Voices
David Stewart, S.J., London Correspondent for America 2014-2020, files from his native Scotland where he now lives and works.
Signs Of the Times
The voting public’s perception of Europe remains unenthusiastic at best.
Dispatches
As with a poem or a dance a symphony or a drama there are times when the deeper narrative of human experience comes to expression more clearly only through art Political events or their interpretation are no different The title of a French film released last year ldquo Cartoonists Foot-sold
Dispatches
Jeremy Corbyn is now the leader of a party of which a substantial section profoundly disagree with him.
Signs Of the Times
The Calais migrants emerge as real people, some of whom even go to church.
Dispatches
The critical moment has now come when practically everyone in Britain and across Europe has finally realized the enormity of the tragedy happening across our continent.
Signs Of the Times
The British Labour Party has long been marked by factionalism and splits, entryism and intrigue. The center and the right have it too, but they hide it better. With Labour, it is visible and endemic.It has happened again, as Labour tries to drag itself back from disaster after the Parliamentary gene
Dispatches
What we are seeing is a humanitarian disaster on a much larger scale than previously thought.
Dispatches
The biggest talking point thus far is the remarkable popularity of Jeremy Corbyn, a veteran of the party’s left.
Dispatches
Opposition leader reminds Prime Minister Cameron “he is talking about people, not insects.”
Dispatches
The Greek referendum result is a dramatic watershed moment in European political history.