Britain’s Most Polarizing Journalist
Carole Cadwalladr is an icon to her supporters. But to her opponents, many of whom use sexist and ageist language to discredit her work, she is a conspiracy theorist.

Carole Cadwalladr is an icon to her supporters. But to her opponents, many of whom use sexist and ageist language to discredit her work, she is a conspiracy theorist.

Saikat Chakrabarti, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff, is working to build a generational movement.

The U.K.’s problems are much bigger than some leaked cables, or the abrupt resignation of its ambassador.

It’s like the flu: uncomfortable, occasionally deadly, but constantly with us.

The arc of history has bent toward authoritarianism.

Imran Khan is addressing his nation's challenges by choosing liberally from a menu of Western and Asian futures.

With Britain’s Conservatives looking fragile and disunited, a plausible successor to Theresa May waits offstage—and it isn’t Boris Johnson.

What upsets the Putin regime isn’t research into its military strength, but anything exploring its illicit finances. Something similar might now be said of the White House.

In his meeting with the British prime minister, he aims to send a message to Euroskeptics everywhere: Don’t mess with the EU.

What has changed is not so much the community, but the environment of British politics.
