Democrats’ chances of unseating President Donald Trump are faltering amidst an eight-way scramble for the nomination that may not resolve until the Milwaukee convention this summer, observes contributor Bill Moloney
Forget history, warns contributor Bill Moloney, and we’ll repeat it to our sorrow. Specifically, Americans better heed the lessons of 1960s policy failures before buying into a rehash of the same in this year’s election.
The US Constitution neither provides for impeachment on the grounds House Democrats allege against President Trump, nor does it require “transmission” by the House Speaker, write attorneys Bill Banta and Rob Natelson. Stop making stuff up!
British voters’ ringing endorsement of Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Conservative Party may be a harbinger of realistic sovereignty pushing aside dreamy globalism elsewhere in Europe as well as in next year’s US election, writes contributor Bill Moloney.
NATO is far from brain dead, writes contributor Bill Moloney—French president Emanuel Macron to the contrary notwithstanding—but US policymakers need to rethink its role in 21st-century geopolitics.