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Will Colombia keep left?

Four years ago, Colombia tried a new tack, electing a left-wing president for the first time. Since taking office, Gustavo Petro has raised income taxes for top earners, halted new oil exploration in a bid to phase out fossil fuels, expanded access to government services like education in rural areas, and hiked the country’s minimum wage by 23%. He has also tried to deal with the country’s powerful armed groups via negotiations, rather than brute force, using a flagship policy branded as “Total Peace.”

On Sunday, Colombians will have their say on this left-wing agenda, as they head to the polls to vote in the first round of the presidential election.

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India’s Gen Z “cockroach” movement runs wild, Netanyahu orders wider Israeli control of Gaza, Brazilian crime orgs seek drone expertise from Ukraine

India’s disgruntled youth are becoming cockroaches

A Kafkaesque political metamorphosis is unfolding across India as millions of disaffected Gen Z’ers are turning into cockroaches – that is, members of the new Cockroach Janta Party (CJP). The party, an online protest movement created by a 30-year old recent graduate from Boston University, was inspired by India’s Chief Justice Surya Kant, who called jobless young people “cockroaches.” It has swiftly amassed tens of millions of followers on Instagram and more than a million registered members, drawing support from young, educated Indians struggling to find work even as the country’s GDP surges ahead. The government has tried to stamp out the infestation, even ordering X to block the CJP handle on national security grounds. But, true to form, roaches are hard to kill – the party simply created a new account that remains active. Analysts say the party won’t have a direct political impact unless it builds an offline presence, but its emergence signals a deep youth frustration that India’s traditional parties ignore at their peril.

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Japan’s population drops by millions

The fifth-largest economy in the world is facing a major population crunch. The decline — from 126.1 million to 123 million — is the biggest population drop over a five-year period since the government began collecting census data in 1920. The government has urgently tried to encourage citizens to have more children as a way of preventing a demographic crisis, but those efforts have so far failed, with birth rates even falling short of Tokyo’s modest expectations.

For more on the impending world’s population crisis and how governments can adapt to aging economies, watch this episode of GZERO World with President and CEO of the Population Reference Bureau Jennifer Sciubba here.

The Hormuz crisis hits higher pitch

You already know that the war in Iran has stoked inflation, but it’s not just for oil, gas, and fertilizer. The shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz has caused prices to “balloon” for another commodity that’s essential for everything from advanced medical equipment and automobiles, to drones, laptops, and even AI. In this video, GZERO’s Alex Kliment puts his pulmonary capacity on the line to bring you a special report on the highest-pitched crisis of all.

You vs. the News: A Weekly News Quiz - May 29, 2026

Think you know what's going on around the world? Here's your chance to prove it.

Why was a Bangladeshi farmer's buffalo spared from Eid sacrifice following an order from authorities?

  • A) The buffalo was discovered to be of the Wagyu breed and had not reached its peak maturity
  • B) The buffalo resembles Donald Trump for its distinctive blond tuft
  • C) The buffalo actually is a reincarnation of an Indian god

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

Progress on maternal mortality is slowing

Over 700 women die each day around the world from complications during pregnancy and childbirth, according to data from the World Health Organization and a group of UN agencies. The world has made undeniable progress over the last two decades in lowering the maternal mortality ratio, which is the number of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births during a given period. But as our Graphic Truth above shows, that momentum is now slowing, raising fears among health experts that global targets are slipping out of reach. The global maternal mortality ratio in 2023 – the most recent year for which data is available – was 197 deaths per 100,000 live births, far off the WHO’s target of reducing that figure to fewer than 70 by 2030.

So why is progress stalling now?

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Spain temporarily banned the US-based prediction markets Polymarket and Kalshi on Tuesday, as well as its rival Kalshi, arguing that they were operating without a gambling license. The ban will last three to four months, pending a review from the country’s gambling watchdog. The move comes as other bans against Polymarket, in particular, are stacking up around the world. They aren’t all necessarily country-wide: in the United States, Minnesota recently became the first state to ban prediction markets. Nonetheless, questions are growing around these prediction companies, as a growing number of insider trading cases come to light.

France to give Norway nuclear protection

When the sun shines, we’ll shine together — but when it doesn’t, you’ll have the protection of France’s nuclear arsenal. That, to adapt the classic Rihanna record, was the message from French President Emmanuel Macron to Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre at a bilateral meeting in Paris on Wednesday. Norway, like the rest of Western Europe, has relied on the US nuclear deterrent for decades. But as the Trump administration sows deepening doubts about the US commitment to NATO, the continent is slowly but surely rethinking its security posture, especially in light of potential threats from Moscow. Poland and Lithuania, which border Russia directly, became the first countries to explicitly join France’s nuclear umbrella after Macron snapped it open to fellow European nations this spring. Paris controls the world’s fourth-largest nuclear arsenal after the US, Russia, and China. That’s some umbrella -ella -ella, eh?

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Agriculture is undergoing its biggest shift in decades. From precision irrigation to predictive crop models, AI technology is improving yield efficiency and sustainability across the sector.

Learn how AI is reshaping agriculture.

The United States and Iran seem to be moving closer to a deal to end the war, recent skirmishing and mixed signals notwithstanding.

If concluded – still a big if – this agreement would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, lift the US blockade, unfreeze Iran’s frozen assets (via Qatar), and extend the ceasefire – while kicking nuclear negotiations down the road. There’d be no dismantling of Tehran’s proxies, no restrictions on its ballistic missiles program, no permanent ban on nuclear enrichment, no takeover of its highly-enriched uranium stockpile, no captured oil, no handpicked successor to Ali Khamenei (sorry, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad), no regime change. Iran’s navy and much of its old leadership are gone, but the regime is more entrenched and emboldened – now armed with a proven ability to close the world’s most important oil chokepoint at will, a more effective deterrent than being a threshold nuclear state ever was. Throw in the cost in US lives and treasure, the global economic disruption, and the damage to American credibility, and this is President Donald Trump’s worst foreign policy failure by a long margin.

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In his latest “ask ian,” Ian Bremmer says momentum is building toward a possible deal with Iran, driven by sustained negotiations and shifting US positions.“There’s still ongoing negotiations at a high level,” Ian notes, adding that Washington and Tehran are maintaining “a significant amount of ongoing touch points.”
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US-Iran: Is a deal still possible?

The merry-go-round of negotiations between the two countries continues. The latest began on Saturday, when US President Donald Trump said an agreement was “largely negotiated,” before Iran poured cold water on this. The US military then hit Iranian missile launchers and boats suspected of dropping mines in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday. Iran denounced those strikes yesterday, calling them a sign of “bad faith and unreliability.”

Yet Monday’s skirmishes in the Strait don’t “undermine the ceasefire or indicate talks are at risk of breaking down,” according to Eurasia Group’s Iran expert Greg Brew. He added that both sides made clear that they didn’t plan a return to fighting. “Neither side wants to derail talks,” said Brew. Trump will gather his Cabinet today to further discuss negotiations. Complicating matters, though, is that Israel started pounding Hezbollah-controlled areas of Lebanon on Tuesday – Tehran has said that a ceasefire must include one between Israel and the militant group.

Meanwhile Iranians are starting to get back online, albeit slowly and not for the majority of the country. This latest internet shutdown, which lasted nearly three months, has battered the already-ravaged economy, costing the country an estimated $30 to 40 million each day. Iran, as Eurasia Group’s Head of Research Jon Lieber noted recently, is eager to achieve a new status quo and move on from the conflict.

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Cornyn’s hefty loss yesterday to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (whom US President Donald Trump endorsed) in the Senate runoff yesterday will be a costly one for the Republican Party. Firstly, the GOP is losing one of their most prolific fundraisers in Senate history. Secondly, Paxton’s scandal-filled history – including allegations of corruption and security fraud charges – could undermine his candidacy, and put the conservative state in play for Democratic nominee James Talarico. Even if Paxton does win, Republicans will likely have to spend much more than they would have if Cornyn won the primary. What’s more, Cornyn still has six months or so in office, so he could become another dissenting voice within the Republican conference.

Read about a political drama at a New York food co-op may sound like the kind of dispute only Brooklyn could produce. Think contentious debates over tahini, permissions, and a peanut butter snack puff called Osem Bamba. Yet, it’s also a microcosm of the ideological divisions in the US over Israel after the war in Gaza. The New York Times breaks down the saga that’s been marked by threats, suspicious substances, congressional candidates weighing in, and a vote yesterday by the co-op’s 17,000 members approving of the boycott. – Natalie J.

Watch: “Obsession.” Ever wanted your crush to love you more than anything else in the world? That’s the plot of the newest horror on the block. The lead, Bear (Michael Johnston), breaks a one-wish willow, as he longs for Nikki (Inde Navarrette) to fall madly in love with him. And so she does. Completely. Disturbingly. Irreversibly. What follows is the kind of horror that keeps you glued to your seat one moment and covering your eyes the next. Director Curry Barker's theatrical debut is dark, sinister, and wickedly original. How do you escape someone who loves you exactly the way you asked? For maximum chills, catch the 11 pm show in your nearest theatre. – Suhani

Read:Empire of the Elite” by Michael Grynbaum. Traditional media isn’t the powerhouse industry it used to be. But once upon a time, it was a ubiquitous societal force that kept us informed and told us how to live our lives – and Condé Nast was at the very center of that. Grynbaum details how the collection of Condé Nast publications (including Vogue, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker) rose to dominate the media industry under the leadership of Si Newhouse, a status-conscious nepo baby with a love for print magazines. Come for the allegories about the rise of media legends like Tina Brown and Anna Wintour, stay for the stories about the wild and glitzy lifestyle that the Condé editors once lived. – Zac


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