Populist movements are widely castigated as nativist, racist, and xenophobic. Yet Ontario Premier Doug Ford has crafted a brand of politics which is pragmatic, centrist and, well, popular. Writing in Foreign Policy, Simon Lewsen argues that Ford’s rhetoric scrambles the left-right divide and his electoral success offers lessons for politicians elsewhere.

In Vino Veritas – Or, Whatever It Takes to Get the Truth Out of Such a Crew
Winston Churchill drank his way to saving the world from Nazism and, according to Alec Marsh in Spiked, the old bulldog would fit right in with certain current Parliamentarians enjoying a tipple to endure late-night sittings in Westminster. “Well, why not?” Marsh asks. “Politicians wouldn’t be human if they didn’t.” This news doesn’t, however, sit well with certain neo-puritan scolds from – you guessed it – the Green Party, which on the other hand does support providing free narcotics to welfare recipients.


