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The battle for the Senate

In his latest “ask ian,” Ian Bremmer says the fight for Senate control is driving Democrats to make tough political tradeoffs as primary season unfolds.

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Paris and Berlin can’t agree on fighter jet plan, Venezuela’s Rodríguez meets with Turkey’s Erdoğan, Taiwan explores chip export controls to China

France and Germany scrap fighter jet plan

France and Germany pulled the plug on plans to jointly build a next-generation fighter jet on Monday, a core pillar of Europe’s largest defense project. The $115.6 billion Future Combat Air System (FCAS) defense initiative was launched by Macron and former German Chancellor Angela Merkel back in 2017, but months of disagreements between the companies involved, France’s Dassault Aviation and European Airbus representing Germany, culminated in its collapse. Hinted at being primarily a backout by Berlin, the scrapped plans are less than ideal for hopes of greater European security collaboration in an era of growing concern about American defense commitments and fears of Russian aggression on the continent.

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Iraqi Kurdish migrants’ perilous journey

Migrants often endure perilous journeys, be it crossing the Darien Gap on foot, the Mediterranean Sea in plastic dinghies, or the Sahara Desert under extreme heat. Along the way, there can be people who seek to exploit these migrants, as the BBC reported was the case for at least 300 Iraqi Kurds who were captured by Libyan militias in the North African country last summer. Over 100 have since been flown back to Kurdish-held areas of Iraq, some bearing scars that suggest forced operations to steal organs may have taken place. It’s not clear how many remain captive.

Time for a US-Canada marriage counselor?

The US-Canada relationship has long been one of the closest partnerships in the world. The two countries share the world’s longest undefended border, exchange nearly $1 trillion in goods and services annually, and work closely together on defense and security.

But as business and political leaders gather for the US-Canada Summit, co-hosted by GZERO’s parent company Eurasia Group and Royal Bank of Canada, starting tomorrow in Toronto, love is not in the air.

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Americans are losing faith in the Supreme Court

Can Americans still trust the Supreme Court? In this latest clip from GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, Yale legal scholar and New York Times Magazine staff writer Emily Bazelon examines why confidence in the Court has declined in recent years and whether the judiciary can continue serving as a check on presidential power

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Growth in US AI adoption highlights uneven access

Earlier this month, Microsoft released a new report offering an in-depth look at AI adoption across the United States, with state- and county-level insights for the first time. While more than 30 percent of working-age Americans now use AI tools, adoption remains uneven across regions, with significantly higher usage in urban areas and communities tied to universities. The findings point to a broader challenge: without stronger access to infrastructure, skills, and education, AI’s benefits risk remaining concentrated rather than broadly shared.

Read the full blog here.

Israel struck military targets and a petrochemical plant in Iran on Monday, defying pressure from US President Donald Trump not to respond to a wave of ballistic missile attacks by the Islamic Republic on Sunday night. The exchange marked the first direct confrontation between Israel and Iran since a ceasefire took effect in April.

Iran and Israel then announced today that they’d halt operations against one another. Yet Trump’s call for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to retaliate is “extraordinary,” according to Ian Bremmer, given the US president was urging a longtime ally to absorb Iranian strikes without responding. Trump has grown frustrated with Netanyahu’s eagerness to continue military operations against Hezbollah despite Iran’s insistence that any ceasefire agreement must also address Lebanon.

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In his latest Quick Take, Ian Bremmer says the Iran ceasefire is “holding on by a thread” as renewed strikes and proxy attacks undermine hopes for a broader deal.

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Kawata, a 35-year-old mayor of Yawata city, is preparing to take maternity leave, becoming the first elected official in Japan to do so. Japan has one of the oldest populations in the world as well as glaring gender gaps in government leadership. Though the country gained their first female prime minister last year, women make up less than 15% of Japan’s House of Representatives. Kawata hopes her announcement will be a “catalyst for changing the system,” encouraging the country to adopt policies friendlier to child-rearing and allow for more women to get involved in politics.

Armenian voters cement country’s shift toward West

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan pledged to “continue the course of rapprochement with the West” after his ruling Civil Contract party won comfortably in yesterday’s parliamentary elections. Early results show the incumbent party received 49.8% of the vote, while the Russian-aligned Strong Armenia Alliance finished in a distant second, with 23.8%. Once part of the Soviet Union, Armenia has increasingly shifted away from Moscow recently toward the US and Europe. Just this year, Yerevan signed a nuclear energy agreement and a strategic partnership deal with Washington. In response, Russian President Vladimir Putin – whose government allegedly attempted to interfere in this election – has threatened to hurt Armenia economically. Given that Russia is Armenia’s largest trading partner, and provides it with large amounts of gas, Yerevan does stand to lose something.

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What are the biggest Supreme Court decisions still to come this decision season? In this episode of GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, Yale legal scholar and New York Times Magazine staff writer Emily Bazelon previews several major rulings expected in the coming weeks, including cases involving birthright citizenship and President Trump's authority over independent federal agencies.
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From birthright citizenship to the independence of federal agencies, the Supreme Court is poised to decide a series of cases that could redefine the balance of power in Washington. Yale legal scholar and New York Times Magazine staff writer Emily Bazelon joins Ian Bremmer to assess what's at stake and whether the judiciary remains an effective check on presidential authority.

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This November, Republicans could lose the House. They could lose the Senate. Yet Trump appears remarkably unconcerned.

Why? Because his political power doesn't primarily come from Congress. It comes from his influence over the Republican base. As Trump looks ahead, legacy, not succession, will be his central political project.

In the latest episode of the GZERO Debrief, Clayton Allen breaks down why Trump may care more about his place in history than the outcome of the 2026 midterms.

Man’s death sparks political firestorm in the United Kingdom

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called for the British public to respond with “pure, cold rage” after a video emerged on Monday showing 18-year-old Henry Nowak desperately calling for help while the police arrested him last December. He died hours later. What exactly is the controversy? When police arrived at the scene, they saw Nowak, who is white, bleeding profusely, while nearby was a 23-year-old British Sikh man Vickrum Digwa, who had stabbed him. However, the police arrested Nowak first because Digwa falsely accused the teenager of racially abusing him, before they noticed the full extent of his injuries. Days later, Digwa was charged with murder, and later convicted – he was sentenced in May to life imprisonment.

Farage suggested that the incident is the latest example of a “two-tier” police system that discriminates against white people – borrowing language used during protests against racial bias in policing that captured global attention in 2020, but in reverse. This response in and of itself has ignited its own backlash, with both Labour and Conservative leaders accusing the hard-right leader of exploiting Nowak’s death for political gain. Farage’s party already leads UK polls, but it would appear he’s keen to remain on the offensive.

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