International News

Coverage of international events and global policy shifts. The Daily Signal offers news reporting with opinion and commentary on world affairs.
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    • Opinion

    This May Be Venezuela’s Tiananmen Square Moment

    Venezuela is no stranger to protests, but the recent uprisings have rocked the country and stirred questions about the nation’s future. This past week, the “mother of all protests” has seen upward of 2 million Venezuelans take to the streets demanding an end to the notoriously corrupt Maduro regime. Beginning on what would be the 207th…
    Ana Quintana
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    • News

    In France’s Presidential Election, the Intersecting Consequences of Islamist Terrorism and Russian Aggression

    KYIV, Ukraine—Europe’s two greatest security challenges, Islamist terrorism and Russian military aggression, have cast a shadow over the French presidential election. Authorities in Paris reported a possible terrorist attack on the Champs-Elysees on Thursday night, throwing the election a last-minute curveball—potentially to the benefit of the far-right National Front party’s candidate, Marine Le Pen. The…
    Nolan Peterson
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    • Opinion

    US Falling Behind on Trade, While Japan and EU Thrive

    European Union and Japanese leaders recently met in Brussels to further negotiations for a free trade agreement. As the EU and Japan work together to boost their economic, political, and security ties, sentiments in the United States seem to be turning away from free trade in favor of protectionism. President Donald Trump has fueled anti-trade…
    Kelly Cousoulis
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    • News

    After State Department Snub, Senators Look to ‘Other Means’ to Investigate Tax Dollars Propping Up Soros Work

    This article has been corrected and updated since publication. Details about changes are at the end of article. Republican senators could investigate U.S. tax dollars funding liberal billionaire George Soros’ networks abroad “through other means” if the Trump administration’s State Department doesn’t provide answers. Six GOP senators wrote Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in March…
    Fred Lucas
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    • Opinion

    State Department Confirms Iran Compliant With Nuclear Deal, but Warns Tehran Still on Notice

    With a new White House, many have wondered about the fate of the 2015 nuclear agreement made between the Obama administration and Iran. The Trump administration’s stance on the agreement became a little clearer on Tuesday when the administration notified Congress that Iran is complying with the terms of the agreement, and that the United…
    James Phillips
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    • News

    Professor Who Tweeted ‘Trump Must Hang’ Takes Paid Leave of Absence

    The professor who tweeted “Trump must hang” and that two Republicans should be executed for each immigrant deported is taking a paid leave of absence for the rest of the spring semester. Professor Lars Maischak of California State University, Fresno agreed upon the leave of absence with the university, according to The Fresno Bee. The…
    Rob Shimshock
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    • Opinion

    How Political Correctness Holds African-Americans Back

    As a group, black Americans have made the greatest gains—over some of the highest hurdles and in a very short span of time—of any racial group in mankind’s history. What’s the evidence? If one totaled up the earnings of black Americans and considered us as a separate nation with our own gross domestic product, we…
    Walter E. Williams
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    • Opinion

    In Britain, Conservatives Seek a Mandate From Voters

    On Tuesday, British Prime Minister Theresa May shocked Britain by calling for an early general election, which will be held on June 8. This election will decide the fate of her government and Brexit. In many ways, May’s decision to “go to the country”—British slang for calling an election—is the way it should be. In…
    Ted Bromund
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    • News

    White House Turns Up Heat, but Rejects ‘Red Lines’ for North Korea

    Both the Trump administration and North Korea are ratcheting up statements about a potential conflict. “President [Donald] Trump has changed the equation. We don’t know what he will do,” said Fred Fleitz, a senior vice president for the Center for Security Policy, a conservative national security think tank. “If there is a strike, shooting down…
    Fred Lucas
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    • Opinion

    How the UN Helps Implement China’s Two-Child Policy, and What Should Be Done

    According to the United Nations Population Fund, its mission is to provide access to safe, voluntary family planning to women around the world. But a recent decision by the State Department suggests that the U.N. Population Fund’s mission statement is more benign than its actual activities. On April 3, the State Department announced that it…
    Nicole McGovern
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    • Opinion

    Meet the Professor Who Could Run Trump’s War on Regulations

    Just hours after Justice Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation as the newest member of the Supreme Court, the White House announced the appointment of George Mason law professor Neomi Rao to be the administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. The appointment won’t be accompanied by the intense media coverage that Gorsuch received. Nevertheless, it could…
    James Gattuso
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    • News

    ‘Peace, but Not at Any Cost’: Ukrainians Brace for More War, and Unrest

    KYIV, Ukraine—Forget death and taxes. In Ukraine, nothing is certain but war and protests. In the country’s eastern Donbas region, the war against Russia and its separatist proxies has dragged on for three years. And in Kyiv’s government halls, meaningful anti-corruption reforms are advancing at a snail’s pace more than three years after the revolution….
    Paul Runko
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    • News

    Trump, NATO Leader to Talk About Allies’ Paying Fair Share

    Less than a week after President Donald Trump rallied the world behind ending the violence in Syria, he will meet with the top civilian leader of NATO, an organization he criticized during the campaign as “obsolete.” “For the sake of NATO’s future, it will have to focus on terrorism,” @ARVershbow says. The top issues will…
    Fred Lucas
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    • Opinion

    How Trump’s State Department Is Honoring Women

    The most headline-grabbing observance of Women’s History Month last month may have been “A Day Without a Woman.” On March 8, the feminist-led event marked International Women’s Day by staging “a demonstration of economic solidarity” in which women were encouraged to take the day off, avoid shopping, and wear red. Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department…
    Grace Melton
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    • News

    Peggy Noonan, Who Explored Why Trump Appeals to Americans, Wins Pulitzer for Commentary

    In a rare acknowledgement of conservative journalists by the most powerful arbiter of serious journalism, political commentator and columnist Peggy Noonan on Monday won a Pulitzer Prize for her columns for The Wall Street Journal on the 2016 presidential campaign. Awarding her the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary, judges said Noonan earned it for…
    Ken McIntyre
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    • News

    College May Punish Students Who Disrupted Conservative’s Speech

    Claremont McKenna College officials have announced possible repercussions for students who protested a conservative speaker’s speech last week. Protesters successfully blocked students and professors from entering an on-campus building to hear Heather Mac Donald’s pro-police speech, as reported by The Daily Signal last Friday. Mac Donald is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think…
    James Rogers
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    • Opinion

    The Troubling Relationship Between Soros and US’ Biggest Foreign Aid Agency

    Foreign aid can help advance U.S. national interests, for example, by promoting our values globally or by demonstrating to the world the goodwill of the American people. Calls to eliminate funding outright often fail to weigh this important function. But our lead aid agency has itself been jeopardizing this effort, and risking all-important public support,…
    Mike Gonzalez
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    • News

    US Cruise Missiles and an EU Vote Deal Putin 2 Setbacks in 1 Day

    KYIV, Ukraine—Thursday was a bad day for the Kremlin. In the span of a few hours, Russia’s two foreign policy mantelpieces—its military adventures in Ukraine and Syria—were both dealt body blows. One came from a United States cruise missile attack on a Syrian regime air base where Russian military forces were deployed. The strike was…
    Nolan Peterson
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    • News

    4 Issues Trump Will Likely Confront Chinese Leader About

    North Korea will be the top agenda item for President Donald Trump when he meets Friday with Chinese President Xi Jinping. “We have somebody that is not doing the right thing and that’s going to be my responsibility,” @POTUS says. “As you know, I’ll be meeting with the president of China very soon in Florida,…
    Fred Lucas
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    • News

    A Century After the US Entered World War I, Modern-Day Trench Warfare Continues in Ukraine

    KYIV, Ukraine—On April 2, 1917, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson stood before a joint session of Congress, asking for a declaration of war against Germany so that the world would “be made safe for democracy.” “Neutrality is no longer feasible or desirable where the peace of the world is involved,” Wilson said. Four days later, on…
    Nolan Peterson
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