Revenge of the Brits
British editors are suddenly leading several U.S. publications. Can it last?
British editors are suddenly leading several U.S. publications. Can it last?
For its hosts, this World Cup has already delivered on its PR potential.
England’s game is America’s, for now. But the Qatar World Cup shows that no undisputed set of values can unite us all.
The absurd spectacle of a tiny Gulf petrostate hosting the world’s premier tournament reveals the ugly side of “the beautiful game.”
This comeback attempt proved abortive, but it revealed a will to power fully intact. Rishi Sunak had better watch out.
Liz Truss was just the latest. For the past dozen years, each leader has left the country poorer, weaker, and more divided than the last.
How tempting it is to trace Liz Truss’s economic fiasco to the decision to leave Europe. If only Britain’s malaise were that simple.
Even by British traditions of political failure, this prime minister’s brief tenure has been a spectacular disaster.
Charles III is far more interested in the benefits of traditional English hedgerows than the great, global glory of Britain.
The paradox of Elizabeth II’s reign was that in presiding over a shrinking empire, she became a modern global monarch.