NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

European elections suggest US shouldn't be complacent in 2020

  • Written by Liisa Past, Next Generation Leader, McCain Institute for International Leadership, Arizona State University
The 2019 European Parliament elections were well defended against outside interference.AP Photo/Olivier Matthys

In many ways, the European Parliament elections in late May were calmer than expected. The more extreme political players, while gaining strength, did not do as well as many predicted. Cyber aggression and disinformation operations seem...

Read more: European elections suggest US shouldn't be complacent in 2020

More Articles ...

  1. Consumer genetic testing customers stretch their DNA data further with third-party interpretation websites
  2. What does the Trump administration want from Iran?
  3. For some, self-tracking means more than self-help
  4. How to handle raccoons, snakes and other critters in your yard (hint: not with a thermos)
  5. 'I still get tweets to go back in the kitchen' – the enduring power of sexism in sports media
  6. Rapid DNA analysis helps diagnose mystery diseases
  7. Fed’s dilemma: Inflation is healthy for the economy – but too much can trigger a recession
  8. Inflation is healthy for the economy – but too much can trigger a recession
  9. Food label nutrition facts matter to you, but don't tell you much about your gut microbes
  10. What the ban on gene-edited babies means for family planning
  11. What Orwell's '1984' tells us about today's world, 70 years after it was published
  12. Companies' self-regulation doesn't have to be bad for the public
  13. Could a weakening US economy imperil Trump's trade war against China?
  14. A growing source of Canadian asylum-seekers: US citizens whose parents were born elsewhere
  15. The Defense Department is worried about climate change – and also a huge carbon emitter
  16. The 25th Amendment wouldn’t work to dump Trump
  17. Artificial intelligence-enhanced journalism offers a glimpse of the future of the knowledge economy
  18. E-cig companies use cartoon characters as logos, and new study shows it works
  19. 23% of young black women now identify as bisexual
  20. Minorities face more obstacles to a lifesaving organ transplant
  21. Why Sudan's deadly crackdown on protesters could escalate in coming weeks
  22. Migrants will pay the price of Mexico's tariff deal with Trump
  23. Investigating the investigative reporters: Bad news from Down Under
  24. The struggle to find silence in the ancient monastic world – and now
  25. What advice articles miss about 'summer loss'
  26. The most unpopular presidential election winner ever could win again in 2020
  27. Driverless cars are going to disrupt the airline industry
  28. Trophies made from human skulls hint at regional conflicts around the time of Maya civilization's mysterious collapse
  29. A concise history of the US abortion debate
  30. May jobs report suggests a slowing economy – and possibly an imminent interest rate cut
  31. Climate change alters what's possible in restoring Florida's Everglades
  32. Forget lower jobs growth, the number of people who've stopped looking for work is much more worrisome
  33. Are brain games mostly BS?
  34. School vouchers expand despite evidence of negative effects
  35. How the 'good guy with a gun' became a deadly American fantasy
  36. Convicts are returning to farming – anti-immigrant policies are the reason
  37. Privacy concerns don't stop people from putting their DNA on the internet to help solve crimes
  38. Does hitting the snooze button really help you feel better?
  39. What would happen to Congress if Washington, DC became the 51st state?
  40. What the US could learn about vaccination from Nigeria
  41. The tell-tale clue to how meteorites were made, at the birth of the solar system
  42. No, Americans shouldn't fear traveling abroad
  43. Women have been the heart of the Christian right for decades
  44. The debate over what ails philanthropy heats up
  45. My students see giving money away as a good thing but they're getting leery of billionaire donors
  46. As more developing countries reject plastic waste exports, wealthy nations seek solutions at home
  47. Spider glue's sticky secret revealed by new genetic research
  48. Antibiotic resistance is not new – it existed long before people used drugs to kill bacteria
  49. Brazilian universities fear Bolsonaro plan to eliminate humanities and slash public education budgets
  50. Will children in your state get the support they need? It depends on the 2020 census