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Can JD Vance reach the promised land?

Two years ago, Donald Trump selected a first-term Ohio senator to be his running mate.

“I promise you this: I will be a vice president who never forgets where he came from,” JD Vance said to the crowd at the Republican National Convention in July 2024. Months later, he would be the second-in-command, and widely seen as the heir apparent to the Make America Great Again-version of the Republican Party.

Vance’s ascent to the pinnacle of power would be enough to give anyone vertigo. Born in the small, industrial town of Middletown, Ohio, and raised by a mother who struggled with alcoholism, Vance made his way through the Marines, Ohio State University, and Yale Law School. He then worked as a venture capitalist before becoming a New York Times bestselling author for his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.” In 2022, he jumped into politics, promoting tariffs to protect US manufacturing and advocating against foreign intervention.

Yet Vance has been sliding downhill since entering the White House.

“Vance was very much ‘of the moment’ in 2024,” Republican strategist Liz Mair told GZERO. “But his shtick isn’t evolving.”

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Latest

China ups the ante in the space race, Bangladesh’s exiled ex-leader eyes return, Wildfires ravage southern Spain

China nets a big win in the space race

In a scene straight out of Looney Tunes, China on Friday maneuvered a gigantic floating net out into the Pacific Ocean, and used it to catch a rocket booster as it gently descended from the sky after launching a satellite into space. The achievement is no cartoon: figuring out how to reuse massively expensive rockets, rather than building new ones for every mission and simply allowing them to crash to Earth or hurtle off into the cosmos, is a huge breakthrough in China’s quest to become a leading “space power” by 2030. To date, Elon Musk’s SpaceX is the only other space racer to retrieve a rocket booster like this. China, which is keen to array its own satellite clusters to rival those of Musk’s Starlink in particular, says it will reuse the rocket for another mission by the end of the year.

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Building a safer, more equitable AI future

At the 2026 AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin says the future of artificial intelligence depends on putting the right guardrails in place to ensure AI is developed safely, responsibly, and equitably.
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Zohran over Bibi?

More American Jewish voters held a favorable view of the New York City mayor than of the Israeli prime minister, despite Mamdani’s outspoken criticism of Israel and reticence to condemn the slogan “globalize the intifada” on the campaign trail (Mamdani’s comments, or lack thereof, drew criticism from Jewish leaders). The findings underscore the growing frustration with Netanyahu in the American Jewish community, particularly over his handling of the war in Gaza. Netanyahu fared slightly better with the American public as a whole than with Jewish voters, according to the poll: his approval rating among all US voters was 10 points higher than among American Jewish voters.

You vs. the News: A Weekly News Quiz - July 10, 2026


Think you know what's going on around the world? Here's your chance to prove it.Which region of the world currently has the most people under 25 years old?
  • A) Africa
  • B) Latin America
  • C) Asia

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

Can AI help solve global crises? Live from the AI for Good Global Summit 2026

As artificial intelligence rapidly reshapes the global economy, one question is becoming increasingly urgent: who will actually benefit?

Recorded at the 2026 AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, this special Global Stage conversation brings together leaders from the United Nations, Microsoft, and the scientific community to examine how AI can help tackle some of the world's biggest challenges, from disaster preparedness and climate resilience to humanitarian response and sustainable development.

Hosted by GZERO Media Global Chief Content Officer Tony Maciulis, the discussion features Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith, UN General Assembly President Annalena Baerbock, UN Special Envoy for Digital and Emerging Technologies Amandeep Singh Gill, World Meteorological Organization Secretary-General Celeste Saulo, and UN Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction Kamal Kishore.

Together, the panel explores the growing gap between countries that can fully harness AI and those still lacking the infrastructure, connectivity, and data needed to benefit from it. They discuss why expanding access must go hand in hand with investing in digital skills, trusted governance, and stronger public-private partnerships.

The conversation also highlights AI's real-world potential to improve weather forecasting, strengthen early warning systems, accelerate disaster response, and support humanitarian operations, while also underscoring that technology alone cannot solve global challenges without sustained investment in data, local capacity, and international cooperation.

Watch the full conversation to hear how global leaders are thinking about building an AI future that is more inclusive, resilient, and truly serves the public good.

This conversation is presented by GZERO Media in partnership with Microsoft. The Global Stage series convenes global leaders for critical conversations on the geopolitical forces reshaping our world.

The Ebola outbreak reached a grim milestone on Thursday. Six hundred people have died in the Congo, according to the country’s health ministry. At the same time, healthcare workers at the center of the outbreak in the Ituri province are striking to protest delays in their wages and bonuses, risking further setbacks to efforts to contain the deadly disease.

Trump gives Ukraine another boost

US President Donald Trump said he would grant Ukraine a license to manufacture Patriot air-defense missiles during the NATO meeting in Turkey on Wednesday, fulfilling a longstanding request from Kyiv. These interceptors can protect Ukraine from Russia’s ballistic missiles – Kyiv is struggling to block such attacks. There’s just one problem: it may take years for Ukraine to build these missiles, as they are highly advanced and the supply chains for the inputs are stressed. The NATO summit was nonetheless a successful one for President Volodymyr Zelensky: the alliance pledged €70 billion ($80 billion) in defense aid to Kyiv, while Trump’s announcement signaled that the White House was more willing to back Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion.

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Assassination plots. International arrest warrants. Political dynasties battling for power. What might sound like a storyline from a Netflix political drama has instead become reality in Philippine politics over the past two years. The spectacle reached a new stage this week with the impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte getting underway, and it could have significant implications for the country's future and its relations with the US and China.

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Yesterday, a French appeals court shortened a ban on far-right leader Marine Le Pen seeking public office, effectively allowing her to stand in the 2027 presidential election. Hours after the verdict was announced, Le Pen officially announced her fourth bid for the Elysée Palace, despite judges upholding her embezzlement conviction and sentencing her to a year of house arrest, ankle monitor and all – a condition she had said would preclude her candidacy as recently as last week (Le Pen has vowed to appeal to France’s highest court).

“There is no longer any scenario in which I could not run,” she said on Tuesday evening. “I am a candidate to the presidential election, I will not change my mind.”

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At the 2026 AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, HRH Princess Lamia bint Majed Al Saud says Saudi Arabia’s investments in technology and innovation are creating new opportunities for the next generation.

Speaking with GZERO’s Tony Maciulis, HRH Princess Lamia discusses the Kingdom’s expanding AI ecosystem, including efforts to train young people, support entrepreneurs, and expand women’s participation in the technology sector.

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Read: The Guardian’s complete World Cup player guide⁠. If you’ve found yourself Googling unfamiliar players or wondering who to watch, this is the best guide I’ve come across: a searchable database with profiles of all 1,248 players at the tournament, plus quick breakdowns of every squad. Bookmark it now – you’ll get a lot more out of the final week of the World Cup. ⁠ – Alex G.

Watch: Incendies.” Inspired by the Lebanese Civil War, this 2010 film directed by Denis Villeneuve is not for the faint of heart. It tells the story of Nawal, a woman from the Levant who struggles to survive the extremist violence in her country as she searches for her missing son. Jumping ahead to the present day, her twin children are second-generation immigrants in Canada with little knowledge of their eccentric mother’s harrowing past. Upon her death, Nawal wills a strange request to her children that leads them on a shocking journey of self-discovery. – Ted

Watch: Joey D’Urso’s social media videos that connect World Cup opponents. We at GZERO have brought you some of the bigger storylines from the World Cup that broach both sports and geopolitics, but D’Urso – a journalist who once worked at the BBC and The Athletic – gets a little more detailed, finding geopolitical links between individual nations that are facing each other in the knockout stages of the world’s top international football tournament. Case in point: he examines the feud between Mexico and Ecuador, who played each other in the last 32. There are also a few explorations of how certain other South American countries provided a secret home for Nazis following World War II. For geopolitical nerds like us, this account is gold. – Zac

Read: “The Return” by Hisham Matar. A brilliant memoir about the writer’s return to Libya in 2012 after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi. Hisham’s father Jaballa, was a prominent opponent of the authoritarian leader, and in 1990, while the family were living in Egypt, Jaballa was kidnapped, jailed, and never again seen. The book follows Hisham’s childhood of loss and exile, his relationship to a country led by a regime that destroyed his family, and his journey back to his homeland to uncover the truth behind his father’s fate. – Farida

Could Russia make an Olympic comeback?

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) provisionally lifted its ban on Russia participating in the Olympic Games on Tuesday, one that it had imposed following the country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The IOC said it didn’t want to hold Russian athletes “responsible for their government’s actions,” meaning they’ll be able to compete in the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles. But why ease restrictions now? The committee said that Russia has relinquished control of regional sports organizations in occupied parts of Ukraine (though the tide had already been turning). The IOC still hasn’t decided whether Russian athletes can display their flag or colors, or even play its anthem. In practical terms, the decision allows Russians to compete in team sports at the Olympics – they had already been permitted to participate in individual events, just not under the Russian flag.

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Amid a heatwave across Europe, 184 cyclists rode 113 miles and climbed more than 8,500 feet during Stage 4 of this year’s Tour de France. Temperatures forced race organizers to relax regulations and allow greater assistance from team cars. Wildfires burning in the Pyrenees have also created problems: in the previous stage, officials barred spectators from the finish area due to smoke concerns. The disruptions underscore Europe’s climate challenge: the continent is warming at more than twice the global average rate.

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