News
August 30, 2021
German elections heat up: Less than a month from Germany's general elections, the three contenders vying to replace longtime Chancellor Angela Merkel went head-to-head in the first major prime-time TV debate. The three chancellor wannabes — the Green Party's Annalena Baerbock, Olaf Scholz, Germany's finance minister from the left-leaning Social Democratic Party, and Merkel's handpicked successor Armin Laschet of the CDU/CSU coalition — debated climate change policy, taxes and COVID recovery, as well as Germany's place in the world. A post-debate survey showed that 36 percent of viewers said Scholz had the best performance, but polls suggest that the election remains anyone's to win. After soaring in the polls in the spring, Baerbock has fallen behind thanks to claims that she embellished her credentials. Laschet, premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, is extremely unpopular, particularly after a series of gaffes as the country dealt with devastating floods in July. Whatever the outcome, next month's winner will probably have to form an ideologically broad coalition government.
Israel and the Palestinian Authority hold rare talks: Israel's Defense Minister Benny Gantz met with PA President Mahmoud Abbas Sunday in Ramallah, the first time that senior officials from the two sides have met for high-level talks in more than a decade. This interaction comes as the PA faces both a fiscal crunch and a crisis of legitimacy amid dwindling popular approval. In a rare move aimed at propping up Abbas' ailing government, Gantz used a loophole to offer the PA a 500 million shekel loan ($155 million) to prevent a PA collapse that would boost Hamas, which currently rules in the Gaza Strip and is deemed a terrorist group by the US and EU. Last month, Israel increased the number of work permits available for Palestinians living in the West Bank to ease economic pressure on the PA, but analysts warn that more drastic measures are needed. The budget of the PA, which has long been accused of graft and cronyism, has taken a serious hit because of a drop off in international aid over the past few years.
Not now, North Korea: Life is coming fast at Joe Biden. The Afghanistan withdrawal has been a fiasco. The worst hurricane in at least a decade is currently pummeling the state of Louisiana. And now, according to a report by the UN's Atomic Energy Agency, North Korean tyrant Kim Jong-un is restarting the Yongbyon nuclear reactor, crown jewel of his controversial nuclear program. The UN says North Korea, which is under strict UN and US sanctions for its nuclear program, has been operating the plant again for the past several months after shutting it down in 2018 as part of negotiations with the Trump administration. The basic challenge remains: the US wants North Korea to verifiably relinquish its nuclear program and weapons, while Pyongyang wants US forces off the Korean Peninsula. Who goes first? Ball's in your court now, Joe.More For You
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Miami Mayor-elect Eileen Higgins points as she thanks her staff and supporters on the night of the general election, on Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025.
Carl Juste/Miami Herald/TNS/ABACAPRESS.COM
A Democrat won Miami’s mayoral race for the first time in nearly 30 years. The Republican defeat will ring some alarms for the party – and their support among Latino voters.
Women work in the plastic container assembly area inside the El Oso shoe polish factory, located in Mexico City, Mexico, in its new facilities, after officers from the Secretariat of Citizen Security and staff from the Benito Juarez mayor's office arbitrarily and violently remove their supplies, raw materials, machinery, and work tools on January 17 of this year following a coordinated operation stemming from a private dispute. On August 27, 2025.
Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto
50: Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum is taking a page out of US President Donald Trump’s book, implementing up to a 50% tariff on more than 1,400 products in a bid to boost domestic production.
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