The far right is on the march again in Germany. The parallels with the rise of Hitler almost a century ago are everywhere.
Germany’s new leader did not even wait for the final election results before delivering his verdict on the US President - and charting the path forward.
Terrorist attacks and job cuts have left Germans feeling bitter,and Alice Weidel is set to benefit in an election some say could seal the fate of Europe.
Three nights of unrelenting bombing destroyed Dresden in 1945. As snow fell at the weekend,neo-Nazi supporters took to its streets to “mourn” – and win political support.
Leaders had gathered expecting to hear the Trump administration’s plans for ending the war in Ukraine. The US vice president decided to toe the Elon Musk line instead.
White supremacists Thomas Sewell and Blair Cottrell had their accounts suspended on Tuesday,two days after this masthead reported neo-Nazism was thriving on the platform.
If foreign malign forces masterminded some of this wave of attacks,as authorities suspect,Australia will not be alone.
Jean-Marie Le Pen shook the French political establishment when he used his pugnacious race politics to reach the presidential election run-off in 2002.
Australian children as young as 12 are at risk of becoming terrorists,demanding a “whole-of-society” response to online radicalisation,authorities say.
The agitator said she and her tour promoter would file an appeal,and the case would be reviewed by a federal judge in days.