Tag Archives: presidency

Sen. Katie Britt acknowledges anecdote used to criticize Biden’s border policies didn’t happen during his presidency – CNN

  1. Sen. Katie Britt acknowledges anecdote used to criticize Biden’s border policies didn’t happen during his presidency CNN
  2. Sex trafficking victim says Sen. Katie Britt telling her story during SOTU rebuttal is ‘not fair’ CNN
  3. GOP Rep Says His Party Threw Katie Britt ‘to the Wolves’ The Daily Beast
  4. Election Updates: Trump mocks and attacks Biden as the two ended their frenzied week in Georgia, kicking off the general election campaign. The New York Times
  5. Transcript of the Republican response to the State of the Union address The Associated Press

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Turkey’s Erdogan submits Sweden’s NATO bid to parliament for ratification -presidency – Reuters

  1. Turkey’s Erdogan submits Sweden’s NATO bid to parliament for ratification -presidency Reuters
  2. Turkey’s president submits protocol for Sweden’s admission into NATO to parliament for ratification Yahoo News
  3. Turkey’s president submits protocol for Sweden’s admission into NATO to parliament for ratification The Associated Press
  4. Turkey’s Erdogan submits Sweden’s bid for NATO membership to parliament Al Jazeera English
  5. Russia-Ukraine war live: Erdoğan submits Sweden’s Nato bid for ratification; Russia plans significant defence spending increase, says UK The Guardian
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Global food insecurity caused by Russia-Ukraine war tops agenda as U.S. assumes UN Security Council presidency – CNBC

  1. Global food insecurity caused by Russia-Ukraine war tops agenda as U.S. assumes UN Security Council presidency CNBC
  2. US Ambassador focuses on food insecurity and human rights during UN Security Council presidency MSNBC
  3. Security Council Report Monthly Forecast, August 2023 – Syrian Arab Republic ReliefWeb
  4. The U.S. is set to take over the presidency of the U.N. Security Council for August WUSF Public Media
  5. Remarks by Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield at a Virtual New York Foreign Press Center Briefing on the U.S. Presidency of the UN Security Council United States Mission to the United Nations
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In Kyiv, Sánchez says Ukraine’s EU candidacy to be a priority of Spain Council presidency – POLITICO Europe

  1. In Kyiv, Sánchez says Ukraine’s EU candidacy to be a priority of Spain Council presidency POLITICO Europe
  2. Russian attacks in Ukraine leave 3 dead, 17 wounded as Spain highlights European support for Kyiv euronews
  3. Ukraine updates: Zelenskyy, Sanchez discuss EU membership – DW – 07/02/2023 DW (English)
  4. Marking New EU Presidency, Spanish Prime Minister Visits Ukraine In Show Of Support Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  5. Spain becomes 21st country that supported Ukraine’s NATO membership – Zelenskyy Yahoo News
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Lula narrowly defeats Bolsonaro to win Brazil presidency again

SAO PAULO, Oct 30 (Reuters) – Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva narrowly defeated President Jair Bolsonaro in a runoff election on Sunday that marked a stunning comeback for the leftist former president and the end of Brazil’s most right-wing government in decades.

Brazil’s Supreme Electoral Court declared Lula the next president, with 50.9% of votes versus 49.1% for Bolsonaro. The 77-year-old Lula’s inauguration is scheduled for Jan. 1.

The vote was a rebuke for the fiery far-right populism of Bolsonaro, who emerged from the back benches of Congress to forge a novel conservative coalition but lost support as Brazil ran up one of the worst death tolls of the coronavirus pandemic.

Bolsonaro remained silent on Sunday night after the results were announced and some of his allies publicly acknowledged his defeat, defying expectations that he might immediately challenge the narrow result after making baseless claims of fraud in previous elections.

Bolsonaro did not make a call to Lula, according to campaign advisers.

Lula said in a speech he would unite a divided country and ensure that Brazilians “put down arms that never should have been taken up,” while inviting international cooperation to preserve the Amazon rainforest and make global trade more fair.

“I will govern for 215 million Brazilians, and not just for those who voted for me,” Lula said at his campaign headquarters. “There are not two Brazils. We are one country, one people, one great nation.”

Lula arrived at a rally in Sao Paulo shortly after 8:00 p.m. (1100 GMT), waving from the sunroof of a car. Ecstatic supporters near Paulista Avenue waited for him, chanting slogans and drinking champagne.

Vice President-elect Geraldo Alckmin and campaign aides jumped up and down chanting, “It’s time Jair, it’s time to leave already,” in a video circulating on social media.

OPPOSITION

Last year, Bolsonaro, 67, openly discussed refusing to accept the results of the vote.

A senior Bolsonaro campaign aide, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he would not make a speech on Sunday. The Bolsonaro campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

One close Bolsonaro ally, lawmaker Carla Zambelli, in an apparent nod to Lula’s victory wrote on Twitter, “I PROMISE you, I will be the greatest opposition that Lula has ever imagined.”

Electoral authorities are bracing for him to dispute the outcome, sources told Reuters, and made security preparations in case his supporters stage protests.

U.S. President Joe Biden congratulated Lula for winning “free, fair and credible elections,” joining a chorus of compliments from European and Latin American leaders.

His victory consolidates a new “pink tide” in Latin America, after landmark leftist victories in Colombia and Chile’s elections, echoing a regional political shift two decades ago that introduced Lula to the world stage.

Lula has vowed a return to state-driven economic growth and social policies that helped lift millions out of poverty when he was previously president from 2003 to 2010. He also promises to combat destruction of the Amazon rainforest, now at a 15-year high, and make Brazil a leader in global climate talks.

“These were four years of hatred, of negation of science,” Ana Valeria Doria, 60, a doctor in Rio de Janeiro who celebrated with a drink. “It won’t be easy for Lula to manage the division in this country. But for now it’s pure happiness.”

A former union leader born into poverty, Lula organized strikes against Brazil’s military government in the 1970s. His two-term presidency was marked by a commodity-driven economic boom and he left office with record popularity.

However, his Workers Party was later tarred by a deep recession and a record-breaking corruption scandal that jailed him for 19 months on bribery convictions, which were overturned by the Supreme Court last year.

In his third term, Lula will confront a sluggish economy, tighter budget constraints and a more hostile legislature.

Bolsonaro’s allies form the largest bloc in Congress after this month’s general election and won the races for governor in Brazil’s three most economically powerful states, highlighting the enduring strength of his conservative coalition.

Reporting by Brian Ellsworth and Lisandra Paraguassu in Sao Paulo, Anthony Boadle and Ricardo Brito in Brasilia, Gabriel Stargardter in Rio de Janeiro; Editing by Brad Haynes and Grant McCool

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson says potential presidential run is ‘off the table’

It looks like The Rock is staying clear of the Oval Office.

Dwayne Johnson revealed the fate of his much-talked-about presidential bid, revealing he’s ultimately decided against it.

“It’s off the table,” Johnson told CBS Sunday Morning’s Tracey Smith. “Yes, it is off the table.

The star wrestler-turned-Hollywood juggernaut said he’s shifting all of his focus to his role as a father.

“I will say this because it requires a B-side to this. I love our country and everyone in it,” Johnson added. “I also love being a daddy.”

“And that’s the most important thing to me is being a daddy, No. 1, especially during this time, this critical time in my daughters’ lives.”

The star is a proud dad to three. He shares his 21-year-old daughter Simone Garcia Johnson with his ex-wife, Dany Garcia. The Rock shares six-year-old Jasmine and four-year-old Tiana with his current wife, Lauren Hashian.

“I know what it was like to be on the road and be so busy that I was absent for a lot of years in my first daughter’s,” Johnson said. “Growing up in this critical age at this critical time in their life, and that’s what the presidency will do. So my number one priority is my daughters.

“Sure, CEO sounds great. But the number one thing I wanna be is daddy. That’s it.”

The actor has decided against running for president.
Getty Images

Last year, Johnson teased he would launch a presidential campaign if it was “what the people want.”

“I do have that goal, to unite our country,” Johnson said in an episode of NBC’s “Sunday Today with Willie Geist” in April 2021. “I also feel that if this is what the people want, then I will do that.”

The Rock shares his 21-year-old daughter Simone Garcia Johnson with his ex-wife, Dany Garcia
Getty Images
He shares six-year-old Jasmine and four-year-old Tiana with his current wife, Lauren Hashian.
Instagram/@therock

Johnson had teased the idea of a political career since at least 2017. In February 2021 he floated a possible run in an interview with USA Today, saying that he would “consider a presidential run in the future if that’s what the people wanted.”

A survey of more than 30,000 Americans released last year found nearly half of respondents wanted to see Johnson run for president. 

Johnson responded to the Piplsay poll with a tweet, writing, “Not sure our Founding Fathers ever envisioned a six-four, bald, tattooed, half-Black, half-Samoan, tequila drinking, pick up truck driving, fanny pack-wearing guy joining their club — but if it ever happens it’d be my honor to serve the people.”

“I am passionate about making sure that our country is united,” he went on. “A united country, as we know, is its strongest, and I want to see that for our country.”



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Sen. Ben Sasse named sole finalist for University of Florida presidency

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), the former president of a small university in Nebraska, has been named the sole finalist to be the next president of the University of Florida, the school announced Thursday.

The lawmaker said he wants to return to academia as the country is rethinking “the radical disruption of work” after the pandemic.

“UF is the most important institution in the nation’s most economically dynamic state,” he said in a statement. “Washington partnership isn’t going to solve these workforce challenges — new institutions and entrepreneurial communities are going to have to spearhead this work.”

“If UF wants to go big, I’m excited about the wide range of opportunities,” Sasse added.

Herschel Walker says abortion ‘nothing to be ashamed of,’ but supports ban

If Sasse eventually accepts the position, Nebraska’s Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts will appoint a successor under state law.

Sasse is expected to resign later this year once the review process takes place and pending final approval of the board, according to a person close to him who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations. Since he is the only finalist, he is expected to be approved.

The university president, W. Kent Fuchs — who announced in January that he would “transition from president to professor” when his successor is appointed — has led the university since 2015.

Fuchs touted his success in raising the university’s public stature, leading its $3 billion fundraising campaign and holding tuition steady.

But he drew criticism from some faculty members who said he too often allowed political pressure from state leaders to influence areas including pandemic response, research and academic freedom on campus.

The school’s candidates for a new president were kept secret in compliance with a law Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed in March. That search included “hundreds of candidates,” according to a letter sent to University of Florida alumni from Mori Hosseini, chair of the school’s board of trustees.

How the Supreme Court could give Republicans more power with elections

Sasse was elected to the Senate in 2014 while serving as president of the Lutheran-affiliated Midland University, which he had led since 2010. He ran as a vocal critic of the Obama administration, specifically the Affordable Care Act.

Once viewed as a powerful voice of dissent within the GOP during the earliest years of the Trump presidency, Sasse, 50, eventually became less vocal as it became clear his constituents and his party’s politics were closer line with the former president’s.

Sasse was easily reelected in 2020, but far less vocal following years of disagreement with Trump and other party leaders.

Before becoming a lawmaker, Sasse worked with several Christian organizations including the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals (ACE), where he was executive director, and multiple federal government agencies including the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, where George W. Bush nominated Sasse to be assistant secretary for planning and evaluation.

Sasse was born and raised in Nebraska before heading to Harvard University for his undergraduate studies. He went on to earn his doctoral degree from Yale University where he studied the intersection of faith and politics in the two major political parties.

Jacqueline Dupree and Susan Svrluga contributed to this report.



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Jill Biden tells donors Joe’s presidency hamstrung by crises

First lady Jill Biden told donors her husband’s political agenda has been sidetracked by unexpected crises at home and overseas.

Biden, 71, made the remarks during a private Democratic National Committee fundraiser in Nantucket, Mass., as President Joe Biden wrapped up his four-day trip to the Middle East, according to CNN.

Her comments came after pollsters recently found most Democrats don’t want the president to seek a second term. His approval rating was a dismal 33%, and only 13% of Americans thought the country was headed in the right direction, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll released Monday.

“[The President] had so many hopes and plans for things he wanted to do, but every time you turned around, he had to address the problems of the moment,” the First Lady reportedly told about two dozen people at a private home.

Jill Biden said her husband has had “so many things thrown his way” during his tenure.
AP

Jill Biden referenced gun violence, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade and opposition to signature legislation within his own party as examples of unforeseen obstacles her husband has contended with.

“He’s just had so many things thrown his way,” she reportedly said. “Who would have ever thought about what happened [with the Supreme Court overturning] Roe v. Wade? Well, maybe we saw it coming, but still we didn’t believe it. The gun violence in this country is absolutely appalling. We didn’t see the war in Ukraine coming.”

Setbacks at home and abroad had also curtailed her own agenda, Biden said, according to the network.

“I was saying to myself, ‘Okay, I was Second Lady. I worked on community colleges. I worked on military families. I’ve worked on cancer.’ They were supposed to be my areas of focus. But then when we got [in the White House,] I had to be, with all that was happening, the First Lady of the moment.”

It was the second fundraiser Biden attended during a three-day trip to the Bay State. On Thursday she reportedly spoke to donors at a private event in Andover.

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Ecuador protests: Indigenous movement tests Guillermo Lasso presidency

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QUITO, Ecuador — The Indigenous protesters of Ecuador have been credited in the past with bringing the country to its knees — and chasing three presidents from office.

Now, the South American country’s powerful Indigenous movement has taken to the streets again, spearheading 12 days of nationwide protests that have paralyzed the capital and tested the government of Guillermo Lasso, one of the last conservative leaders on the continent, just a year into his presidency.

Demonstrators have marched through Quito, clashed with police and blocked highways across the country, causing shortages of food and fuel. As government forces have sought to quell the rising protests this week, at least four people have died, four have disappeared and 93 have been injured. Dozens have been arrested, according to local human rights groups, and at least 114 police officers have been injured, authorities say.

As in 2019, when pre-pandemic protests led by the Indigenous brought Ecuador to a standstill, organizers are harnessing frustration over fuel prices. Gasoline costs less in Ecuador than in other countries in the region, but the government last year cut long-running subsidies, causing prices at the pump to nearly double.

But this time, the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador is asking for more. The movement is calling for economic reforms to address widening inequality in a country still suffering from the economic havoc wrought by the pandemic, which was particularly lethal here.

Indigenous and rural communities, protesters say, have been disproportionately hurt by inflation, soaring gas prices and austerity measures. The organization has presented the government with a list of 10 demands, including a better job-creation plan, increased investment in public education and health care, and a halt to oil and mining expansion.

Mario Granja joined demonstrators this week on the Avenida 12 de Octubre in central Quito. Police had blocked traffic on the normally busy street; protesters lit eucalyptus fires in an effort to ward off the effects of the eye-burning tear gas that lingered in the air.

“I come here to fight for fuel prices … for our children’s education, and for work,” the 57-year-old construction worker said. “We want the president to leave. He is lying to the people, and the people are tired of being deceived.”

Voters across Latin America, one of the regions hit hardest by the pandemic and its economic toll, have voted out presidents and parties in favor of politicians promising change. Lasso’s victory in Ecuador last year, over the candidate handpicked by former president Rafael Correa, amounted to a rebuke of the leftist governments that had long held power in the country. Lasso, a conservative banker, promised to ramp up coronavirus vaccinations, revive the country’s economy and create more job opportunities — including for Indigenous people.

As Latin America embraces a new left, the U.S. could take a back seat

Lasso benefited in the election from discontent among Indigenous peoples, who represent only about 10 percent of the population but are a powerful and organized political force. After the Indigenous candidate Yaku Pérez failed to make it to the second round of voting, many Indigenous voters cast their ballots blank, helping Lasso.

A year later, Ecuador is suffering rising unemployment, a shortage of medicine, students still out of school, and surges in drug violence and prison massacres. Lasso has focused more on macroeconomic challenges, such as reducing the budget deficit and repaying foreign debt, than on the social programs demanded by a population struggling with poverty. Sociologist Decio Machado, an independent political consultant, said the approach reflected a total “lack of sensitivity.”

That’s earned the president sinking approval and rising opposition in the National Assembly and on the streets. Lawmakers associated with Correa initiated a process in the assembly Friday to vote on Lasso’s removal.

The war next door: Conflict in Mexico is displacing thousands

Lasso has addressed the protesters’ demands only partially. He announced plans last week to subsidize fertilizer costs for small and medium farmers by 50 percent. He said the public bank would forgive overdue loans worth up to $3,000. He also said there would be no additional increase in the cost of diesel, which would be limited to $1.90 per gallon, or gasoline, which would be limited to $2.55. Both are above the protesters’ demands of $1.50 and $2.10 per gallon.

“I called for dialogue and the answer was more violence,” Lasso said in televised remarks. “There is no intention to find solutions.”

Leonidas Iza, president of the Indigenous confederation, said Lasso’s proposals did not fully meet the protesters’ demands. He also doubted the president’s sincerity in implementing them.

Lasso’s challenges could serve as a warning to other recently elected presidents in the region who courted angry voters with promises of change.

“In such unequal countries, when people see someone new, they have huge expectations,” said Santiago Basabe, a political scientist on the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Ecuador. “When you’ve already offered more than you can give, people aren’t going to take a step back. … If you don’t follow through, people will get irritated.”

And in the case of Ecuador’s Indigenous community, people will mobilize.

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The Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador is credited with helping to oust three governments in Ecuador between 1997 and 2005, by leading massive, days-long street protests that pushed the National Assembly to vote out the presidents for incapacity to govern. Today, many, including Lasso, say the group is trying to do the same.

But it won’t be as easy this time. The assembly now requires a two-thirds vote to remove a president, more than the majority requirement of the past.

Lasso has responded to the protests by calling a 30-day state of emergency in six provinces, including Pichincha, home to Quito. Police have occupied the Casa de la Cultura, a cultural center in central Quito that has historic significance as a base for Indigenous protesters who come in from the countryside. Police withdrew from the building Thursday.

Several groups, including Amnesty International, have called for a dialogue between the government and the movement to end the protests immediately. Both sides say they are open to dialogue, but the confederation’s Iza has demanded that the government lift the state of emergency before sitting down at the table.

“We’ve always had our door open to dialogue — we’ve only said that talks can’t make a mockery of the Ecuadoran people,” Iza said at a news conference. He said any dialogue with the government must lead to results. He has had several meetings with the president over the past year, he said. All, he said, have ended in empty promises.

Ecuador’s prison riot: Drug cartels, overcrowded cells and a bloodbath

Meanwhile, anger at the protesters and the disruption they’re causing to daily life is rising, particularly in Quito, where clashes between protesters and police have blocked off whole neighborhoods in the city center. Counterprotesters staged “peace demonstrations” in the capital Wednesday, shouting “We want to work!”

The government says the first eight days of protests cost the economy more than $110 million dollars, affecting some 1.4 million jobs. The Ecuadoran Federation of Exporters says highway blockades, affecting mostly the flower, broccoli, lumber and banana industries, have cost it $27 million in exports.

Granja traveled to Quito in a caravan Monday night from the province of Cotopaxi. Ordinarily, the drive would take less than an hour, but it took the caravan 10 hours as it met police blockades along the way.

He’s been sleeping on a floor at Salesian University, one of two universities in Quito that have opened their doors to some 18,000 protesters from rural Ecuador.

Back in his community of Tancuchi, Granja said, he’s being pushed to his limits. He has found it difficult to find work as a construction worker; when he does, the pay is $100 per week, not the $150 he got before the pandemic. The price of some basic goods, meanwhile, has doubled. Cooking oil has jumped from $2 per liter to nearly $4.50 per liter. One dollar used to buy eight buns. Today it buys only four.

“Now even the potatoes have to be counted. As they say, one potato can be made into 12 pieces,” he said. “I ask God that the president takes action. That he doesn’t continue deceiving us.”

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France in no mood to make concessions to Russia, presidency says

French President Emmanuel Macron welcomes a guest at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, June 10, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

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  • A negotiated solution to the war would be needed, official says
  • France ready to help on Ukraine’s grain stocks crisis

PARIS, June 11 (Reuters) – France is unwilling to make concessions to Russia and wants Ukraine to win the war against Moscow’s invading forces with its territorial integrity restored, a French presidential official said on Friday, as Paris seeks to assuage concerns over its stance in the conflict.

President Emmanuel Macron has been criticised by Ukraine and eastern European allies after published interviews on Saturday quoting him as saying it was vital not to “humiliate” Russia so that when the fighting ends there could be a diplomatic solution. read more

“As the president has said, we want a Ukrainian victory. We want Ukraine’s territorial integrity to be restored,” the official told reporters when asked about Macron’s humiliation comments.

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Macron has spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin regularly since the Feb. 24 invasion as part of efforts to achieve a ceasefire and begin a credible negotiation between Kyiv and Moscow, although he has had no tangible success to show for it.

“There is no spirit of concession towards Putin or Russia in what the president says. When he speaks to him directly, it is not compromise, but to say how we see things,” the official said.

France is also ready to help on allowing access to the port of Odesa, where some of Ukraine’s grain stocks are ready to be exported, the official said.

“We’re at the disposal of the parties so that an operation can be set up which would allow access to the port of Odesa in complete safety,” the official said.

The official didn’t elaborate on what that help would be.

The Black Sea, where Odesa is located, is crucial for shipment of grain, oil and oil products. Its waters are shared by Bulgaria, Romania, Georgia and Turkey, as well as Ukraine and Russia.

Ukrainian government officials estimate 20 million tonnes of grain are unable to travel from what was the world’s fourth largest exporter before Russia’s invasion. read more

Defending Macron’s position, the official said there would have to be a negotiated solution to the war. He added that Paris was a key backer of sanctions and provided strong military support to Ukraine.

Some eastern and Baltic partners in Europe see Macron keeping a dialogue open with Putin as undermining efforts to push Putin to the negotiating table.

Macron will travel to Romania and Moldova on June 14-15 to show France’s support for two of the countries most exposed to events in Ukraine.

France has about 500 soldiers on the ground in Romania and deployed a surface-to air- missile system as part of a NATO battle group it heads up there. The official said Macron would visit French troops to underscore Paris’ commitment to the alliance.

Macron has not been to Kyiv to offer symbolic political support as other EU leaders have and Ukraine has wanted him to. The presidential official did not rule out a Macron visit.

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Reporting by Elizabeth Pineau and John Irish;
Additional reporting by Mathieu Rosemain
Editing by Grant McCool and Frances Kerry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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