Issue Watch
Track global public opinion on current issues.
- 2008: Race for the White House
- 2008: The U.S. Electoral College
- Abortion
- Africa
- Angela Merkel
- Death Penalty
- Economy and Globalization
- Environment
- European Union
- George W. Bush
- Global Warming
- Gordon Brown
- Hamas
- Immigration
- Iran
- Iraq War
- Kevin Rudd
- Latin America
- New Zealand Election 2008
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- North Korea
- Oil and Gas
- Same-Sex Marriage
- Silvio Berlusconi
- Stem Cell Research
- Stephen Harper
- Terrorism
- U.S. Election 2008 - The Democrats
- U.S. Election 2008 - The Republicans
- U.S. Election 2008: The Primaries
- Vladimir Putin
- Yasuo Fukuda
Angus Reid Global Monitor
Politics In Depth
Our latest political reviews.
-
Virtual Primary Takes Shape In U.S.
-
Election by computer? Deal with access and security first.
Mario Canseco Over the next two days, voters in the United States will be able to participate in the first virtual presidential primary.
June 23, 2003 -
From right to left, the political pickings are pretty slim
-
It's time for Canadian parties to revitalize.
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun I can't remember a time when the Canadian political stage featured such a lacklustre group of performers as those performing on it today.
June 14, 2003 -
Martha Stewart, George W. and tainted information
-
What price will each pay for their use of questionable intelligence?
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun Martha Stewart and George W. Bush both stand accused of misusing information: one to sell stock and the other to sell a war.
June 07, 2003 -
A Guerrilla President In El Salvador?
-
Following three conservative rulers, voters look left in the Central American country.
Mario Canseco The people of El Salvador have been familiar with the Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN—Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front) for more than 30 years.
June 03, 2003 -
If Chrétien is sincere, he’ll help Congolese
-
Strong foreign policy required to deal with African crisis.
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun Just when Canadian prime minister Jean Chrétien should be enjoying the twilight of his three terms in office, his government seems, instead, to have entered the "twilight zone"—a disquieting place somewhere between shadow and substance where all of the inconsistencies of his decade in power are coming together in one final discordant burst.
May 31, 2003 -
A system in disarray
-
E-Coli, West Nile, SARS and Mad Cow: Four crises that call for a reform of public health in Canada.
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun Maybe it's time to declare an orange alert here in Canada, not because of the threat from terrorists but from microbes.
May 24, 2003 -
One-size-fits all solution won’t ease Western alienation
-
Each province West of Ontario has its own needs and concerns.
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun Western Canadian alienation is back in the news.
May 17, 2003 -
The art of surreal politics
-
Halfway through its term, the Campbell government is confounding friend and foe alike.
Angus ReidVancouver SunThere's a painting at the Art Institute of Chicago that serves as the perfect metaphor for B.C.'s political picture over the past two years.
May 10, 2003 -
Petitions, Signatures and Recalls
-
Campbell safe in B.C., but Davis might still be ousted in California.
Mario Canseco Recalls have become fashionable in the West Coast of North America.
May 09, 2003 -
Wave the flag or be silenced
-
The sight of TV networks trading impartiality for gung-ho patriotism serves as a warning for Canadians.
Angus Reid Vancouver Sun Now that the anesthetic of the mind-numbing 24/7 coverage of the Iraq War is starting to wear off, it's becoming increasingly clear that, despite the hoopla over satellite cameras and embedded journalists, the invasion of Iraq saw American broadcasters enter a new and disturbing phase in which the lines between reporting and propaganda are blurred more than ever.
May 03, 2003
Archive Search
Search the Angus Reid Global Monitor Politics In Depth archive.