Rechercher dans ce blog

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Trump escalates his January 6 cover-up as political comeback steps up a gear - CNN

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

(CNN)Donald Trump is acting like an ex-President with a constitutional crime to hide as the cover-up of his assault on democracy gathers pace alongside his political comeback.

The twice-impeached 45th President's continuing influence on politics, popular culture and national life is broadening on multiple fronts and appears undimmed by his ban from social media platforms. His behavior is mirroring the conduct he showed in office: a driving desire to avoid accountability, a challenge to the US system of checks and balances, a willingness to exploit racial and cultural divides, and an eye for a political opening that could boost his own profile, like an apparent tele-rally on the eve of Virginia's gubernatorial election. The high-stakes election in a state Trump lost by 10 points last year will be closely watched as an indicator of the political environment heading into the 2022 midterms.
A just-revealed list of documents that Trump wishes to prevent the House select committee probing January 6 from seeing -- and over which President Joe Biden has refused to assert executive privilege -- in itself offers a darkly suggestive picture of Trump's activities leading up to the mob attack by his supporters on the US Capitol.
If the committee gets its hands on call logs, memos from senior White House staff and entries from the then-President's schedule, it will be able to create a much fuller picture than is already known about how far Trump directed events, the depth of his effort to steal the election from Biden and how little he did to stop the January 6 riot once it started.
"In 2021, for the first time since the Civil War, the Nation did not experience a peaceful transfer of power," the House Committee wrote. "The Select Committee has reasonably concluded that it needs the documents of the then-President who helped foment the breakdown in the rule of law. ... It is difficult to imagine a more critical subject for Congressional investigation."
While Trump perpetually tries to evade the consequences of his actions, his latest campaign of obstruction is closely linked with his increasing political activity heading into the midterm elections and a possible 2024 presidential campaign. If the committee were to produce a damning report of Trump's conduct, it would form a powerful public record of an attempt by an ex-President to destroy America's democratic heritage as he apparently seeks the office again. There is every reason to believe that in a new White House term, and feeling validated, Trump would pose an even greater threat to democratic governance.

Hiding the truth of January 6

The lengths to which Trump is prepared to go to prevent Americans from learning the full truth about the Capitol insurrection came to light in late night court filings on Friday and early Saturday. The National Archives for the first time revealed details in a sworn declaration about the trove of documents Trump wants kept secret.
Among the 700 pages of documents are handwritten memos from then White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, logs of calls by the then-President and then-Vice President Mike Pence and White House visitor records.
In the Meadows documents alone, there are three handwritten notes about the events of January 6 and two pages listing briefings and telephone calls about the Electoral College certification, the archivist said.
The papers could also shed new light on the role of conservative lawyer John Eastman, who drafted a six-step plan for how Pence could have certified the election in favor of Trump, rather than the rightful winner on January 6.
Eastman proposed Pence throwing out the votes of enough states that Biden won so that the presidential election would be decided by the House, where each state gets a single vote and Republicans controlled more state delegations.
Eastman said on former White House official Steve Bannon's radio show in January that Pence could pull it off if he had the "courage and the spine" to do so, according to comments unearthed by CNN's KFile. CNN reported last week that the January 6 committee would subpoena Eastman if he did not cooperate.
The conservative lawyer's blueprint, which has been derided by many scholars but appears to have been taken seriously by Trump, has prompted some members of the January 6 committee to draft new legislation to head off such schemes in the future. The proposal could offer more specific instructions for when Congress can overturn a state's slate of electors, and more clearly define the role the vice president plays in counting the votes, CNN's Jeremy Herb and Pamela Brown reported. Drafting a law would also provide the committee with a "legislative purpose," that could potentially strengthen its case -- both against Trump's sweeping executive privilege assertions and against Bannon, who has already been cited for criminal contempt of Congress for ignoring a subpoena and could be prosecuted by the Justice Department.

'It's just me and Liz Cheney'

The concept of executive privilege is meant to provide presidents a guarantee that they can receive confidential advice on matters of state from senior officials. However, Trump appears to be using the doctrine to cover-up details of his own role in trying to stage a coup, so the claim that he is seeking to protect the office of the presidency itself rings rather hollow. But even if the House select committee does draft legislation, its prospects are uncertain. It could potentially pass the Democratic-led House, but its chances of surviving a likely GOP filibuster in the Senate -- where only seven Republican senators voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial over January 6 -- appear slim.
Such GOP appeasement of Trump's autocratic instincts was cited on Sunday by Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger -- a rare Republican critic of Trump and one of just two Republicans on the January 6 committee -- as one of the reasons why he decided not to run for reelection.
"You ultimately come to the realization that basically it's me, Liz Cheney, and a few others that are telling the truth, and they're about 190 people in the Republican Party that aren't going to say a word," Kinzinger said on ABC's "This Week."
"And there's a leader of the Republican caucus that is embracing Donald Trump with all he can," Kinzinger said, referring to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who has anchored his party's hopes of winning back the House next year and becoming speaker, on Trump.

Trump's influence is everywhere

The latest developments in the January 6 investigation were not the weekend's only indicators of Trump's hold over his party and the influence his tumultuous time in the Oval Office still holds over the country.
He is apparently planning to vault himself on Monday into the Virginia governor's race with a tele-rally on behalf of Republican candidate Glenn Youngkin, who has run a well-pitched campaign that all but ignores the ex-President while sending coded cultural and racial messages to his supporters. Youngkin hopes to make gains in the critical suburban areas around Washington, DC, where Trump is held in disdain. Trump's maneuver appears to be a naked attempt to claim credit if Youngkin wins a neck-and-neck race in a state where Biden trounced the ex-President. But it might just give Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe -- who has had limited success with painting his rival as a Trump clone -- an election eve boost.
"Trump wants to win here so he can announce for president for 2024. That's the stakes of this election," McAuliffe told supporters on Sunday. If McAuliffe -- who served a previous term as governor -- squeezes out a victory Tuesday, it might suggest that Trump remains a drag on swing state GOP candidates, even out of office. But Trump is likely to use a victory for Youngkin to bolster his false claims that vote counts in last year's elections were tampered with and that he really won in states he easily lost.
In a new sign that his return to front-line politics is accelerating, Trump showed up in Atlanta on Saturday night for Game 4 of the World Series and, with the former first lady by his side, relished taking part in the controversial "Tomahawk chop" -- a chant and gesture that is a longtime tradition at Braves games but has also been criticized as racist and offensive to Native Americans. Trump's visit, alongside his personally recruited Georgia senate candidate Herschel Walker, underscored his willingness to embrace politically incorrect causes to send cultural signals to his base -- a technique that is at the center of his political appeal.
His visit to the state also brought a reminder of some of his most notorious efforts to steal the 2020 election, including his January 2 call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, who disclosed on Sunday that he felt threatened by Trump's pressure to find votes that would overturn his narrow loss in the state to Biden.
"And so you run down every single rabbit trail, none of it ever was supported by the facts. And so I was never concerned from the standpoint of that, but I heard the threat that he was making," Raffensperger said on NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday.
The ex-President's influence also hung over the G20 summit in Europe as foreign nations wonder how long Biden's "America is Back" mantra will last if Trump runs for president in 2024. The current President on Sunday warned the world is "continuing to suffer from the very bad decisions President Trump made to pull out of" the Iran nuclear deal. Biden has struggled to get the Islamic Republic back to the negotiating table and the US now appears on the edge of another serious escalation with Tehran.

Adblock test (Why?)



"politic" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 11:06AM
https://ift.tt/3BE4p1C

Trump escalates his January 6 cover-up as political comeback steps up a gear - CNN
"politic" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3c2OaPk
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Stock Market Today: Dow, S&P Live Updates for Nov. 1 - Bloomberg

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

Most Asian stocks rose Monday after the outcome of Japan’s election bolstered expectations for fiscal stimulus and as fresh all-time highs for U.S. shares encouraged some investor optimism.

Equities jumped more than 1% in Japan, where Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s Liberal Democratic Party defied forecasts by preserving its outright majority. Stocks slipped in Hong Kong and China. Data signaled economic weakness in China due to power shortages, surging commodity prices and Covid curbs. U.S. futures advanced following Friday records for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 04:34AM
https://ift.tt/3bsK4S5

Stock Market Today: Dow, S&P Live Updates for Nov. 1 - Bloomberg
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Market’s biggest bull sees year-end rally, but warns it's setting up Wall Street for a scare next year - CNBC

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

Chris Harvey's reign as the year's biggest bull won't extend into next year.

The Wells Fargo Securities head of equity strategy, whose 2021 S&P 500 target is 4,825, predicts Wall Street will stage a vibrant year-end rally and then see a losing 2022.

"You're going to bring equities to a level that they can't sustain. We'll have the equity market melt-up," he told CNBC's "Trading Nation" on Friday. "We'll bring stocks to a level where the fundamentals and valuations don't support them."

The S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow ended the week in record territory. The S&P and Nasdaq were up 7% in October while the Dow gained 6%.

"What we're seeing from a lot of individuals and investors is they feel like the market is unbreakable at this point in time. We've had several pullbacks. You've bent it, but you've never broken," said Harvey. "That brings another level of FOMO [fear of missing out], and that brings in a level of confidence."

Harvey lists strong economic fundamentals, better-than-expected earnings, low capital costs and massive cash on the sidelines as fuel for gains.

"It's late in the bull market," he said. "Now is a period where irrationality becomes much more rational. Things you don't expect to happen can happen, and most likely will."

Harvey contends momentum names, which include banks, will be major drivers into year-end. He calls financials a "stealth leadership play" that will get traction from the Federal Reserve's taper plans.

Don't go bottom fishing

"That will put upward pressure on rates, and that's good for banks," said Harvey. "We want to buy things that are working. We don't want to go bottom fishing. We don't want to buy broken stories."

He suggests playing the iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF.

"The funny thing here is a lot of people believe these are high tech and all tech-type stocks," he noted. "If you look at the momentum index and the Momentum ETF, 20% of it is in banks and three of the top ten names in the momentum ETF are banks. So, you have pretty good diversity."

Harvey estimates the market melt-up will last three to six months. In next year's second quarter, he expects a more hawkish Fed, decelerating growth and uncertainty surrounding the mid-term elections to start creating headwinds that could cause a 10% correction.

"I hate this comment, but I'm going to give it to you anyway. I think it is a 'sell in May and go away,'" said Harvey. "By the time you get into late spring, early summer, you really want to turn more defensive."

It's still considered early for firms to deliver next year's S&P targets. Harvey's target is 4,715. The more bullish estimates so far include Credit Suisse's Jonathan Golub, who has a 5,000 S&P target.

Disclaimer

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 04:01AM
https://ift.tt/3jTbplb

Market’s biggest bull sees year-end rally, but warns it's setting up Wall Street for a scare next year - CNBC
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Inflation Fighters Lure Emerging-Market Investors as Prices Soar - Yahoo Finance

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

(Bloomberg) -- Investors are raising the stakes for emerging-market central banks, rewarding those doing the most to prevent inflation from becoming more than transitory.

Most Read from Bloomberg

With inflation in developing nations now exceeding expectations by the most in more than a decade, assets backed by policy makers who are getting ahead of price pressures are enticing fund managers more than ever. Enter Russia and South Korea, whose currencies pulled ahead most of their peers last month and whose longer-dated bonds have steadily outperformed their shorter-maturity counterparts since June.

“The proactive-tightening central banks could be rewarded with currency outperformance,” said Alan Wilson, a London-based money manager at Eurizon SLJ Capital. “Alpha opportunities do exist within our asset class, particularly when monetary policy is diverging.”

Surging prices threaten to eat into the yield premium that emerging markets offer over their developed peers, a key attraction for local and foreign investors alike. Data this week from Russia, South Korea and Colombia may provide further clues on the longevity of the rise in consumer prices, giving investors more reason to pick out the victors of the inflation battle.

Russia’s long-dated bonds are earning the faith of investors after policy makers delivered six rate hikes this year, with 10-year yields falling below their shorter-maturity counterparts last week for the first time since 2017. The inversion occurred as traders priced in a period of high rates following the central bank’s bigger-than-expected hike in October. Meanwhile, the ruble delivered its best monthly gain in almost a year.

In South Korea, long-dated bonds have also outperformed shorter-maturity securities, with the gap between 10-year and three-year securities falling to the lowest since March 2020. The Bank of Korea’s determination to pursue higher rates puts it at the forefront of Asia’s monetary tightening following its August hike, helping the won outpace most Asian peers in October.

“Bond markets in Korea and Russia are now increasingly overpricing medium-term inflation risk,” said Manik Narain, the head of emerging-market cross-asset strategy at UBS Group AG in London.

At the other end of the spectrum, the currencies of Turkey and Brazil were the worst performers in October while their yield curves steepened.

Two consecutive surprise rate cuts since September sent the lira to record lows, pressured by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s demands for cuts to borrowing costs that he believes will curb Turkey’s chronic inflation.

Meantime, the Brazilian government’s plans for greater public spending are undermining the central bank’s efforts to rein in prices despite embarking on the world’s most aggressive tightening this year.

“As important as central bank credibility is in fighting inflation, there also has to be a consistency between fiscal and monetary policy,” said Francesc Balcells, the London-based chief investment officer of emerging-market debt at FIM Partners. “The market will punish either particularly if fiscal is vulnerable to begin with, which is the case in Brazil, or if monetary policy is completely out of whack, which is the case in Turkey.”

These are the events and data to look out for this week:

  • Central-bank meetings in Poland and the Czech Republic will be closely watched as their currencies trailed the majority of developing peers in October despite recent rate increases. Their real rates remain in negative territory amid a surge in inflation

    • Poland’s central bank will likely deliver another rate hike on Wednesday following an unexpected tightening in October

    • Czech policy makers are also set to lift borrowing costs on Thursday

  • Malaysia is expected to keep its benchmark rate unchanged on Wednesday after the government announced last week a record spending plan for 2022 to revive its virus-battered economy

  • Brazil’s central bank will publish on Wednesday the minutes of last week’s meeting when it delivered its biggest interest-rate hike in almost two decades

  • In Turkey, data on Wednesday will probably show that consumer prices accelerated to more than 20% in October amid a resurgence in energy costs and a weakening currency

  • Purchasing managers’ indexes across emerging markets, including South Africa, Indonesia and Brazil, will show to what extent economies are recovering from the coronavirus shock

    • China’s factory activity contracted for a second straight month in October, as electricity shortages and soaring commodity prices continued to weigh on manufacturers, data on Sunday showed

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 12:01AM
https://ift.tt/3Exim3c

Inflation Fighters Lure Emerging-Market Investors as Prices Soar - Yahoo Finance
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Bluebird Market in Silverthorne expected to open in November - Summit Daily News

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com
Bluebird Market in Silverthorne is pictured Sunday, Oct. 31. The market is expected to open sometime in November, with a grand opening celebration in December.
Lindsey Toomer/Summit Daily News

As Bluebird Market is nearing completion, business owners in the market are ecstatic to get up and running soon. Instead of construction workers, the market will soon be full of residents and visitors looking for a quick bite.

Scott Vollmer, director of property operations for Fourth Street Crossing developer Milender White, said they are close to getting a final certificate of occupancy to get the market open. While there isn’t a set date, he expects to see a soft opening with seven of the nine tenant spaces in November.

“There’s a couple different general contractors, so it’s really hard to pinpoint when they’ll all be done,” Vollmer said. “By the time that happens, we’re looking at probably doing a grand opening in the month of December.”



There are also two retail spaces that will be open on the mezzanine with the first phase of tenant openings, and bookings are being accepted for Summit Assembly, the 6,000-square-foot event space on the northernmost side of the market.

“We have events that will be hosted in the market that are very much community-driven, community-focused events, and those will be workshops, classes, things that happen on the mezzanine and will activate different areas throughout the food hall that are kind of common space,” Vollmer said. “And there might be live music events and things like that. Then, as a separate business, (the venue space) is probably going to be booked out two times a month for bigger, high-impact events. Some of these events are going to be social gatherings and private events. Others will be perhaps open to the public like concerts and or … ticketed events or things like that.”



Vollmer said he’s already anticipating some holiday event bookings in December. The occupancy for the event space is 520 people, so he said it is on the pricier side since it is a large venue.

Bluebird Market in Silverthorne is pictured Sunday, Oct. 31. The market is expected to open sometime in November, with a grand opening celebration in December.
Lindsey Toomer/Summit Daily News

As far as food vendors, Heather Beckman will soon open the Colorado Marketplace & Bakery after two years of anticipation. She and her husband owned a restaurant in Fort Collins for 12 years and sold it in late 2019.

The Beckmans would frequently visit Summit County and quickly fell in love with the area. After selling their previous restaurant, they decided to pick up and move to the county, and Bluebird Market presented a new opportunity.

“I happened to stumble across Fourth Street Crossing when it was in construction back a couple years ago, and so I just reached out, and I said, ‘What’s going on here?’” Beckman said. “One of the spaces fell through a couple weeks before the pandemic, so the landlord reached out to me because he liked our resume.”

Beckman said the marketplace and bakery will not be a full-service restaurant, rather they’ll have a variety of grab-and-go options for folks to choose from. Beckman has a degree in culinary arts and said she hopes to do a bit of catering and cake decorating, too, which she said will pair well with the nearby event space.

“My husband and I are both savory chefs, as well, so we know how to do a little bit of (everything),” Beckman said. “We’re pretty well-rounded. We like sweets in the bakery aspect, but we also love braising and all that kind of slow cooking and all that fun stuff.”

The builder working on Colorado Marketplace & Bakery’s space is also working to finish up a few of the other business spaces within the market.

Teresa Toczek and her husband own Chimayo Grill in Dillon, and they’re excited to open a second location in Bluebird Market called Baja Chimayo. Toczek said they always knew they wanted to expand their business, and she is happy they are able to do so within Summit County.

“We want to keep the Chimayo name in there just so there’s somewhat similarity, but it’s also somewhat different,” Toczek said. “… The second store is where we get the opportunity to experiment with different tacos, different ideas, concepts and whatnot.”

Baja Chimayo will focus more on tacos and other items not sold at Chimayo Grill. To keep her regulars’ minds at ease, Toczek reiterated that Chimayo Grill won’t be changing at all.

“We have ambition, and even though we’re content and happy and comfortable with the one location, it’s the adventure, the excitement of starting something new and experimenting,” Toczek said. “That sense of freedom is exciting to us.”

Toczek said her husband, who is the head chef at Chimayo Grill, is also pitching in to help finish construction in the new space. She said she is most looking forward to seeing how the unique operations of a food market hall will work from a vendor’s perspective because she’s only ever visited one as a patron.

There still is not an operator lined up to take over the Old Dillon Inn space inside the market, but Vollmer said they are still actively proposing management opportunities and interviewing potential tenants.

A hiring event is from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday, Nov. 2, at the market, 325 Blue River Parkway in Silverthorne.

“We really have created an operating plan and business model that I think is really going to be well-perceived up there, and everyone’s been pretty excited about it,” Vollmer said. “They’re all very focused and motivated to get open.”

Bluebird Market in Silverthorne is pictured Sunday, Oct. 31. The market is expected to open sometime in November, with a grand opening celebration in December.
Lindsey Toomer/Summit Daily News

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 06:00AM
https://ift.tt/3bw5RIF

Bluebird Market in Silverthorne expected to open in November - Summit Daily News
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Inflation Fighters Lure Emerging-Market Investors as Prices Soar - Bloomberg

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

Investors are raising the stakes for emerging-market central banks, rewarding those doing the most to prevent inflation from becoming more than transitory.

With inflation in developing nations now exceeding expectations by the most in more than a decade, assets backed by policy makers who are getting ahead of price pressures are enticing fund managers more than ever. Enter Russia and South Korea, whose currencies pulled ahead most of their peers last month and whose longer-dated bonds have steadily outperformed their shorter-maturity counterparts since June. 

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 12:01AM
https://ift.tt/3w4dUWI

Inflation Fighters Lure Emerging-Market Investors as Prices Soar - Bloomberg
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Global Battery Market Sourcing and Procurement Intelligence Report | Top Spending Regions and Market Price Trends | SpendEdge - Yahoo Finance

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

NEW YORK, Oct. 31, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The Battery market will register an incremental spend of about USD 48.77 Billion, growing at a CAGR of 7.51% during the five-year forecast period. A targeted strategic approach to Battery sourcing can unlock several opportunities for buyers. This report also offers market impact and new opportunities created due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Battery Market Procurement Research Report
Battery Market Procurement Research Report

Download free sample report

Key Highlights Offered in the Report:

  • Information on how to identify strategic and tactical negotiation levels that will help achieve the best prices.

  • Gain information on relevant pricing levels, detailed explanation on pros and cons of prevalent pricing models.

  • Methods to help engage with the right suppliers and discover KPI's to evaluate incumbent suppliers.

Get a free sample report for more information

Insights into buyer strategies and tactical negotiation levers:

Several strategic and tactical negotiation levers are explained in the report to help buyers achieve the best prices for the Battery market. The report also aids buyers with relevant Battery pricing levels, pros, and cons of prevalent pricing models such as volume-based pricing, spot pricing, and cost-plus pricing and category management strategies and best practices to fulfil their category objectives.

For more insights on buyer strategies and tactical negotiation levers, www.spendedge.com/report/battery-market-procurement-research-report

Key Drivers and Trends Fueling Market Growth:

The pressure from substitutes and a moderate level of threat from new entrants has resulted in the low bargaining power of suppliers.

Price forecasts are beneficial in purchase planning, especially when supplemented by the constant monitoring of price influencing factors. During the forecast period, the market expects a change of 5%-8%.

  • Identify favorable opportunities in Battery TCO (total cost of ownership).

  • Expected changes in price forecast and factors driving the current and future price changes.

  • Identify pricing models that offer the most rewarding opportunities.

SpendEdge presents a detailed picture of this procurement market by the way of study, synthesis, and summation of data from multiple sources. Our Battery market procurement report covers the following areas:

Some of the top Battery suppliers listed in this report:

This Battery procurement intelligence report has enlisted the top suppliers and their cost structures, SLA terms, best selection criteria, and negotiation strategies.

  • General Electric Co.

  • Panasonic Corp.

  • Toshiba Corp.

To get instant access to over 1000 market-ready procurement intelligence reports without any additional costs or commitment.

Subscribe Now for Free

Table of Content

  • Executive Summary

  • Market Insights

  • Category Pricing Insights

  • Cost-saving Opportunities

  • Best Practices

  • Category Ecosystem

  • Category Management Strategy

  • Category Management Enablers

  • Suppliers Selection

  • Suppliers under Coverage

  • US Market Insights

  • Category scope

  • Appendix

Get instant access to download 5 reports every month and view 1200 full reports. With every purchase, we also offer complimentary research add-ons and Covid-19 impact assessmentsPurchase Now!

About SpendEdge:
SpendEdge shares your passion for driving sourcing and procurement excellence. We are the preferred procurement market intelligence partner for 120+ Fortune 500 firms and other leading companies across numerous industries. Our strength lies in delivering robust, real-time procurement market intelligence reports and solutions.

Contacts
SpendEdge
Anirban Choudhury
Marketing Manager
Ph No: +1 (872) 206-9340
https://www.spendedge.com/contact-us

SpendEdge Logo (PRNewsfoto/SpendEdge)
SpendEdge Logo (PRNewsfoto/SpendEdge)
Cision
Cision

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/global-battery-market-sourcing-and-procurement-intelligence-report--top-spending-regions-and-market-price-trends--spendedge-301410128.html

SOURCE SpendEdge

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
November 01, 2021 at 12:13AM
https://ift.tt/3mxT1jy

Global Battery Market Sourcing and Procurement Intelligence Report | Top Spending Regions and Market Price Trends | SpendEdge - Yahoo Finance
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Ongoing Shortages Could Significantly Affect The Stock Market - Forbes

How New Jersey may prove some politics still is local - CNN

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

(CNN)There's a gubernatorial race this upcoming Tuesday in the state with the 11th largest population in the nation. No, it's not in Virginia (which has the 12th largest population). It's in New Jersey.

You may not have heard much about the election in the Garden State between incumbent Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy and Republican Jack Ciattarelli.
One big reason why: In an era in which many non-presidential elections, like Virginia's, have clear national implications, the race in New Jersey looks like it'll prove that some politics is still local.
Another reason for a lack of coverage: the race doesn't look to be all that close. Murphy holds a clear advantage over Ciattarelli in the final days of the campaign. He leads by 8 points in an average of recent polls, including 9-point and 11-point advantages in recently published Stockton University and Monmouth University surveys respectively.
New Jersey is not known for being a place particularly hard for pollsters to survey. No gubernatorial election this century in New Jersey has seen a polling miss bigger than Murphy's lead in the polls.
Still, Murphy's edge is not foolproof. A look back at more than 240 gubernatorial elections since 1998 reveals that the polling average was off 8 points or more nearly 20% of the time. Taking into account the fact that a polling error could increase Murphy's margin, this means that we should expect that about 10% of the time, there will be a polling error large enough for Ciattarelli to win.
If Murphy does hold on, he'll do so even as President Joe Biden's popularity has tanked in the state. Biden sported just a 43% approval rating in the aforementioned Monmouth poll, which was lower than his disapproval rating of 49%.
While other polls don't have Biden nearly as unpopular, all agree his popularity has fallen greatly since he won New Jersey by 16 points a year ago. His net approval (approve - disapprove) rating is currently less than Murphy's edge over Ciattarelli.
This disparity should not be surprising. I went back and looked at the gubernatorial elections in the year before and year of every midterm since 2010. The past presidential vote in each state was not statistically significantly correlated with the governor's result, once you controlled for incumbency.
In other words, it didn't really matter on average what the tilt of a state was on the presidential level, when voters had a record to judge the incumbent governor on.
There's a reason why Republican governors in the deeply blue states of Maryland, Massachusetts and Vermont were re-elected in 2018, even as former President Donald Trump was deeply unpopular in their states.
This is good news for Murphy. His approval rating stood at 52% to a disapproval rating of 39% in the Monmouth poll, and 52% approval to 44% disapproval in the Stockton poll. These 13- and 8-point spreads between his approval and disapproval nearly equaled his 11- and 9-point leads in these polls. Murphy's popularity was far more telling than Biden's popularity as to the state of the race.
Compare this to gubernatorial races without an incumbent running, like in Virginia where state law prohibits governors from serving two consecutive terms. How these states vote on the presidential level has historically been far more predictive of the results in these elections. As a whole, these races have been much more correlated with congressional results in midterms, too.
Additionally, you can see how much local issues are driving New Jersey voter opinion. The top issue for voters is not the economy or the Covid pandemic. It's actually taxes at 27% in the Monmouth poll. The Stockton poll showed basically the same thing with 28% listing taxes.
New Jersey is the state with the highest property taxes in the country, and the issue is often a big one for voters in local and state elections. Property taxes were the second most important issue for voters in the last three New Jersey gubernatorial elections.
The No. 1 issue listed on Ciattarelli's website is lowering taxes.
A look at any national poll reveals that the issue of taxes does not top the list of concerns of most Americans.
Instead, the No. 1 problem for Americans is the economy more broadly. The economy and jobs also is a top issue on which Virginia voters say they're basing their votes on.
I would point out, though, that just because New Jersey may not tell us less about what will happen in the 2022 congressional elections, it doesn't make the race any less important for what it tells us about American politics in general. If the polls are right, New Jersey will be the latest gubernatorial example of the fact that not all politics is nationalized just yet.

Adblock test (Why?)



"politic" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 11:58PM
https://ift.tt/3BAcvYO

How New Jersey may prove some politics still is local - CNN
"politic" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3c2OaPk
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Here are 5 leading market experts' views on inflation as prices continue to rise - Business Insider

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com
Inflation and stock appreciation
Malte Mueller/Getty Images
  • Inflation is high, and five market experts have weighed in on where prices head from here.
  • Paul Tudor Jones, Carl Icahn, Jeff Gundlach, Stanley Druckenmiller, Alan Greenspan .
  • Inflation is "the single biggest threat" to society, Jones said previously.

What do a tank of gas, a week's worth of groceries, your new home, a used car, and a back-to-school-outfit have in common?

They've all gotten more expensive this year.

Consumers are facing the highest prices in about a decade, and it's likely to stick around through at least the middle of next year. Many of the top market experts have begun sounding alarms over the trend.

Here's what five of them have to say as inflation continues to increase.

Paul Tudor Jones

For billionaire investor Paul Tudor Jones inflation is the number one problem facing society.

"It's probably the single biggest threat to, certainly, financial markets, and I think to society just in general." Jones told CNBC in an Oct. 20 interview.

Jones, the founder and chief investment officer of Tudor Investment Corporation, said it's clear that inflationary pressures aren't "transitory," considering the economy has overheated in part thanks to unprecedented levels of fiscal and monetary stimulus.

He said equities, not fixed income assets like bonds, are much better investments in the "inflationary world."

Carl Icahn

Meanwhile, the legendary billionaire investor Carl Icahn suggests investors try bitcoin if they are looking to hedge inflation. "If inflation gets rampant, I guess it does have value," he said warily of the cryptocurrency.

Icahn said inflation is taking hold - in a bad way.

"The market is certainly going to hit the wall. I really think there will be a crisis the way we're going, the way we're printing money, the way we're going into inflation," he said in an October CNBC interview.

Jeff Gundlach

For Jeff Gundlach inflation all comes down to two factors: wages and rent.

The billionaire "bond king" and CEO of investment firm DoubleLine told CNBC in an Oct. 22 interview that those two factors are "waiting in the wings to keep things elevated." He said wages for lower salary jobs have risen to "sky high" levels, and soon, that trend will likely push up wages for supervisors as well. As for the cost of shelter, Gundlach said in the last six months, median rent has risen by more than 10%.

"We're going to get persistently high inflation thanks to the shelter component," he said, adding that inflation is likely to stay above 4% at least through 2022.

Stanley Druckenmiller

Druckenmiller, on the other hand, thinks inflation will top 4% for at least the next four years, and the Federal Reserve will be late in raising interest rates to counteract it, Bloomberg reported.

Just a year ago the billionaire investor and founder of Duquesne Family Office said inflation could reach as high as 10% with markets in a "raging mania." That party, he told CNBC at the time, will eventually end in a "hangover."

Alan Greenspan

Greenspan, the former chair of the US Federal Reserve, said "unprecedented amounts of government spending" and "burgeoning federal debt" may lead to higher inflation for a longer period of time.

On top of that, Greenspan, who is now a senior economic adviser to Advisors Capital Management, raised alarms over demand-side inflation, where "too many dollars chasing too few goods and services," and supply-side inflation, where shortages in energy, transportation, and raw materials are prevalent.

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 07:30PM
https://ift.tt/2ZDBfTm

Here are 5 leading market experts' views on inflation as prices continue to rise - Business Insider
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

The Scary, Spooky, and Nasty Sides of American Politics – “The Sunday Political Brunch” - GoLocalProv

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

Sunday, October 31, 2021

View Larger +

Baby Trump Halloween

Well, it’s Halloween weekend, with horror stories everyone, even in the world of politics. Look, politics is blood-sport and a business of sharp elbows, so it should come as no surprise how nasty things can get at times. It’s been that way for years, so let’s “brunch” on that this week.

“Donald Trump, Jr., said WHAT????” – This week actor Alec Baldwin fired what was supposed to be a gun with blanks on the set of the movie, “Rust,” being filmed in New Mexico. Tragically, the gun had a live-round and a camera person was killed, and the director wounded. Anticipating this would generate another heated Second Amendment debate, Donald Trump, Jr., had T-shirts printed up which said, “Guns Don’t Kill People; Alec Baldwin Kills People.” It sent social media a buzzing!

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

“What’s Good for the Goose, is Good for the Gander” – Are the Trump T-shirts in bad taste and a bit “too soon” in timing? Of course, they are. But I’m not surprised. In the news business, “gallows humor” is a staple. On the other hand, Alec Baldwin has skewered President Trump multiple times with a funny, spot-on parody on “Saturday Night Live.” I know many a Trump supporter who thinks the impersonation is a hoot, as well as the Trump critics. Look, political satire and humor (even if it’s in poor taste), has been a staple of our democracy from day one. And it’s considered among the most protected forms of speech.

“Where was George?” – Nasty volleys are part of our political landscape. In 1988, Sen. Ted Kennedy (D) Massachusetts gave a scathing speech about Vice President George H.W. Bush’s role in the Iran-Contra scandal. While many top-level White House staffers were keyed in, Bush said he was “out of the loop” and not involved. That prompted Kennedy, to keep saying, “Where was George?” in his speech. Later that summer at the Republican National Convention, Sen. Paul Laxalt (R) Nevada, gave one of the Bush nominating speeches. Parroting Kennedy, Laxalt said, “Where was George? Where was George? He was dry, sober, and home with his wife,” a clear slap at Kennedy and his Chappaquiddick scandal. Ouch!

“Jefferson Versus Adams Smackdown!” – If you think modern politics is newly nasty, think again. The old-school meanness dates to our founding fathers. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams may have been – to this day – the most bitter rivals in American political history. The history books tell us that Jefferson once referred to Adams as a “hideous hermaphroditical character” (suggesting he had the genitals of both genders). Adams referred to Jefferson as “a mean-spirited, low-lived fellow.” And it went on for years as they were rivals for the White House, which both eventually occupied.

“Like Father; Like Son?” – The 1828 election was among the nastiest as John Adams’ son, John Quincy Adams, vied for a second term against Andrew Jackson.  Jackson’s camp asserted that while acting as a secretary to the envoy to Russia, Adams procured a young woman to have sex with a Russian czar. The Jackson campaign referred to Adams as a “pimp.” Andrew Jackson married his wife Rachel in 1791. The problem was, she never got officially divorced from her first husband. The legal problem was resolved in 1794, and the Jacksons remarried. But that did not stop the Adams camp from referring to Jackon as an adulterer and his wife a bigamist. While Jackson won the election, Rachel died before his inauguration. He blamed the nastiness of the campaign for her death. “May God Almighty forgive her murderers as I know she forgave them. I never can,” Jackson said.

“Trump v. Biden” – In more contemporary times, President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden who succeeded him, often had choice words. Trump said, “Sleepy Joe, a Radical Left nonbeliever who wants to take away your religion and your guns… Sleepy Joe,,, Sleepy and very slow,”  Biden teed off on Trump’s handling of COVID-19. “This is the same man that said the virus would be gone in April. By July, it’d be gone. By the warm weather, it’d be gone, like a miracle! And by the way, maybe you can inject some bleach into your arm!”

“Bush-Whacked” – In the 2002 Republican primary the campaign of George W. Bush used robocalls asking primary voters if they would be, “more likely or less likely to vote for John McCain if you knew that he fathered an illegitimate black child?” It wasn’t true, of course, prompting McCain to say, “There is a special place in hell for people like those.”

In the late 1940s four young congressman had offices in close proximity. Their names were John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Gerald Ford. All became president and collectively occupied the White House for 16 consecutive years. They were cordial, but sometimes were feisty rivals. Ford was an All-American football player at Michigan and was drafted by the NFL. Johnson didn’t think much of Ford’s intellect, once saying of Ford, “He’s a nice guy, but he played too much football with his helmet off.”

What are your most scary, horrific memories of politics as we enjoy Halloween weekend? Just click the comment button and, “BOO,” let us know!

Mark Curtis, Ed.D., is Chief Political Reporter for the seven Nexstar Media TV stations serving West Virginia, its five neighboring states and the entire Washington, DC media market. He’s a MINDSETTER™ contributing political writer and analyst for www.GoLocalProv.com and all its affiliates.


Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

Adblock test (Why?)



"politic" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 01:24PM
https://ift.tt/3br4M4J

The Scary, Spooky, and Nasty Sides of American Politics – “The Sunday Political Brunch” - GoLocalProv
"politic" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3c2OaPk
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

These money and investing tips can help you enjoy the stock market's treats - MarketWatch

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

Don’t miss these top money and investing features:

Sign up here to get MarketWatch’s best mutual funds and ETF stories emailed to you weekly!

INVESTING NEWS & TRENDS
Here’s the math for Tesla’s stock price if it becomes the Apple of car makers

Apple crushed the once-dominant handset makers and has fat margins. Can Tesla do the same in automaking? Read More

Market’s ‘golden cross’ is not the heavenly sign for stocks the bulls would have you believe

Stocks don’t perform better when the market’s short-term moving average goes above its longer-term average. Read More

Higher interest rates probably won’t cause this bull market in stocks to end

The relationship between the stock market and interest rates is anything but straightforward. Read More

Slower S&P 500 earnings growth is not bullish — no matter what some stock market ‘experts’ are saying

Faster earnings growth generates higher stock market returns — just as you’d expect. Read More

These 8 money-losing stocks could bring you big gains come January

How to profit from investors’ year-end tax-loss selling. Read More

The S&P 500’s recent run shows signs of tiring — watch the breadth signals

For now, the breakout to new highs should dictate a “core” bullish position with a fairly wide stop. Read More

How to build your own ETF and avoid thousands of dollars in management fees

Buy shares of promising companies in growing sectors, such as ecommerce. Read More

Do you really know what’s in your ETF?

Every week we highlight the most timely exchange-traded fund news, from new launches to inflows and performance. Read More

Why increased capital spending is setting up this select group of industrial stocks to outperform in the next few years

With so much demand, producers of goods and services are increasing their capital spending. And that means accelerating sales growth for a select group of U.S. companies. Read More

Biden administration wants ESG to factor in employee retirement funds. That mandate would hurt workers.

Political incursions into investment processes and stewardship are misguided. Read More

Want to beat pension fund experts? Think like an idiot

If you had ignored the experts who told you to avoid seven major sectors, you would be outperforming them by a lot Read More

Why rollover IRAs can be dangerous

Most retirees reduce their equity exposure when they roll over a 401(k) Read More

SPACs could repeat the worst of the dot-com bubble — here’s how finance insiders are trying to stop that

CFA Institute is worried about the damage SPACS could do to investors’ confidence in the stocks market. Read More

Buying shares of DWAC and its Trump deal ‘is closer to gambling than investing’

Trump Media & Technology Group’s presentation offers no insight into a business plan and doesn’t even mention a single dollar figure. Read More

I’m a Trump supporter, but as an investor I’m wary of the Trump SPAC

5 reasons to be cautious about chasing Digital World Acquisition and Phunware stock. Read More

Five things investors learned about the semiconductor sector from the latest batch of earnings

There have been competing narratives for semiconductor companies. It’s important for investors to know where their favored names fit in. Read More

These are the 2 main reasons you should consider adding semiconductor stocks to your portfolio now

Chipmakers appear primed for rapid growth for years to come. Read More

Harvard’s endowment return is worse than the S&P 500 and that should be a lesson for your own portfolio

Choose a comfortable risk level and stick with it. Read More

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 08:18PM
https://ift.tt/2Y1VUPX

These money and investing tips can help you enjoy the stock market's treats - MarketWatch
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Political notebook: Meetings and events | Politics | tulsaworld.com - Tulsa World

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Political notebook: Meetings and events | Politics | tulsaworld.com  Tulsa World

"politic" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 12:00PM
https://ift.tt/2ZCQHz7

Political notebook: Meetings and events | Politics | tulsaworld.com - Tulsa World
"politic" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3c2OaPk
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Investor Perspectives on Emerging Market Sovereign GSS Bonds - World Bank Group

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com

As we head into COP 26, the world faces two crises— the COVID-19 pandemic and Climate Change. The first is estimated to have pushed over 100 million people into extreme poverty in 2020. The second is threatening to increase that number by another 130 million people in the next ten years. While we continue our efforts to provide financing to developing countries, we are also reinforcing partnerships with the private sector.

With this in mind, the World Bank Treasury hosted a roundtable discussion with emerging market sovereign debt investors to brainstorm challenges and opportunities for investing in sustainability-related initiatives through green, social and sustainability-linked (GSS) bonds. Participants included representatives from Alliance Bernstein, Amundi, AP2, BlackRock, BlueBay Asset Management, Calvert, Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF), Franklin Templeton, Global Evolution, Nuveen, Pictet, PIMCO, Prudential, and Western Asset Management.

 “The level of private investment directed at emerging and frontier markets has been extremely low relative to developed markets,” said Anshula Kant, Managing Director and Chief Financial Officer of the World Bank Group, in her opening address. “Many of them contribute little to global greenhouse gas emissions but are highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change and have limited resources to tackle these challenges. Without funds flowing to them, we cannot achieve our collective goal of a sustainable future.”

 “Providing long-term financing to sustainable development outcomes has, by definition, higher potential additionality and positive impact spillovers in emerging markets than in more developed economies,” said Vincent Mortier, Deputy Global Chief Investment Officer at Amundi, in his keynote address. “GSS bonds provide investors with the ability to finance environmental and socially impactful projects while securing about the same risk/return profile to conventional bonds.”

 And yet very few sovereign issuers have tapped the pool of investors integrating environmental, social and governance factors in investment decisions.

George Richardson, Director of Capital Markets and Investment department at the World Bank Treasury, highlighted some of the challenges for emerging market sovereign issuers, including “limited access to international capital markets, lack of understanding how these instruments fit into approved public debt management strategies, smaller eligible project portfolios, and the costs of GSS bond preparation,” as well as recent successes (ColombiaEgypt).

GSS bonds are increasingly a part of emerging market investment toolkits. The quality of the issuer and ESG factors remain a critical consideration. Credit enhancement and co-investment with Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) will attract more investment to these markets. Investors are equally interested in the ESG credentials of issuers, including human rights records.

At the same time, investors want to see how proceeds from GSS bonds connect to Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), including strategies and policies at the quasi-sovereign level in the energy sector. They are looking for impact. Accountability and tracking of the use of proceeds are key. Issuers need to measure and report impact accurately and consistently in line with accepted best practices.

The World Bank’s Sustainable Finance and ESG Advisory Services focus on addressing these challenges. Investors say the World Bank’s involvement increases the credibility of emerging market transactions. Therefore they want to see the World Bank involved much more in information dissemination and education of issuers, capacity building to ensure the use of proceeds are aligned with coherent green strategies and NDC plans, and standard-setting for GSS bond issuance and impact reporting. 

Adblock test (Why?)



"Market" - Google News
October 28, 2021 at 02:00PM
https://ift.tt/3bq58Zg

Investor Perspectives on Emerging Market Sovereign GSS Bonds - World Bank Group
"Market" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Yge9gs
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Japan votes in test for new PM Kishida, political stability - Reuters

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com
  • Kishida's coalition expected to keep its majority
  • New prime minister's LDP may suffer a bruising
  • LDP losses could weaken Kishida's clout, ability to do job

TOKYO, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Japanese voters went to the polls on Sunday to decide whether to endorse the conservative government of Fumio Kishida or weaken the new prime minister and possibly return the world's third-largest economy to a period of political uncertainty.

The vote is a test for Kishida, who called the election soon after taking the top post early this month, and for his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which has been battered by its perceived mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic.

Already, Kishida has struggled to advance policies to help poorer people, while securing a big boost in military spending and taking a harder line on China.

With his lacklustre image failing to inspire voters, the LDP is on the brink of losing its majority in the lower house of parliament for the first time since 2009, opinion polls show, although its coalition with junior partner Komeito will stay in power.

"It's hard to say the pandemic is completely snuffed out and society is stable, so we shouldn't have any big changes in coronavirus policy," said Naoki Okura, a doctor, after voting in Tokyo.

"Rather than demanding a change in government, I think we should demand continuity."

Voting ends at 8 p.m. (1100 GMT), with projected results likely to come soon afterward from media exit polls.

TOUGH CONTESTS, REVOLVING DOOR?

Several key LDP lawmakers are facing particularly tough contests, including Akira Amari, the party's secretary general.

"Revolving-door prime ministers is a weakness that many outside of Japan fear," Sheila A. Smith, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote in a blog post. "Prime Minister Kishida will need a unified party and a strong electoral showing on Oct. 31 if he is to successfully tackle Japan’s difficult national agenda."

Turnout will be crucial, since higher turnout tends to favour the opposition. As of 2 p.m., turnout stood at 21.49%, down 0.34 point from the previous lower house poll - but 16.6 million voted in advance, the Internal Affairs Ministry said.

The biggest opposition group, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, is expected to gain seats but not come near toppling Kishida's coalition.

"The only party with policies aimed at people in their 20s and 30s is the Constitutional Democrats, things like income tax and so on," said office worker Daisuke Matsumoto, 27. "It's true other parties have policies aimed at child-raising, but what about those of us who are childless?"

A big loss of LDP seats could lead to party infighting, returning Japan to an era of short-lived administrations that diminished its global stature, until Shinzo Abe helmed the country for a record eight years to September 2020. The dovish Komeito could also gain more clout within the coalition.

Uncertainty is high, with the Nikkei newspaper estimating 40% of single-seat districts have close races and recent polls showing some 40% of voters undecided.

Kishida's publicly stated goal is for his coalition to keep a majority, at least 233 seats, of the 465 in the lower house. Before the election, the coalition had a commanding two-thirds majority of 305, with the LDP holding 276.

Investors and political watchers are focussed on whether the LDP - in power for all but brief spells since it was formed in 1955 - can keep its majority as a single party. Losing that would erode Kishida's power base in the factional LDP and the party's standing against the Komeito.

The usually splintered opposition is united, arranging for only one party - including the widely shunned Japanese Communist Party - to face off against the coalition in most districts, with analysts saying this is creating a number of neck-and-neck battles.

But the opposition has failed to capture the hearts of voters, with only 8% supporting the Constitutional Democrats while 39% back the LDP, according to a poll last week by public broadcaster NHK.

Still, some voters - like Yoshihiko Suzuki, who voted for the Constitutional Democrat in his voting district and the Communists in proportional representation - hoped the poll might teach the LDP a lesson.

Suzuki, 68 and retired, said Abe's eight years in power made the LDP complacent and arrogant, underscored by a series of money and cronyism scandals.

"I hope this election comes as a wakeup call for them," he added. "If it does, the LDP will become a better party, considering the number of talented lawmakers they've got."

Reporting by Sakura Murakami, Elaine Lies, Irene Wang, Daniel Leussink, Kiyoshi Takenaka and Yoshifumi Takemoto; Writing by Sakura Murakami and Elaine Lies; Editing by William Mallard

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Adblock test (Why?)



"politic" - Google News
October 31, 2021 at 01:51PM
https://ift.tt/3btsjSy

Japan votes in test for new PM Kishida, political stability - Reuters
"politic" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3c2OaPk
https://ift.tt/2Wls1p6

Search

Featured Post

Politics - The Boston Globe

unitedstatepolitics.blogspot.com Adblock test (Why?) "politic" - Google News February 01, 2024 at 03:47AM https://ift.tt...

Postingan Populer