What We're Watching
Alexei Navalny’s funeral
Memorial to Alexei Navalny, Russian political opponent, in front of the Russian embassy in Berlin.
Benoit Durand / Hans Lucas
The Russian opposition leader who died suddenly at an Arctic penal colony earlier this month, will be laid to rest Friday in Moscow — around 6am for you East Coast early birds.
Navalny’s family and colleagues have accused authorities of preventing a wider civil ceremony to honor him. Last week Navalny’s mother said the penal colony threatened to withhold his body entirely unless she promised a private funeral.
Navalny’s wife Yulia, who has sworn to continue her late husband’s work, warned on Wednesday that she didn’t know if the funeral, or the trip across town to the cemetery, would be “peaceful.”
About a thousand people showed up at great risk to their lives, but there's been no major crackdown so far — but we're watching for what's next. This is, after all, the funeral of a man who at his peak was able to bring hundreds of thousands into the streets to decry Vladimir Putin’s party of “crooks and thieves.”
Putin, for his part, has a choice to make: it’s important to nip any protests in the bud, particularly as he heads towards a sham “election” later this month. But as every strongman knows, cracking down too hard risks heightening the symbolic and political power of the event.From a resilient but divided consumer economy to cooling small business hiring, tighter housing affordability, and AI’s shift from buzzword to economic engine, 2025 revealed a “K-shaped” recovery and rapid technological transformation. Bank of America Institute’s 2025 Year in Review distills the data behind the year’s defining trends. Explore the 2025 Year in Review from Bank of America Institute.
In this episode of "ask ian," Ian Bremmer breaks down the growing rift between the US and Canada, calling it “permanent damage” to one of the world’s closest alliances.
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FILE PHOTO: European Commissioner for Trade Maros Sefcovic and India's Trade Minister Piyush Goyal pose after signing an agreement, as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and European Council President Antonio Costa stand behind them, at the Hyderabad House in New Delhi, India, January 27, 2026.
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