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Josh Shapiro on how Democrats can learn to love AI

Artificial intelligence is transforming the economy, but many Americans remain deeply skeptical of where the technology is headed. In this clip from GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro makes the case that Democrats should embrace innovation while also demanding stronger guardrails for AI.
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Trump’s ineffective pressure campaign on Iran and China

Ian says President Trump assumed Iran would “cave” after US and Israeli strikes against its leadership and military capabilities. Instead, Tehran used its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz to force Washington to back down.
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UK’s Burnham waits in the wings as Starmer resigns, Colombia’s “El Tigre” set to win, US-Iran talks continue

Starmer resigns, and the UK prepares to turn left

After less than two years in office, Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced on Monday morning that he would resign as Labour Party leader. “I have spoken to His Majesty the King this morning to inform him of my decision,” said a tearful Starmer outside Downing Street, who will exit office by September. The center-left leader’s position had been rapidly deteriorating ever since his party won a huge parliamentary majority in 2024: Economic stagnation, communication issues, and a scandal relating to Peter Mandelson tanked the PM’s approval ratings. The straw that broke the camel’s back came last week, when Labour rival Andy Burnham won a special election in Makerfield.

Burnham announced on Monday that he will run to replace Starmer. He is a popular figure among Labour members, and his path to victory looks clear: former Health Secretary Wes Streeting, who was set to run for leadership too, backed Burnham earlier today. Should he become PM, the former Manchester mayor could shift the government left, with proposals for a land value tax, nationalizing public goods like water, and more social housing.

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WWII-related dispute rocks Ukraine-Poland relations

Polish President Karol Nawrocki rescinded his country’s highest civilian award from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday. Why? On May 26, Zelensky honored Ukrainian nationalist fighters whom Poland has long held responsible for killing tens of thousands of Poles in 1943. Kyiv, for its part, remembers them as fighting the Soviet Union. The two countries remain allies against Russia, but the rift could complicate efforts to rebuff Moscow.

AI becomes a top global concern

What worries the world? Inflation, war, climate change, and now, artificial intelligence.

A new survey by UK-based research firm Public First, which polled more than 18,000 people across 15 countries, found that just over a third of respondents ranked AI development among their top concerns for the next five years. That puts it ahead of longstanding anxieties like immigration and migration, energy security, and geopolitical rivalries, per the poll.

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Scaling AI without scaling resource use

As governments and businesses accelerate AI adoption, concerns around energy and water demand are intensifying. Microsoft leaders Melanie Nakagawa and Juan Lavista Ferres highlight new research showing that advancements in AI models, datacenter operations, and hardware could improve energy efficiency by 8–20x.

The findings suggest that, at scale, AI systems can become significantly more efficient than previously understood—enabling continued growth while reducing the resources required to support it and reinforcing a more sustainable path for AI expansion.

Read the full blog here.

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro has become one of the Democratic Party's most closely watched leaders. As Democrats search for a path forward after their 2024 defeat, Shapiro argues the party should focus less on rhetoric and more on delivering tangible results for voters.

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At the 2026 US Canada Summit in Toronto, hosted by Eurasia Group and RBC, Ian Bremmer breaks down the idea of a US-China “Thucydides Trap,” where rising and dominant powers collide.

He questions whether great-power rivalry is really the defining feature of today’s world order or an oversimplification of a more complex system.

What can Democrats learn from winning in America's ultimate swing state? On the latest episode of the GZERO World podcast, Ian Bremmer sits down with Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro to discuss the future of the Democratic Party, the growing crisis of trust in American institutions, and the biggest challenges facing the country at home and abroad.

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From the sidelines of the 2026 US-Canada Summit, hosted by Eurasia Group and RBC in Toronto, GZERO's Tony Maciulis sat down with Erika McEntarfer, Distinguished Policy Fellow at Stanford's Institute for Economic Policy Research and former Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, for a ground-level read on what the numbers are and aren't telling us.


McEntarfer describes the current moment as a potential "frozen labor market": unemployment is low because layoffs are rare, but hiring has cratered to levels last seen in 2010. On AI, she pushes back on the idea that automation is the primary culprit behind youth unemployment as the struggles facing young workers span all industries, a pattern more consistent with a broad hiring slowdown than a targeted tech disruption.


Looking ahead, McEntarfer said she remains cautiously optimistic that AI will ultimately create more jobs than it displaces, drawing on 200 years of North American economic history but acknowledged the transition may not move fast enough for workers struggling in the market today.

What should US policy in the Middle East look like after the Iran war? We asked Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro just a week before the ceasefire deal was signed. In this clip from GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, he argues that US President Donald Trump's military campaign against Iran has raised costs for American families, weakened US standing abroad, and failed to achieve its stated objectives.
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What is the biggest geopolitical tail risk today?

At the 2026 US-Canada Summit, hosted by Eurasia Group and RBC in Toronto, Ian Bremmer assesses the geopolitical risks shaping an increasingly volatile global landscape. He highlights Russia as one of the most significant tail risks today, driven by the ongoing war in Ukraine and the potential for further escalation.

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Eight presidents, one of whom lasted five days. A plethora of attempted impeachments – including four successful ones. Several ex-leaders jailed. Eighteen different finance ministers. A litany of publicly-financed projects that are unfinished. Protests prompting a state of emergency declaration. An absence of trust in government. Election count delays sparking further demonstrations.

All of this has unfolded in the last decade in Peru, with political upheaval reigning over the South American country. And a person widely viewed as fostering that instability looks set to become president.

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While the US has drawn attention for blocking fans, coaches, and referees from entering the country for the World Cup, co‑host Canada has also denied entry into its country for two players. Ahead of Ghana’s opening match against Panama in Toronto, midfielder Thomas Partey was denied a visa to travel from the US to Canada. And just yesterday, Canada refused a visa for Ivory Coast forward Elye Wahi before Saturday’s match against Germany, also in Toronto. Neither player has been convicted of a crime - Partey has been charged with sexual assault and Wahi arrested on suspicion after a recent match‑fixing controversy. Under Canadian law however, foreign nationals can be denied entry based solely on criminal charges, regardless of whether a foreign conviction exists.

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