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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    • News

    As Obama’s Time in Office Lengthens, Number of Democrats Who Think Government Has Too Much Power Has Grown

    A Gallup poll released Friday shows that 60 percent of Americans believe that the federal government has too much power. Where once distrust of government power was a distinctly conservative trait during President Barack Obama’s presidency, now the concern about increasing federal power has crept across party lines and brought the level of distrust for the government…
    Joshua Gill
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    • Opinion

    Putin Is Not a Child. Obama Should Stop Treating Him Like One.

    In last Friday’s press conference, President Obama called Vladimir Putin’s incursion in Syria “an act of weakness.” It’s his pat answer when Putin misbehaves. The White House likes to portray the Kremlin as a place filled with petulant children who don’t understand what’s in their own best interest and will one day rue their misguided…
    James Carafano
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    • News

    Meet the Single Mom Who Took On the IRS

    Sabina Loving always knew she wanted to work for herself. So much so that, when an abandoned storefront was renovated and became available for rent across the street from her house on the South Side of Chicago in 2010, she decided that one day she would operate her budding tax-preparation business out of it. “When…
    Madaline Donnelly
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    • Opinion

    North Korea Will Launch a Missile, but Not on Oct. 10th

    It had become an article of faith among the media and punditgentsia that North Korea would launch a long-range missile on Oct. 10 to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Korea Workers Party. But while Pyongyang has been publicly emphatic about having the sovereign right and intent to launch, it never declared…
    Bruce Klingner
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    • Opinion

    Meet Bill Main, a Tour Guide Who Fought D.C. to Be Able to Give Tours Without Government Permission

    Many politicians want to know what holds workers back. Too often they don’t need to look any farther than the laws they pass. One in three jobs in the economy now requires government permission to hold. Workers without a license can’t work in them. This makes sense for surgeons and pharmacists. But many jobs, like…
    James Sherk
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    • News

    21 Questions With Washington Florist Who Refused to Serve Gay Wedding

    Barronelle Stutzman, more commonly known as the “Washington florist,” came under fire this year for refusing to make flower arrangements for a gay couple’s wedding. Stutzman, owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Wash., cited her Christian religious beliefs about marriage. After she was labeled a “bigot” by those who oppose her, The Daily Signal sat down with…
    Kelsey Bolar
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    • Opinion

    Palestinian President’s UN Speech Falls Flat

    After weeks of hinting that he would “drop a bombshell” at the United Nations, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Wednesday threatened to stop abiding by the 1993 Oslo Accords, which have set the framework for Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations for more than two decades. In his speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Abbas complained that…
    James Phillips
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    • Opinion

    Time for the US to Rethink Its Support for the European Union

    Since the end of the Second World War, the U.S. has encouraged the free nations of Europe to abandon their independence in the name of closer economic and political union. That process created today’s European Union, the EU. We encouraged this partly because we believed that Europe was like the American states, and that they…
    Ted Bromund
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    • Opinion

    US Needs a Foreign Policy That Marginalizes Russia’s Ability to Mess With Us

    The Kremlin is not our friend. Nor is Moscow a 10-foot-tall threat to our national interests. What America needs is a middling foreign policy that looks to marginalize Russia’s capacity to mess with us. And there is no better place to start this approach than in Syria. Putin has made a muscular move to support…
    James Carafano
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    • Opinion

    To Defeat ISIS, We Need a Leader Who’s Not Obama

    When President Obama said at the United Nations on Tuesday that “defeating ISIL requires—I believe—a new leader,” I thought for a brief moment I’d finally found something on which he and I could agree. Then I realized he wasn’t talking about his own leadership. The president was actually talking about the regime of Bashar Assad,…
    Peter Brookes
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    • Opinion

    Cartoon: Who Is Really Pushing the Buttons of US Foreign Policy?

    James Phillips wrote recently on Russian involvement in Syria: Russia’s aggressive military intervention in Syria poses major problems for the United States, its allies, and the future of Syria. It is likely to make a bad situation worse by propping up the Assad regime, intensifying the fighting, and driving more Syrian refugees out of the country….
    Glenn Foden
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    • Opinion

    Obama Settles for an Unbalanced Relationship Between US and China

    Last week’s U.S.-China summit offers an object lesson in how President Obama conducts foreign policy. All the rhetoric, assumptions, and diplomatic tics of the Obama Doctrine are there. And the outcomes, as usual, are not good. For example, no matter how provocative China is, it must be, according to Obama, “engaged.” It may launch a devastating…
    Kim Holmes
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    • News

    The Consequences of Russia’s Bombing Campaign in Syria

    Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States has worked to isolate Russia from the Middle East. Now, in 2015 and five years into a devastating civil war in Syria, Russia has not only entered the most intractable situation in the Middle East, but also attacked the situation with indiscriminate authority. Under the…
    Josh Siegel
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    • Opinion

    Russia Broke the INF Treaty (Again). What the US Should Do

    On Sept. 2, Russia tested a ground-launched cruise missile named SSC-X-8, in violation of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty, according to reporting by the Washington Free Beacon. This test represents the latest in a long train of Russian violations of the 1987 treaty, which prohibits ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges from 500 to 5,500…
    Michaela Dodge
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    • Opinion

    Putin’s Syrian Gambit Exposes Flaws in Obama’s Naive Foreign Policy

    Russia’s aggressive military intervention in Syria poses major problems for the United States, its allies, and the future of Syria. It is likely to make a bad situation worse by propping up the Assad regime, intensifying the fighting, and driving more Syrian refugees out of the country. Secretary of State John Kerry doggedly tried to…
    James Phillips
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    • News

    State Takes Legal Action to Seize $135K From Bakers Who Refused to Make Cake for Lesbian Couple

    The agency that ordered Aaron and Melissa Klein to pay $135,000 in damages for refusing to bake a cake for a same-sex couple began the legal process last week to seize the money the Oregon bakers are refusing to pay. “Our agency has docketed the judgment and is exploring collection options,” Charlie Burr, communications director…
    Kelsey Bolar
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    • Opinion

    How the Wars in Ukraine and Syria Are Connected

    LONDON—For the last year, I’ve been reporting on the Ukraine war. I’ve been back and forth to the front lines, embedded with Ukrainian troops and civilian volunteers. I’ve been on the receiving end of Russian weapons, including tanks, heavy artillery, mortars, machine guns, grenade launchers, sniper rifles, and good ol’-fashioned Kalashnikovs. I don’t know for…
    Nolan Peterson
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    • News

    He Escaped From a North Korean Prison Camp. Now He’s Showing the World His Torture Scars.

    SEOUL, South Korea—In an exclusive interview with The Daily Signal, human rights activist Shin Dong-hyuk shows scars that he suffered from torture inside a North Korean prison camp. Shin was born in a North Korean prison in 1982 and made a daring escape in 2005. He allowed The Daily Signal to film his back and…
    Ed Frank
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    • News

    Who Are the Mysterious Members of the House Freedom Caucus?

    With over 40 members and no official roster, the House Freedom Caucus—a conservative group in the U.S. House of Representatives that pushed for House Speaker John Boehner to leave office—consists of a core group of leaders going against the Washington establishment. After the start of the 114th Congress in January 2015, nine members of the…
    Leah Jessen
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    • News

    Why Does It Matter Who the House Speaker Is? Looking at House Leadership’s Responsibilities

    House Speaker John Boehner announced last week he would be resigning from Congress, effective October 30, and Republicans have already begun competing for the top leadership posts in the wake of his news. House Republican leadership consists of four positions—speaker, majority leader, majority whip, and conference chair—and current House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California…
    Melissa Quinn
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