ads during the EU referendum.
In an appearance on CNN on Thursday, Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL) reacted to comments from former White House chief strategist and Breitbart executive chairman Steve Bannon saying that establishment Republicans were “in full collapse.” Bannon, quoted by the Financial Times
The Hungarian government has hit back at the mainstream media for claiming that the ‘Soros plan’ to open up Europe to mass immigration is an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory.
Monday on his nationally syndicated radio show, conservative talker Mark Levin questioned some of the personnel President Donald Trump has in place in his administration. According to Levin, those that supported Trump during the 2016 campaign are now outnumbered within
Financial Times U.S. managing editor Gillian Tett argues that those on the left who want to understand economic nationalists need to take a page out of Steve Bannon’s playbook and regularly read Breitbart News just like the former White House Chief Strategist watches and dissects the “opposition media” like CNN and MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow to learn about and scout the institutional left and their enablers in the legacy media.
Report states that China will offer two small economic concessions to President Donald Trump’s administration in the hope of maintaining friendly relations with the United States.
As part of its 2016 ‘Seasonal Appeal’, the Financial Times (FT) highlights “psychological first aid” to migrants as a cause they want readers to donate money towards.
The Financial Times endorsed Hillary Clinton in an op-ed Monday morning, calling the Democratic nominee “the best hope” despite “all her weaknesses.”
From FT.com Guardian Media Group will this week reveal a higher than expected full-year operating loss of £69m as the owner of The Guardian newspaper battles to bring its finances under control. GMG’s total pre-tax loss will hit £173m as
Good news for bird-haters and bat-loathers. A lawyer working for the wind industry says there may, after all, be a silver lining to the Brexit vote: apparently, once Britain is independent, we’ll be freed of all those pesky EU regulations
If the output of the Financial Times is anything to go by, the voices of the pro-European Union (EU) establishment are finally realising they are doing more to promote the case for Brexit, and risk losing the referendum. Today the international business
Nigel Farage has said that a Brexit following the EU referendum would be the “first domino” to fall leading to the disintegration of the bloc.
From the Financial Times: Those campaigning for Britain to leave the EU are not bigoted little Englanders. The accusations made by the Remain camp about commerce and inward-looking Brexit campaigners are questionable. Too often, their arguments are based on financial
From the Financial Times: Globalisation is failing in advanced western countries, where a process once hailed for delivering universal benefit now faces a political backlash. Why? The establishment view, in Europe at least, is that states have neglected to forge
The Financial Times (FT), one of the world’s most influential economics and finance newspapers has splashed its front cover this morning with a still from the video from the Florida rally at which former Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields alleges that
Edward Luce of the Financial Times says that bookies give Donald Trump “a one in four chance of becoming the next US president” but that number might be “too low.”