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The illegal immigration problem is going away.That's the conclusion I draw from the latest report of the Pew Hispanic Center on Mexican immigration to the United States.Pew's demographers have carefully combed through statistics compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau, the Department of Homeland Security and the...
Perhaps we will be forced by then to go back to basics and demand a new Magna Carta.
In this tumultuous political year, the latest sharp surprises come from the far reaches of the Anglosphere--Alaska and Australia--as voters defied expectations.
Mead urges Washington to “enter into deep strategic conversations” with each of these powers, so as to start building effective partnerships. The problem is, we’ve already tried that, with most of them.
Five works that illuminate the shared heritage of America and Britain.
With slowing economic growth, a publicly feuding cabinet, and a series of corruption scandals that have paralyzed governance, you might think the last thing India needs is a foreign policy mishap. But there's no other way to characterize New Delhi's full-throated support for Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas's dangerous grandstanding at the United Nations in pursuit of statehood.
Canada held an election last Monday and the result was anything but boring. The headline story is that the Conservative Party of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has headed minority governments since 2006, won an absolute majority of seats, 167 of 308, in the House of Commons. The Conservatives' triumph offers a couple of lessons that may be relevant to U.S. Republicans.
Can the once Soviet nation maintain its relatively new closeness to the West, while retaining a foreign policy stance essentially mistrustful of Western power? Whether the West will remain committed to India's rise will depend on what choice New Delhi makes.






