Rupert Cornwell
Known for his commentary on international relations and US politics, Rupert Cornwell also contributes obituaries and occasionally even a column for the sports pages.
With The Independent since its launch in 1986, he was the paper's first Moscow correspondent - covering the collapse of the Soviet Union – during which time he won two British Press Awards. Previously a foreign correspondent for the Financial Times and Reuters, he has also been a diplomatic correspondent, leader writer and columnist, and has served as Washington bureau editor. In 1983 he published God's Banker, about Roberto Calvi, the Italian banker found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge.
Rupert Cornwell: At last! The cure for Chicago's inferiority complex has arrived
Out of America: No more 'Second City' – the president-elect's adopted home town has joined the big league now
Recently by Rupert Cornwell
Rupert Cornwell: Coolly, calmly, Obama is putting together a remarkable team
Sunday, 23 November 2008
Out of America: Even senior Republicans admit that – on paper, at least – the president-elect is assembling a very impressive administration
Rupert Cornwell:Formidable opponent is now the best choice
Saturday, 22 November 2008
There are many clever explanations for Barack Obama's apparent decision to endow America with its third Madam Secretary of State in a decade.
Rupert Cornwell: Where can the Republicans go now?
Friday, 21 November 2008
The comparison is the 1997 rout of the Tories, another party that had outstayed its welcome
Rupert Cornwell: Returning to the past is way forward for Obama
Monday, 17 November 2008
At first glance it looks like the ‘Clinton restoration’ that Barack Obama’s victory had seemingly forestalled. In fact however, Mr Obama’s selection of many aides associated with the last Democratic president obeys a deeper logic – of ensuring his administration hits the ground running, something Bill Clinton signally failed to achieve when he took power in January 1993.
Rupert Cornwell: This is no time to be waiting for the 44th President
Sunday, 16 November 2008
Amid the global economic crisis, Washington's interregnum feels dangerously long
Rupert Cornwell: After the victory, what next?
Sunday, 9 November 2008
President-elect Barack Obama has already started to put his team in place – just as well, given the scale of the challenges he will face come January
Rupert Cornwell: How Bush's toxic legacy did for his party
Wednesday, 5 November 2008
The Republicans are now facing a civil war between centrists and conservatives
A spectacular volte-face in the home of capitalism
Wednesday, 15 October 2008
Rupert Cornwell: What further indignities might then be heaped on America's battered free market?
Rupert Cornwell: Democrats should fear the Boogie Man
Sunday, 5 October 2008
Out of America: The late Lee Atwater may return to haunt the Obama campaign if desperate Republicans resort to his infamous tactics
Rupert Cornwell: Stunning defeat of bill exposes failures of the US political system
Tuesday, 30 September 2008
Yesterday was not only a black Monday for markets. It was the blackest of Mondays too for the US political system, saddled with a discredited president who has completely lost control of his own party and a Congress that responds to a national emergency with little except snarling partisanship.

- Jack Riley: A word from the Redditor-in-chief
- Larry Ryan: 'Bizarre indie cameos'
- Simon Rice: The year of the (football) crisis
- Sanjida O'Connell: The truth about life in a 'green' house
- Jimmy Leach: Obama and the internet
- Archie Bland: Pick of the commentators
- Chris Schuler: Life on Mars
- Catherine Gordon: The boxer rebellion bands and some casual Johnny Borell hating
- Andrew Grice: Brown tries to defuse VAT bombshell
- Catherine Townsend: Google Sex Searches NSFW
- Jane Merrick: Peace reigns in the Labour Party
- David Price: Mapping the mind of the blogosphere
- Colinb: Trillion pound black hole of national debt?
- Edward Seckerson: Villazon Back in Comfort Zone
- The Life Browser: Scrooge Williams and friends
- The Independent starts blogging
- Start your own Independent Minds blog
Columnist Comments
• Terence Blacker: The greasy gravy train of lobbyism
The idiocy and graft at work in the system barely merits a second glance.
• Dominic Lawson: When 'life' should mean life.
Sometimes the public feel the perpetrator should not be released.
• Steve Richards: Who is accountable for the police?
Why was Damian Green arrested with such spectacular insensitivity?
Most popular in Opinion
Read
1 Steve Richards: Who is accountable for the police?
2 Dominic Lawson: When 'life' should mean life.
3 Terence Blacker: The greasy gravy train of lobbyism
4 Leading article: Conventional wisdom and terrible consequences
5 Letters: Terrorism, terrorists, them and us
6 James Purnell: New Labour is not dead and buried – it's in rude health
7 Robert Fisk's World: The British should not forget the massive debt they owe the Irish
8 Susie Rushton: A Swedish lesson in Abba-negation
9 Robert Fisk: 'Nobody supports the Taliban, but people hate the government'
10 Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Muslims must confront the truth about Mumbai
Emailed
Commented
1 Steve Richards: Who is accountable for the police?
2 James Purnell: New Labour is not dead and buried – it's in rude health
3 Terence Blacker: The greasy gravy train of lobbyism
4 Podium: Animals should run free – not sit in cages for our entertainment
5 Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Muslims must confront the truth about Mumbai
6 Dominic Lawson: When 'life' should mean life.
7 Tom Sutcliffe: Twittering on is not the way to provide news
8 Leading article: India and Pakistan have a common extremist enemy
9 Susie Rushton: A Swedish lesson in Abba-negation
10 Bruce Anderson: Parliament's rights are under threat – and so are ministers'



