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Is it the end of the old Conservative Party in Britain?
The Conservatives should bepushing argumentsfor thesuperiority of competition and consumer control over state-management of Britain's decrepit public services.
It is hard to figure out which bias is stronger in the Canadian press: its hatred of Stockwell Day or its enthusiasm for the late Yasser Arafat.
Three weeks before Canadian elections, a Conservative minority government seemed within reach, yet the result was not a Liberal victory but a Conservative defeat. What went wrong?
Ernie Eves has spent the past half-year looking for the issue that could re-elect Ontario's Conservative government; his Education Minister, Elizabeth Witmer, just tripped over it.
Where is the Indian political grouping that emphasises growth over equity, seeks equality of opportunity rather than outcome, celebrates the private sector as an engine of economic prosperity, and champions the cause of a strong military?
In deviating from the traditional theme of the Conservative Party, David Cameron has isolated upper-middle-class voters and generated underwhelming support from the electorate.
Roger Scruton, Britain's foremost conservative philosopher, offers a traditionalist manifesto to discomfit both the left and American free-marketeers.





