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Demonstrations were widespread but generally short-lived.
The big question is whether British politics has experienced an aberration or a lasting change.
It severely weakens political parties and opens the door for the president to prevent anyone who has criticized him from seeking office.
The utopian proposal must give way to a more moderate vision, voters say.
President Kais Saied needs more carrots than sticks.
Rodrigo Chaves’s election reveals that antiestablishment sentiment remains strong across Latin America.
President-elect Gabriel Boric must now find the right formula to engage skeptics while also maintaining support from the radical elements of his alliance.
The Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers has voted to refer the Kavala v. Turkey case to the European Court of Human Rights. By doing so, the Council of Europe upheld European values and principles, namely the rule of law.
A coalition of democracies is sanctioning China for its treatment of Uyghurs. Does this herald a new joint strategy among democracies for addressing China’s human rights violations in Xinjiang?
American democracy has been deeply damaged by a president’s refusal to concede power and his supporters’ use of violence and intimidation to pressure political officials—problems fueled by polarization and an antidemocratic faction of the Republican Party. Here’s where the fault lines come from—and how to begin patching them.