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Business News

Countries repatriating gold in wake of sanctions against Russia – study

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – An increasing number of countries are repatriating gold reserves as protection against the sort of sanctions imposed by the West on Russia, according to an Invesco survey of central bank and sovereign wealth funds published on Monday.

The financial market rout last year caused widespread losses for sovereign money managers who are “fundamentally” rethinking their strategies on the belief that higher inflation and geopolitical tensions are here to stay.

Over 85% of the 85 sovereign wealth funds and 57 central banks that took part in the annual Invesco Global Sovereign Asset Management Study believe that inflation will now be higher in the coming decade than in the last.

Gold and emerging market bonds are seen as good bets in that environment, but last year’s freezing of almost half of Russia’s $640 billion of gold and forex reserves by the West in response to the invasion of Ukraine also appears to have triggered a shift.

The survey showed a “substantial share” of central banks were concerned by the precedent that had been set. Almost 60% of respondents said it had made gold more attractive, while 68% were keeping reserves at home compared to 50% in 2020.

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One central bank, quoted anonymously, said: “We did have it (gold) held in London… but now we’ve transferred it back to own country to hold as a safe haven asset and to keep it safe.”

Rod Ringrow, Invesco’s head of official institutions, who oversaw the report, said that is a broadly-held view.

“‘If it’s my gold then I want it in my country’ (has) been the mantra we have seen in the last year or so,” he said.

DIVERSIFY

Geopolitical concerns, combined with opportunities in emerging markets, are also encouraging some central banks to diversify away from the dollar.

A growing 7% believe rising U.S. debt is also a negative for the greenback, although most still see no alternative to it as the world’s reserve currency. Those that see China’s yuan as a potential contender fell to 18%, from 29% last year.

Nearly 80% of the 142 institutions surveyed see geopolitical tensions as the biggest risk over the next decade, while 83% cited inflation as a concern over the next 12 months.

Infrastructure is now seen as the most attractive asset class, particularly those projects involving renewable energy generation.

Concerns over China mean India remains one of the most attractive countries for investment for a second year running, while the “near-shoring” trend, where companies build factories closer to where they sell their products, is boosting the likes of Mexico, Indonesia and Brazil.

As well as China, Britain and Italy are seen as less attractive, while rising interest rates coupled with work-from-home and online shopping habits which became embedded during the COVID-19 outbreak meant property is now the least attractive private asset.

Ringrow said the wealth funds that performed better last year were those that recognised the risks posed by inflated asset prices and were willing to make substantial portfolio changes. It would be the same going forward.

“The funds and the central banks are now trying to get to grips with higher inflation,” he said. “It’s a big sea change.”

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Mike Harrison)

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Biden AI Chair Champions Regulation And Mandated Gov Intervention For ‘Inclusivity’

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Biden AI Chair Champions Regulation And Mandated Gov Intervention For ‘Inclusivity’

Jason Cohen on July 9, 2023

Chair of the National AI Advisory Committee (NAIAC) Miriam Vogel emphasized the necessity of government regulation and intervention in achieving “inclusivity” through artificial intelligence (AI) in a recent interview.

Vogel has served as chair of the NAIAC since May 2022 advising the president and White House on AI policy, according to her LinkedIn profile, and she is also the president and CEO of EqualAI, a nonprofit organization dedicated to decreasing “unconscious bias” in AI. President Joe Biden’s administration, in October, published a “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights,” citing EqualAI as a consulted stakeholder for the document; and in February, Biden signed an executive order mandating federal government agencies to ensure AI promotes racial equity.

“We can ensure that AI creates more opportunity, more jobs, more education, more inclusivity,” Vogel declared in the June 28 interview with European New School of Digital Studies. “So I think that is the role of government and civil society, is to mandate what the expectations are. If you’re using AI, here’s the ways you need to make sure that society is ready. I think government has to play that role in leading on how society can be ready.”

AI has immense potential for societal advancement, but realizing it will require government intervention through regulations, mandates and collaboration, Vogel asserted in the interview.

Further, in response to a question about content moderation in relation to AI, Vogel said there is a need for “a multi-stakeholder process where we have industry, government, private-public partnerships where civil society comes in as well and helps together answer these questions of what are we exposing ourselves to and our next generation.”

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“It needs to have regulatory pieces, but we also need industry playing a role,” she added.

NAIAC praised Biden’s dedication to these issues in a report published in May, stating, “President Biden has clearly articulated his interest in ending discrimination and bias (including algorithmic discrimination and bias).”

EqualAI is included in the appendix of the White House’s “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights” as one of the stakeholders consulted by the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) during the crafting of the document. The blueprint frequently includes the word “bias,” asserting that safeguarding citizens should consist of protections “against abuse, bias, and discrimination to ensure that all people are treated fairly when automated systems are used.”

The blueprint also states advancement is necessary “to protect the public from algorithmic discrimination to use and design automated systems in an equitable way,” claiming, “algorithms used in hiring and credit decisions have been found to reflect and reproduce existing unwanted inequities or embed new harmful bias and discrimination.”

Vogel previously worked to combat “bias” in other areas of American society including law enforcement, the workplace, gender and LGBT issues, according to the Brookings Institution. She served as associate deputy attorney general during President Barack Obama’s administration and spearheaded the establishment of “Implicit Bias Training for Federal Law Enforcement.”

EqualAI, NAIAC and the White House OSTP did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Key Data Points Throw Wrench In Dems’ ‘Partisan’ Supreme Court Narrative

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Key Data Points Throw Wrench In Dems’ ‘Partisan’ Supreme Court Narrative

Katelynn Richardson on July 9, 2023

  • Fourteen decisions split the justices 6-3 along ideological lines last term, while only five cases did the same during the 2022-2023 term, according to data compiled by Adam Feldman and Jake Truscott.
  • Justice Jackson voted in the majority 84% of the time, more than the liberal justices did last term and more than Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan did this term.
  • “In general, the voting patterns for any given term are more a function of the mix of cases heard that term than they are any change in the orientation of the Court or the approach of individual justices,” Case Western Reserve University School of Law Professor Jonathan Adler told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

While the Supreme Court delivered major conservative victories in the final days of this term, voting patterns reveal the Court was not as unflinchingly conservative as its critics claim.

After the Supreme Court released major rulings overturning affirmative action and striking down President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan, Democrats again began advocating for court packing, term limits and a code of ethics for the justices—calling the Supreme Court “MAGA,” “illegitimate,” and, as Biden said, “not a normal court.” Yet only five cases split the justices 6-3 along ideological lines during the 2022-2023 term, the smallest amount in any of the past six terms and less than the 14 cases with the same split last term, according to data compiled by Adam Feldman and Jake Truscott, who conduct statistical analysis of the Supreme Court on the website Empirical Scotus.

“Just over a week ago, before the affirmative action decision…the general narrative was, wow, this Court is all over the place,” Manhattan Institute Constitutional Studies Director and Senior Fellow Ilya Shapiro told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “The last handful of cases didn’t change that statistical pattern.”

Justice Jackson voted in the majority 84% of the time, more than the liberal justices did last term, according to Feldman and Truscott. She was also in the majority more than Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barret were in the majority most frequently, at 96%, 95% and 91% of the time, respectively, per Feldman and Truscott.

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“In general, the voting patterns for any given term are more a function of the mix of cases heard that term than they are any change in the orientation of the Court or the approach of individual justices,” Case Western Reserve University School of Law Professor Jonathan Adler told the DCNF. “This is because the cases heard in a single term are never fully representative of the range of issues that can come before the Court, and this is more true than ever given the decline in the number of cases the Court is hearing each term.”

“So if we compare this term to last term, the Court’s ideological orientation has not changed meaningfully, but the Court did hear a different mix of cases, and given the issues in those cases the voting patterns were different,” he continued.

Supreme Court Stats. This term the Justices’ frequencies in majority were
Kavanaugh 96%
Roberts 95%
Barrett 91%
Jackson 84%
Gorsuch 82%
Sotomayor 82%
Alito 80%
Kagan 80%
Thomas 76%

For much more see this statistical summary from me and @JakeTruscott_44 athttps://t.co/euSF76zd1T

— Dr. Adam Feldman (@AdamSFeldman) June 30, 2023

Justice Neil Gorsuch broke with the conservative majority to side with the liberals in a case on the Navajo Nation’s water rights. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh Kavanaugh also joined the three liberal justices to form a 5-4 majority in striking down Alabama’s congressional district map as a violation of the Voting Rights Act.

An unusual majority also shot down the “independent state legislature theory,” the idea that legislatures have unrestricted constitutional authority to administer federal elections without review from state courts, in a 6-3 ruling in Moore v. Harper. Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion was joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

Other high profile cases gained unexpected unanimous support. All nine justices sided with a Christian postal worker in Groff v. DeJoy, ruling that employers cannot deny a religious accommodation unless it would result in “substantial increased costs.”

In Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the justices unanimously rolled back the EPA’s authority to regulate under the Clean Water Act (CWA), delivering a victory for a couple prevented by the EPA from building a home on their own land near Priest Lake, Idaho.

Additionally, in cases that did split along the predicted ideological lines, polls show Americans are evenly split on the outcome or mostly agree, according to The Washington Post.

“The justices are all acting in good faith trying to get the cases right as they see them,” Shapiro told the DCNF. “We’re seeing a lot of different approaches to interpretation.”

As far as next term, Adler said it’s hard to tell if the pattern will hold “because the Court has not yet accepted many cases.”

“We don’t yet know all that much about next term because the Court has not yet accepted many cases, perhaps only a third of the full number of cases it will hear next year,” Adler concluded. “But whether the Court appears to be reaching consensus or is dividing on ideological lines will be driven primarily by the ultimate mix of cases the Court ends up hearing.”

Based on the cases the Supreme Court has already accepted, Shapiro said next term is “shaping up to be a big government structure, administrative state term.”

“I don’t think it is going to grab the same kind of attention from the popular press,” he said.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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In call with Turkey’s Erdogan, Biden expresses support for Sweden’s NATO bid

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Ezgi Erkoyun and Kanishka Singh

ISTANBUL/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden expressed a desire to see Sweden join NATO “as soon as possible” in a phone call with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in which they discussed Sweden’s bid to become a member of the Western alliance, the White House said on Sunday.

Turkey, along with Hungary, has been a stumbling block to Sweden’s bid, which requires unanimous approval by all NATO members.

Erdogan told Biden that Stockholm has taken steps in the right direction for Ankara to ratify its bid, referring to an anti-terrorism law, but said these steps were not useful as Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) supporters continued to hold demonstrations in Sweden, the Turkish presidency’s communications directorate said separately on Sunday.

Biden “conveyed his desire to welcome Sweden into NATO as soon as possible,” the White House said in a statement.

The leaders agreed to meet face-to-face in Vilnius, Lithuania, at an upcoming NATO summit and discuss bilateral relations and regional issues in detail, the Turkish presidency also said.

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On Thursday, Sweden failed to convince Turkey to lift its block on Stockholm’s path to NATO membership in a foreign minister-level meeting, as Ankara requested more action in the fight against terrorism.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said he would convene a meeting between Erdogan and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson in Vilnius on Monday.

Sweden and Finland applied for NATO membership last year, abandoning policies of military non-alignment that had lasted through the decades of the Cold War in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

While Finland’s NATO membership was green-lighted in April, Turkey and Hungary have yet to clear Sweden’s bid. Stockholm has been working to join at next week’s NATO summit in Vilnius.

During their call, Biden and Erdogan also discussed the delivery of F-16 fighter jets to Turkey, and Ukraine’s aim to join NATO, according to the Turkish presidency’s readout.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Kanishka Singh; Editing by Hugh Lawson, Peter Graff and Leslie Adler)

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UN experts arrive in Honduras to explore anti-corruption mission installation

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) – A UN mission of experts arrived in Honduras to examine the establishment of an international anti-corruption mission in the Central American nation, which is plagued by widespread corruption that exacerbates poverty and immigration, Honduran authorities announced Sunday.

Leftist President Xiomara Castro pledged during her campaign to install an anti-corruption commission known as the International Commission Against Corruption and Impunity in Honduras (CICIH). A year and a half after taking office, civil society groups have grown frustrated with delays in the process as the government and the United Nations have not yet reached an agreement on the scope of a potential commission.

Castro’s government signed a letter of intent with the UN in December to promote the installation of the mission in Honduras, where U.S. diplomats say $3 billion is lost annually and local authorities say 74% of the population lives in poverty.

“We are going to start negotiating with the UN mission the conditions for the installation of the international anti-corruption body,” Honduran Foreign Minister Eduardo Enrique Reina told local media on Sunday, adding that the government “aspires for it to enjoy autonomy to prosecute corruption.”

The length of the mission’s stay in Honduras to meet with various sectors was not specified.

The UN previously called for the repeal or reform of a series of laws that hinder the Public Ministry’s ability to investigate and prosecute officials and legislators for the misuse of public funds and money laundering. The independence of the CICIH to investigate crimes has also been a key sticking point to negotiations.

The CICIH would be the second anti-corruption commission to operate in Honduras. In 2016, the Mission to Support Against Corruption and Impunity in Honduras (MACCIH) was installed with the backing of the Organization of American States (OAS) and the Obama administration

The MACCIH exposed the corruption of officials, legislators and politicians, many linked to former President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who was extradited to the United States on drug trafficking charges after leaving power in early 2022.

The mission left Honduras in 2020 after the OAS failed to reach an agreement with the Hernandez government to extend its stay.

(Reporting by Gustavo Palencia; Writing by Anna-Catherine Brigida; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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UK jobs market cools again, pay growth weakest since April 2021: REC

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) – Pay pressures in Britain’s labour market cooled further in June, according to a survey of recruiters published on Monday that could help ease some of the Bank of England’s (BoE) concerns about inflation pressure.

The Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) and accountants KPMG said increases in starting salaries for permanent and temporary staff were the weakest since April 2021.

The BoE, which has raised interest rates 13 times since late 2021 in an attempt to tame the highest inflation rate among the world’s big rich economies, has said it expects pay growth to weaken, easing price pressures.

The monthly REC survey showed the availability of staff rose for the fourth month in a row to 57.6 from 55.6 in May, the steepest month-on-month increase since November 2009 excluding the coronavirus pandemic period.

“This is likely driven by people reacting to high inflation by stepping up their job search, and by some firms reshaping their businesses in a period of low growth,” Neil Carberry, REC’s chief executive, said.

Claire Warnes, partner for skills and productivity at KPMG UK, said the sharp upturn in people looking for work reflected a drop in recruitment and increasing redundancies.

REC said uncertainty over the economic outlook weighed on hiring decisions in June.

Its monthly permanent placements index came in at 46.4 last month, picking up from the near two-and-half-year low of 43.8 in May but still below the 50.0 no change level.

Temporary hiring, which often rises when firms are uncertain about the economic outlook, increased moderately.

Vacancies ticked up further in June although the pace of growth was the weakest since records started in March 2021.

(Reporting by Suban Abdulla; Editing by William Schomberg)

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Factbox-Chinese electric vehicle investment plans in Thailand

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Chinese electric vehicle manufacturers are pouring into Thailand, having committed to invest $1.44 billion in production facilities in Southeast Asia’s biggest automaking hub that has long been dominated by Japanese companies.

This new wave of investment has been backed by Thailand’s government, which has rolled out incentives and courted Chinese firms, with a target to convert about 30% of the country’s annual vehicle production into EVs by 2030.

INVESTMENTS UNDERWAY

China’s Great Wall Motor made an early punt on Thailand in 2020 when it acquired a factory from General Motors , where it will spend 22.6 billion baht ($647.38 million) turning it into a regional production centre for EV and hybrid cars.

The automaker will start producing its popular compact Ora Good Cat EV in Thailand next year, and is also bringing in its subsidiaries MIND Electronics, HYCET and Nobo Auto that make electronics, powertrains and seating.

Chinese rival SAIC Motor, which owns MG Motor and has a partnership with Thai conglomerate Charoen Pokphand Group, launched its first EV in the country in 2019.

It is investing 500 million baht to expand its existing plant for EV parts and battery manufacturing, the company said in April.

Chinese EV giant BYD is investing 17.9 billion baht to set up a new facility in Thailand that will start producing 150,000 passenger cars per year from 2024, some of which will be exported to Southeast Asia and Europe.

China’s Hozon New Energy Automobile is also working with Thailand’s Bangchan General Assembly to locally produce the electric NETA V model starting next year.

IN THE PIPELINE

Several deals are also in the pipeline, according to the Thailand Board of Investment (BOI), which has been pursuing Chinese automakers.

State-owned Chongqing Changan Automobile, which has partnerships with Ford and Mazda, will invest 9.8 billion baht to set up its first right-hand drive EV factory outside China, according to the BOI.

GAC Aion, a subsidiary of state-owned automaker Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) is planning to invest more than 6.4 billion baht to produce EVs in Thailand, the BOI said.

China’s Chery Automobile, which first rolled out a self-developed EV in 2009, is “very interested” to invest in Thailand and plans to enter the market early next year, according to the BOI.

Chongqing Changan, GAC and Chery did not respond to requests for comment on their plans for Thailand.

Chinese automaker Geely is also in the early stages of planning an entry into Thailand, Reuters reported in May, including weighing models for import and local manufacturing.

RISING POPULARITY

The influx of Chinese models appears to be helping to boost the popularity of EVs in Thailand, the second-largest car market in Southeast Asia.

In the first half of 2023, over 31,000 EVs were registered in Thailand, more than three times the number for all of 2022, the BOI said, citing industry data.

The price gap between EVs and combustion engine cars has also narrowed, in part because of government subsidies.

The cheapest variant of Great Wall’s Ora Good Cat – Thailand’s best-selling EV last year – currently costs around 828,500 baht, while Hozon’s NETA V is priced at 549,000 baht, according to company websites.

On Toyota’s Thailand website, the Corolla Altis is priced at 894,000 baht and the Yaris Ativ at 549,000 baht.

($1 = 34.9100 baht)

(Compiled by Devjyot Ghoshal in Bangkok; Editing by Jamie Freed)

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China-led EV boom in Thailand threatens Japan’s grip on key market

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Devjyot Ghoshal and Pasit Kongkunakornkul

BANGKOK (Reuters) – Thailand’s Siam Motors partnered with Nissan Motors in 1962 with a factory that rolled out four cars a day, leading to a profitable, decades-long relationship with Japanese companies that transformed it from a car dealer to an automotive pioneer.

But the Thai family-owned group that has grown annual revenues to $7 billion on the back of that success is now looking at opportunities elsewhere.

Siam Motors is in talks with several Chinese automakers about potential partnerships, particularly for high-end electric vehicles, vice president Sebastien Dupuy said in an interview, referring to previously unreported discussions.

“EVs will be a nice pocket of growth,” he said. “There is a market growing for that, and we want to capture the growth.”

Siam Motors’ position reflects a rapid shift underway in Thailand, where Chinese investments worth $1.44 billion since 2020 – including by BYD and Great Wall Motor – have opened a new front in a market Japanese automakers historically dominated.

Close on the heels of a sales crisis in China, Japanese automakers now face a battle for another key Asian market because of what has been a go-slow approach to EVs, according to registration data, industry officials and analysts. The Chinese wave is already beginning to reshape Thailand’s auto industry, as EV makers from China bring in their suppliers and local Thai firms – including those with longstanding links to Japanese companies, like Siam Motors – seek new partnerships.

Thailand is Southeast Asia’s largest car producer and exporter, and its second-largest sales market after Indonesia. Japanese automakers are so dominant that for decades they have treated it almost as an extension of their home market. But China surpassed Japan as Thailand’s top foreign investor last year, boosted by BYD’s investment in a new plant set to start up in 2024, amid concerted efforts by Thai officials to draw Chinese EV producers.

Thailand’s transition offers a test case for other economies as Chinese automakers ramp up exports and build overseas production hubs, partly in response to a hypercompetitive home market for electric cars.

In Europe, for example, where policies to support local EV production are still taking shape, Chinese automakers are also making a major push in a market where EVs now account for almost a fifth of overall sales.

CHINA VS. JAPAN

Bangkok resident Pasit Chantharojwong drove a Toyota Corolla for a decade and a half before switching to Great Wall’s Ora Good Cat this year. “I’ll never go back to a combustion-engine car again,” said the 55-year-old teacher, who also drives part-time for a ride-hailing service.

Of the nearly 850,000 new cars registered in Thailand last year, only around 1% were EVs, according to government data. But between January and April this year, that proportion rose to more than 6%.

BYD is now the market leader, followed by China’s SAIC and Hozon and U.S. automaker Tesla, according to registration data showing 18,481 EVs sold between January and April.

More than 7,300 of those were BYD cars. Only 11 newly registered EVs this year came from Toyota, Thailand’s dominant brand that along with its partner Isuzu and Honda accounted for almost 70% of overall car and truck sales last year in Thailand.

Hajime Yamamoto, a principal at Nomura Research Institute’s consulting division in Thailand, said Chinese brands could take at least 15 percentage points of share from Japan over the next decade by delivering affordable EVs.

“The Japanese are only able to target some of the premium segments,” Yamamoto said.

Toyota, which alongside its group companies has invested nearly $7 billion in Thailand over the last decade and employs some 275,000 people, told Reuters in a statement that it is considering EV production in the country – its first official confirmation.

Toyota said it has taken 3,356 bookings so far for the electric bZ4X, which it began selling in Thailand last year.

It has also signalled an electric pickup truck is coming, but Goldman Sachs said in a note last month that “there is a growing need for them to consider other product segment expansion.”

GOVERNMENT PUSH

By 2030, Thailand aims to convert around 30% of its annual production of 2.5 million vehicles into EVs with ambitions to become the main regional production hub, for which it is aggressively pursuing investment.

Thailand’s pitch to Chinese EV makers has been its existing supply base – built largely for Japanese automakers – and readiness to provide incentives.

These include lower tariffs on imports on the condition of subsequent local assembly and some tax breaks for EV manufacturing.

“We realise that if we would like to be the EV hub of the region, we cannot only build the car assembly industry,” said Thailand’s Board of Investment Secretary General Narit Therdsteerasukdi, who has travelled multiple times to China in recent months.

“We need to strengthen the whole ecosystem of EVs.”

The BOI has approved 14 projects by 13 companies, representing an annual production capacity of 276,640 EVs as of May 31.

Great Wall selected Thailand as a regional hub for EVs because of the country’s strong infrastructure, supplier and talent base, alongside its growth potential, said Narong Sritalayon, managing director of its Thailand arm.

“You want to penetrate into a market that has purchasing power and will be able to support your growth plans in the future, especially in a new business like electric vehicles,” he said.

($1 = 35.2000 baht)

(Additional reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng in Bangkok and Daniel Leussink in Tokyo; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and Jamie Freed)

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Innovation in EVs seen denting copper demand growth potential

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Mai Nguyen

HANOI (Reuters) -New electric vehicles from Tesla and rivals are being engineered for efficiency in a way that cuts copper content, changes that could limit demand growth for the metal as the next-generation of EVs hits the road, industry analysts say.

The strong ramp-up in sales for EVs, led by growth in China, means copper demand will continue to grow for the remainder of the decade, but innovation in EVs has emerged as a limiting factor, according to two recent forecasts.

Copper has been seen as a green-energy transition play, in part because of the wiring needed for electric cars. EVs can use as much as 80 kgs (176 pounds) of copper, four times the amount used in a typical combustion engine vehicle.

In a report this week, Goldman Sachs said EVs accounted for two-thirds of the global demand growth in copper last year.

But EV and battery makers have found ways to cut weight and costs that also mean less copper is needed per vehicle, Goldman Sachs and consultancy CRU Group said separately.

CRU Group lowered its estimate for copper usage in an average EV to 51-56 kgs between this year and 2030. That was down from its previous forecast of 65-66 kgs over the same period.

Goldman Sachs estimated copper in an average EV would fall to 65 kgs per vehicle by 2030 compared with an estimate of 73 kgs last year.

Both cited a chain of engineering changes intended to improve range, reduce weight and bolster efficiency of EVs that will have the cumulative effect of cutting copper content.

“It may be the first crack in the story on the demand side,” CRU analyst Robert Edwards said. “Some of the projections out there have been very aggressive in terms of potential green energy demand (for copper).”

The engineering changes include shifting to more compact batteries where cells do not have to be wired into modules, using thinner copper foil in battery cells and shifting to higher voltage systems that will require less wiring.

In one example, Tesla expects that by moving to a 48-volt system for the secondary battery – the smaller battery used to power functions like lighting and wipers – in future EVs, it will be able to cut the need for copper to one quarter of current levels, Elon Musk told investors in May.

Goldman Sachs called innovation in batteries and the potential shift to higher voltage systems like Tesla’s “the main threat to copper’s EV demand leverage.”

It expects copper demand for EVs to be 1 million metric tons this year and 2.8 million by 2030. Previously, it had projected 3.2 million metric tons of demand from EVs in 2030.

However, a higher penetration rate of EVs is making up for the easing copper usage in each unit.

CRU said it expected that EVs and plug-in hybrids would account for 42% of vehicles sold globally in 2030, up from a forecast of a third previously.

CRU’s Edwards said some of those bullish on copper may have underestimated the potential for EV makers to roll out technologies that limit the use of the metal.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange leapt to a record $10,845 per metric ton in March 2022, partly thanks to the bullish EV demand story, but has fallen by nearly a quarter since.

(Reporting by Mai Nguyen in Hanoi and Kevin Krolicki in Singapore; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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New York police arrest man suspected of firing from a scooter, killing one

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – New York City police on Saturday arrested a man suspected of randomly firing at people while riding a scooter through the streets of Brooklyn and Queens earlier in the day, killing an 87-year-old man and wounding three other men, officials said.

Police said they had yet to establish a motive or find any connection between the victims, who were all shot within half an hour of each other during the rampage, which police said was conducted on an illegal scooter.

“Video shows he’s not targeting anybody, he’s not following anybody. As he’s driving on the scooter he’s randomly shooting,” Assistant Chief Joseph Kenny of the New York City Police Department told a press conference.

Video of the suspect captured from the first incident was sent to every police officer’s cellphone, and the 25-year-old suspect was arrested less than two hours later by officers who recognized him riding on a main thoroughfare.

Officers recovered a 9 mm handgun with an extended magazine and additional ammunition, Kenny said.

The victim who died was an 87-year-old man shot in the back, Kenny said. The New York Daily News, citing a friend of the victim, identified him as Hamod Ali Saeidi, who walked several miles every day to check in on family and friends.

The other victims were a 44-year-old man shot in the cheek who was in critical condition, a 63-year-old man shot in the right shoulder in stable condition, and a 21-year-old man who was hit in the shoulder and was not as seriously wounded, Kenny said.

The suspect also fired at a group of people and missed. At each location, 9 mm shell casings were recovered, Kenny said.

Police declined to identify the suspect but said he had one prior arrest on his record.

(This story has been corrected to change the day to Saturday, instead of Sunday, in paragraph 1)

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Argentina inaugurates key gas pipeline to reverse energy deficit

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Candelaria Grimberg

SALLIQUELO, Argentina (Reuters) – Argentina inaugurated on Sunday the first stage of a gas pipeline that will carry natural gas from the Vaca Muerta formation in western Argentina to Santa Fe province by way of Buenos Aires province, an essential work to reverse the country’s significant energy deficit.

Vaca Muerta, a massive shale formation the size of Belgium located in Patagonia, is seen as key to boosting the South American country’s gas supplies and lessening the need for pricey imports. It has the second unconventional gas reserves worldwide and the fourth in oil.

The country, whose central bank foreign exchange reserves have dwindled to dangerous lows, registered a $5 billion deficit in the energy trade balance in 2022 because it needs to import energy during the highest consumption months.

The completion of the first stage of the gas pipeline, which starts in Neuquen province and reaches Buenos Aires province, adds 11 million cubic meters of gas per day. This will double when the compression plants are installed in Tratayen, in Neuquen province, and in Salliquelo, in Buenos Aires province.

The inauguration comes as the ruling Peronist party aims to cling to power in upcoming October elections with the country reeling from 114% inflation. Economy Minister Sergio Massa, who often touts the economic benefits of the pipeline, is seeking the presidency in what pollsters predict to be a tight race.

“This work (…) is the beginning of change in the economic and energy matrix of Argentina,” Massa said at the inauguration ceremony held at a gas compression plant about 30 kilometers (18.64 miles) from Salliquelo as part of the celebrations for Argentina’s Independence Day. “We are no longer going to import gas in ships because we are going to use the gas from our subsoil.”

The president of state energy company Energia Argentina, Agustin Gerez, told reporters after the event that the call for tenders for the second section of the gas pipeline reaching San Jeronimo in Santa Fe province would be made in September with expected completion between March and April 2024. This will increase transportation capacity by 44 million cubic meters per day, an important improvement allowing the imports of diesel and liquefied natural gas (LNG).

With the new pipeline up and running, the country expects to reach net zero in its energy balance in 2024 and achieve a surplus in 2025, according to official estimates.

(Reporting by Candelaria Grimberg with additional reporting by Eliana Raszewski. Writing by Anna-Catherine Brigida; editing by Diane Craft)

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Russian, Turkish ministers talk after Turkey sends Ukrainian commanders home

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

(Reuters) – The foreign ministers of Russia and Turkey spoke by telephone on Sunday, a day after Ankara angered Moscow by sending five Ukrainian commanders home with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in what Russia called a violation of a prisoner exchange agreement.

The Russian and Turkish foreign ministries said Sergei Lavrov and Hakan Fidan discussed the situation in Ukraine, as well as a Black Sea grain export agreement that lifted a Russian de facto blockade of Ukrainian ports last year.

Moscow has threatened to quit the grain export deal when it comes up for renewal on July 17, saying demands to facilitate sales of its own grain and fertiliser have not been met.

Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that he was pressing Russia to extend the deal, brokered last year by Ankara and the United Nations, by at least three months.

The Russian ministry said the two sides had focused on recent developments around Ukraine, including Ankara’s returning detained commanders of Ukraine’s Azov unit, which defended a steelworks in the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol last year.

Russia captured the city last year after laying it to waste, killing thousands of civilians in a three-month siege. The Azov unit led the city’s defence, holding out in the steelworks for weeks until they were ordered by Kyiv to surrender.

The captured Azov commanders, lionized as heroes in Ukraine and vilified in Russia, were released in a prisoner swap in September, under terms that required them to stay in Turkey until the war ends. Zelenskiy brought them home on Saturday after a visit to Turkey.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Saturday that Turkey had violated agreements in permitting their release, and had failed to notify Russia in advance.

Ankara has not commented publicly about the decision to send them home. Turkey’s presidency and foreign ministry did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Peter Graff)

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Former Biden Climate Czar Works For ‘Green’ Private Equity Firms

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

Former Biden Climate Czar Works For ‘Green’ Private Equity Firms

Will Kessler on July 9, 2023

Former National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy works for two private equity firms that have climate portfolios with investments in China.

McCarthy currently works as an advisor for private equity firms Pegasus Capital Advisors LP and TPG Inc., according to her website, both of which have investments in China and are funds that invest using environmental and social metrics. McCarthy worked for the Biden administration as the first ever climate czar where she pushed for the climate provisions in the bipartisan infrastructure law and the Inflation Reduction Act, which she argues “led to the most aggressive action on climate in U.S. history.”

Pegasus Capital Advisors, where McCarthy works as an operating advisor, manages the Green Climate Fund’s (GCF) Global Subnational Climate Fund (SnCF), which was created in 2021 in order to “address a major deficit in climate finance,” according to a press release from the GCF. The Biden administration has given $2 billion to the GCF, a U.N. project that aims to “accelerate clean energy transitions,” according to a White House press release. The GCF has invested $1.4 billion in Shandong, China, according to its website.

McCarthy is also a senior advisor for TPG, which has active investments in Chinese companies such as Du Xiaoman Financial and Zhaoke Ophthalmology, according to its website. The TPG Rise Climate Fund closed at $7.3 billion in 2022, according to a press release.

Pegasus Capital Advisors says, “We focus on solutions related to sustainability and health,” according to their website. “From green infrastructure to improved health and well-being, our investment themes and strategies are based on the long-term value creation that offer scale and depth of environmental and social impact.”

TPG Inc. has its own public benefit organization, Y Analytics, whose mission is to “increase not only the amount of capital that is allocated toward impact, but also to improve the effectiveness of capital invested toward the greater good,” according to TPG’s website.

McCarthy was previously accused of ethics violations by GOP House members after she met with Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) President and CEO Manish Bapna, according to White House visitor logs, which is an alleged violation of Biden’s “Revolving Door Ban.” The ban prohibits appointees from engaging parties who are related to their former employer, and McCarthy had previously served as NRDC’s president and CEO.

McCarthy has also previously called for Big Tech companies to censor those with differing opinions on environmental issues and energy policy, saying, “The tech companies have to stop allowing specific individuals over and over again to spread disinformation,” according to Axios.

TPG confirmed to the Daily Caller News Foundation that McCarthy works as a senior adviser for the firm.

Pegasus Capital Advisors LP, the GCF and McCarthy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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‘Not Looking For A Third World War’: Biden Keeps Reversing Course On Giving Weapons To Ukraine

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

‘Not Looking For A Third World War’: Biden Keeps Reversing Course On Giving Weapons To Ukraine

Mia Watkins on July 9, 2023

President Joe Biden has changed course on at least seven occasions over what types of weapons to greenlight for Ukraine, including some that earlier on the administration considered to be potentially escalatory.

The Biden administration has approved more than $42 billion in weapons for Ukraine since August 2021 but has opposed sending American combat troops, a scenario the administration argues could amount to a third world war, according to The Washington Post. Administration officials say the pattern of reversing previous deferments comes from changing battlefield conditions and Kyiv’s anticipated needs, but it also comes as officials have consistently warned against sending some offensive capabilities for fear of provoking Russian President Vladimir Putin into a wider war, according to a Daily Caller News Foundation review.

“We don’t have an interest in the conflict in Ukraine widening to a broader conflict or evolving into World War III, so we’ve been mindful of that,” Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl said last June after the administration changed its thinking on HIMARS for Ukraine, according to Defense News. “But at the same time, Russia doesn’t get a veto over what we send to the Ukrainians. The Ukrainians didn’t start this war, the Russians did.”

FIM-92 Stinger

The U.S. began accelerating weapons supplies to Ukraine as Russian forces amassed near its border in the fall of 2021, but it wasn’t until days after the invasion that the Biden administration for the first time approved Stinger anti-aircraft missiles, according to The Wall Street Journal. In January, the U.S. had approved two European partners to transfer American-made Stingers to Ukraine.

Stinger missiles are shoulder-fired weapons equipped with infrared sensors that guide the missile toward the target and are capable of taking down Russian gunship helicopters, according to Business Insider.

M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS)

After months of internal wrangling, the administration relented and announced an initial delivery of the now-infamous HIMARS light wheeled multiple rocket launchers on June 1, just not those equipped to fire rockets at longer ranges, Politico reported. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl said as a condition of providing HIMARS, Washington extracted a pledge from Kyiv to employ the system in defensive operations only and avoid firing into Russian territory, Defense New reported.

MIM-104 Patriot

The next capability Ukraine asked for was the Patriot surface-to-air missile defense system Kyiv said could protect its skies from Russia’s indiscriminate missile barrages on both civilian and military sites.

Obtaining and manning Patriots would strain Ukraine’s military in terms of training and munitions, as well as global demand for the rare, expensive systems and the types of missiles they fire, the administration argued. Despite these concerns, the Department of Defense announced it would provide one Patriot battery to Ukraine in December.

M1 Abrams Main Battle Tanks

Similarly, the administration offered 31 U.S.-made M1 Abrams main battle tanks for Ukraine in late January after a barrage of demands from Kyiv for advanced western-made heavy tanks, a decision made apparently against the Pentagon’s initial recommendation.

Amid pressure from NATO, however, the administration authorized 31 Abrams, equal to one Ukrainian tank brigade, in the interest of maintaining a unified front and unlocking German-made Leopard 2s for Ukraine.

Ground-Launched Small Diameter Bombs

The administration initially sent HIMARS equipped to fire rockets with a 53-mile range, but in February delivered a supply of ground-launched small-diameter “smart bombs” that fire from HIMARS up to 94 miles.

Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions (DPICMS)

Friday’s security assistance package included an unspecified number of 155 mm DPICMS, or cluster munitions, which contain projectiles that burst in mid-air and disseminate smaller munitions over a large target area. Many countries have banned stockpiling or using the munitions because of their high fail rate and tendency to detonate when disturbed later by civilians.

Back in December, an administration official told Politico the White House was not completely against the idea of sending DPICMS to Ukraine, but it was not in active consideration.

“According to our own policy, we have concerns about the use of those kinds of munitions,” National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said at the time, according to Politico.

However, as the ongoing counteroffensive has dragged on longer than anticipated and may consume more 155mm rounds than the U.S. and partners can supply, “We need to build a bridge from where we are today to when we have enough monthly production of unitary rounds … to give Ukraine what it needs,” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said Friday.

The administration “deferred” the decision for some time, he added.

“It was a very difficult decision on my part,” Biden told CNN.

Honorable Mention: F-16 Fighting Falcon

After the tank announcement, Ukraine renewed public cries for F-16 multirole fighter aircraft. In January, Biden explicitly said F-16s for Ukraine were a “no,” Politico reported.

Then the administration did not rule out the possibility of eventually providing Ukraine with the fourth-generation jets in February but said they were off the table “for now.”

Finally, in May, the administration said it would support procurement of F-16s for Ukraine and training Ukrainian forces on the system, Politico reported. The question of what changed between January and May was one of determining whether Ukraine had the capabilities it needed for the short-term and the prospects of escalation, officials told the outlet.

Denmark and the Netherlands have plans to train Ukrainian troops on the fighters and other European nations are considering doing the same, according to several media reports, but no deliveries have been announced.

USA 🇺🇸 has announced a new military aid package for Ukraine 🇺🇦 worth $800 million, it includes:

-Cluster Munitions (Over one hundred thousand 155mm DPICMs shells)
-32 Bradley IFVs
-32 Stryker APCs
-31 Howitzers 155mm
-Patriot Missiles
-HIMARS Missiles
-Artillery Shells 155/105mm pic.twitter.com/0hfnTDNXqG

— Ukraine Battle Map (@ukraine_map) July 7, 2023

What Could Be Next? Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS)

Next up, the U.S. is considering ATACMS as Ukraine’s urgent need for firepower has begun to sway even the most opposed members of the White House, the WSJ reported on June 29.

Earlier in 2023, in a change of tune, the Biden administration told Ukraine it does not have sufficient spare ATACMS to send to Ukraine without detracting from U.S. readiness for future fights, Politico reported, citing four people with knowledge of the discussions.

Previously, the administration denied Ukraine’s request for ATACMS on the grounds that the HIMARS-fired rocket, which can reach targets up to 190 miles from the launch site, would allow Ukraine to strike Russian territory and violate Russian President Vladimir Putin’s red lines.

“The idea that we would give Ukraine material that is fundamentally different than is already going, there would have a prospect of breaking up NATO and breaking up the European Union and the rest of the world,” Biden said during a press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, according to Politico.

“They’re not looking to go to war with Russia. They’re not looking for a third World War,” he added.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Marketmind: China inflation kicks off week with a bang

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Jamie McGeever

(Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.

A clutch of key economic data releases showing whether China is starting to emerge from its post-lockdown funk, and monetary policy decisions – and more importantly, guidance – from New Zealand and South Korea will be the main regional drivers for Asian markets this week.

These come against a slight but potentially significant deterioration in risk appetite as investors grapple with even higher global borrowing costs – most notably U.S. and UK bond yields – and simmering U.S.-Sino trade tensions.

The U.S. second-quarter earnings season moves into gear too, with the tone likely to be set later in the week when some of Wall Street’s biggest names report.

Asian markets, however, continue to underperform. MSCI’s broad Asia ex-Japan index shed 1.5% last week, its third consecutive week without rising, and is flat for the year. The MSCI World index is up 11% year to date.

Much of that is due to the sluggishness of China’s markets, and key indicators from the region’s largest economy on Monday will get the trading week underway.

Annual consumer price inflation for June is expected to hold steady at just 0.2%, with the monthly rate coming in at 0% compared with -0.2% in May. As recently as January, annual CPI inflation was running above 2%.

Price pressures look set to remain well-rooted in deflation in the coming months. Annual producer price inflation, already the most negative since 2016, is seen falling to -5.0% from -4.6% in May.

These figures show the task China’s central bank and government are facing to reflate the economy. With deflation setting in and growth slowing, it’s little surprise that China’s stocks, bonds and currency are under the cosh.

Chinese banking stocks, measured by the Hong Kong-listed Hang Seng Mainland Banks Index, plunged 10.5% last week. That was the index’s biggest fall in five years and third steepest since it was launched in 2011.

Reflecting just how poorly China’s post-lockdown economy has performed relative to consensus forecasts, Citi’s Chinese economic surprises index has now fallen 11 weeks in a row. That’s the longest stretch of underperformance since 2010.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s four-day visit to China concluded on Sunday with no obvious thawing of relations between the two superpowers. Yellen said her talks with Chinese officials were “direct” and “productive” but they have “significant disagreements”.

The other major regional economic data points and policy decisions this week for investors to get their teeth into include: rate decisions in New Zealand and South Korea; Chinese lending and trade figures; Indian inflation; Singapore’s Q2 GDP report.

Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Monday:

– China CPI, PPI inflation (June)

– Japan current account (May)

– Fed’s Barr, Daly, Mester and Bostic all speak

(By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Diane Craft)

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Biden begins three-nation tour with stop in London

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Steve Holland

STANSTED, England (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden arrived in Britain on Sunday, starting a three-nation trip that will be dominated by a NATO summit in Lithuania aimed at showing solidarity with Ukraine in its fight against Russia while not yet accepting Kyiv as a member of the alliance.

But the challenges of forging solidarity among NATO’s 31 member countries were highlighted in a call between Biden and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan before the alliance summit in Lithuania this week, with Sweden’s bid for membership in the Western alliance a continued point of contention.

Biden landed at Stansted Airport and boarded the Marine One helicopter for central London, where he will meet British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at 10 Downing Street on Monday. He will later travel to Windsor Castle for a visit with King Charles.

The talks with the king, expected to include climate initiatives, will give Biden a greater sense of the man who succeeded his mother, Queen Elizabeth, after her death last September.

Biden had tea with the queen at Windsor in June 2021, and they discussed many of the same issues that remain a top priority today, like Russia and China.

Biden will travel on to Vilnius, Lithuania, on Monday night and hold talks with NATO leaders there on Tuesday and Wednesday. Biden and the NATO allies aim to show support for Ukraine and give Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy a sense of what will have to be done to gain NATO membership sometime in the future.

In a CNN interview previewing his trip, Biden urged caution for now on Ukraine’s drive to join NATO, saying the alliance could get drawn into the war with Russia due to NATO’s mutual defense pact.

“I don’t think there is unanimity in NATO about whether or not to bring Ukraine into the NATO family now, at this moment, in the middle of a war,” Biden said.

Zelenskiy said an invitation for Ukraine to join NATO would send a message that the Western defense alliance is not afraid of Moscow. Ukraine should get clear security guarantees while it is not in NATO, and Zelenskiy said that would be one of his goals in Vilnius, in an interview broadcast on Sunday.

“I’ll be there and I’ll be doing whatever I can in order to, so to speak, expedite that solution, to have an agreement with our partners,” Zelenskiy said on ABC’s “This Week.”

The NATO membership of Sweden, whose accession to the alliance has been blocked by both Hungary and Turkey, will be part of the agenda in Vilnius. New members must be approved by a unanimous vote of all existing NATO members.

Biden discussed Sweden’s NATO bid on a call with Erdogan, and “conveyed his desire to welcome Sweden into NATO as soon as possible,” the White House said in a statement on Sunday.

Erdogan told Biden that Sweden must do more to contain supporters of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which it considers a terrorist group and who continue to hold demonstrations in Sweden, Erdogan’s office said.

‘CONFIDENT’ ALLIANCE

A centerpiece of Biden’s visit to Lithuania will be a speech he will deliver at Vilnius University on Wednesday night.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters the speech will cover Biden’s vision of “a strong, confident America flanked by strong, confident allies and partners taking on the significant challenges of our time, from Russia’s aggression in Ukraine to the climate crisis.”

One of Biden’s objectives is to show Americans back home the importance of continuing support for Ukraine as he faces re-election. Some of his Republican rivals in the race for the November 2024 presidential election have voiced doubts about his strategy.

Solid majorities of Americans support providing weaponry to Ukraine to defend itself against Russia and believe that such aid demonstrates to China and other U.S. rivals a will to protect U.S. interests and allies, according to a Reuters/Ipsos survey late last month.

Some Democratic lawmakers on Sunday raised concerns about Biden’s decision to send cluster munitions to Ukraine. The artillery shells release dozens of bomblets that cause destruction over wide areas and unexploded ordnance can pose hazards for decades.

Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, told reporters on Sunday that Ukraine in written assurances said it would not use cluster bombs in Russia or in populated areas.

Biden’s last stop will be in Helsinki for talks with the leaders of the newest NATO member, Finland, and to attend a summit of U.S. and Nordic leaders.

(Reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Franklin Paul, Andrea Ricci and Leslie Adler)

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Biden arrives in Britain to meet King Charles, PM Sunak

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Michael Holden and Steve Holland

LONDON (Reuters) -U.S President Joe Biden arrived in London late on Sunday for the start of a three-nation tour that will include meetings with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and a discussion on climate change with King Charles at Windsor Castle on Monday.

The White House had said the trip was designed “to further strengthen the close relationship between our nations”.

The president, who flew into Stansted airport northeast of London late on Sunday, will travel to Downing Street on Monday to hold a low-key meeting with Sunak, their fifth in as many months. Sunak’s spokesperson said the discussions would likely include the upcoming NATO summit and Ukraine.

“As we face new and unprecedented challenges to our physical and economic security, our alliances are more important than ever,” Sunak said in a statement released by his office.

“The UK is Europe’s leading NATO ally, we are the United States’ most important trade, defence and diplomatic partner, and we are at the forefront of providing Ukraine with the support they need to succeed on the battlefield,” said Sunak, who studied at California’s Stanford University and owns a penthouse flat in Santa Monica, in southern California.

Sunak has gone some way in repairing ties with Biden after the relationship cooled under his predecessors Boris Johnson and Liz Truss due to their tough stance over a post-Brexit deal with the European Union and Johnson’s closer ties to Republican former President Donald Trump.

For Biden, the more high-profile part of the trip will be his meeting with King Charles at Windsor Castle, to the west of London, where the monarch’s late mother, Queen Elizabeth, hosted Democratic President Barack Obama in 2016 and Trump in 2018.

Biden also met Queen Elizabeth at Windsor for tea in 2021.

The king will receive Biden in the quadrangle of the castle, where a guard of honour will give a Royal Salute and the U.S. national anthem will be played, the king’s office said.

The president and the king are due to discuss climate issues, a subject on which Charles, 74, has campaigned and spoken out about for more than five decades.

When the two men met at the COP26 U.N. climate summit in Scotland two years ago, Biden praised Charles’ leadership on the subject, telling him, “We need you badly”.

“You are very kind for saying that,” Charles replied.

Biden met Charles at a reception during a visit for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth last year, but in keeping with longstanding practice of U.S. presidents, he did not attend the king’s coronation in May.

U.S. special climate envoy John Kerry told the BBC he had been invited to brief the king and Biden about a climate finance conference that he was due to host with British energy minister Grant Shapps on Monday.

Following the meeting, Biden and Sunak will leave Britain for Lithuania where NATO leaders will gather for a key summit. Biden is then expected to travel to Helsinki for a meeting with Nordic leaders.

(Reporting by Michael Holden and Steve HollandAdditional reporting by Muvija M and Paul SandleEditing by Helen Popper and Leslie Adler)

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U.S. President Joe Biden arrives in Britain

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) – U.S President Joe Biden arrived in London late on Sunday for the start of a three-nation tour that will include a meeting with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at 10 Downing Street and talks about climate change with King Charles at Windsor Castle on Monday.

Biden will travel to Vilnius, Lithuania, on Monday night, where he will hold talks with NATO leaders on Tuesday and Wednesday.

(Reporting by Steve Holland; writing by Paul Sandle; Editing by Kate Holton)

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Captivating Serenity and Rich History: Watching the Sunset at Sunset Beach in Cape May

by Jessica Woods July 9, 2023
By Jessica Woods

CAPE MAY, NJ – Nestled on the southernmost tip of New Jersey lies the enchanting Sunset Beach in Cape May, a place where the horizon comes alive with a mesmerizing tapestry of colors as the sun bids adieu to another day. This picturesque destination not only offers a breathtaking natural spectacle but is also steeped in fascinating history.

Situated on the Delaware Bay, Sunset Beach is a pristine stretch of coastline renowned for its serene ambiance and captivating views. The beach’s name itself evokes a sense of tranquility and promises a front-row seat to witness nature’s most spectacular performance.

As the sun begins its descent towards the horizon, Sunset Beach transforms into a canvas awash with vibrant hues. The golden orb paints the sky with shades of fiery orange, soft pink, and deep purple, casting an ethereal glow that envelops the surroundings. Spectators gather along the shoreline, eagerly awaiting this daily marvel, as the sun’s slow descent creates a poignant symphony of light and color.

A unique aspect of Sunset Beach is the presence of “Cape May Diamonds.” These sparkling, translucent stones, resembling diamonds, can be found scattered along the shoreline. Formed from quartz crystals that washed ashore from the Delaware River, Cape May Diamonds have captivated visitors for generations. Many people enjoy combing the beach, hoping to find these treasured gems as a memento of their visit.

Beyond its natural splendor, Sunset Beach has a rich history that dates back centuries. Here are a few notable historical highlights:

Just off the coast of Sunset Beach lies the remains of the SS Atlantus, a concrete ship built during World War I. The ship was part of an experimental project but ultimately ended up stranded and partially sunk off the coast. Today, its ghostly skeleton stands as a testament to engineering innovation and the ravages of time.

Rising from the dunes, a striking sight greets visitors—the towering remains of a World War II concrete ship observation tower. Constructed in 1942 to help spot German U-boats, the tower now stands as an iconic landmark, evoking memories of a bygone era.

A short distance from Sunset Beach, the Cape May Lighthouse stands tall, guiding ships since its construction in 1859. Visitors can climb its 199 steps to the top and enjoy panoramic views of the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay.

The waters surrounding Sunset Beach have witnessed countless shipwrecks over the years. Some vessels met their fate due to treacherous storms, while others fell victim to hostile encounters during wartime. Scuba divers and history enthusiasts are drawn to the area, eager to explore the secrets that lie beneath the waves.

Sunset Beach in Cape May,, offers an idyllic escape where natural beauty and historical intrigue coexist harmoniously. Whether you find solace in the tranquil sunsets, hunt for Cape May Diamonds, or uncover the remnants of maritime history, this enchanting destination promises an experience that will linger in your heart and memory. From the kaleidoscope of colors that grace the sky to the tales of naval heroism and the allure of hidden treasures, Sunset Beach is an exquisite gem on the East Coast that deserves a place on every traveler’s itinerary.

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Caught! One dead, three injured in random scooter shootings in NYC

by Adam Devine July 9, 2023
By Adam Devine

NEW YORK, NY – Police are searching for a gunman who rode around the city on Saturday randomly shooting at people. During his rampage, the shooter killed an elderly man and wounded three others in five attacks.

Police believe they have the shooter in custody.

At approximately 11:10 AM, police received a 911 call regarding a male who had been shot near the intersection of Ashford Street and Arlington Avenue in Brooklyn. Upon arrival, officers found a 21-year-old male suffering from a gunshot wound to the left shoulder. The injured individual was promptly transported to Brookdale Hospital Medical Center by EMS in stable condition.

Around 11:27 AM, a 911 call reported a male shot in front of 108-19 Jamaica Avenue in Queens. Police arrived at the scene to discover an 86-year-old male with a gunshot wound to his back. Despite immediate medical attention from EMS, the victim was pronounced deceased at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center.

The identity of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of his family.

While officers were present at the second incident location, they received information that an unidentified individual had displayed a firearm and fired multiple shots at a group of individuals gathered at the intersection of 108 Street and Jamaica Avenue nearby.

Fortunately, no additional injuries were reported in relation to the gunfire.

At 11:35 AM, police were alerted to another male shot at the intersection of 126 Street and Hillside Avenue.

Upon arrival, they found a 44-year-old male with a gunshot wound to his face. EMS arrived at the scene and transported the victim to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in critical condition.

Incident 5: Shortly after, at 11:37 AM, a 911 call reported a male shot at the intersection of 134 Street and Jamaica Avenue in the 102 Precinct. Police arrived to find a 63-year-old male with a gunshot wound to his right shoulder. EMS responded and transported the injured male to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in stable condition.

At approximately 1:10 PM, officers stopped a 25-year-old male riding a scooter at the intersection of Sutphin Boulevard and 94 Avenue in the 103 Precinct.

NYPD officers safely recovered a firearm, and the individual was taken into custody without further incident.

The deceased victim has been identified as Hamoo Saeidi, an 86-year-old male from Queen.

The suspect charged was identified as Thomas Abreu, a 25-year-old male from Brooklyn residing at 136 Elton Street. He is facing one murder charge; two attempted murder charges, and six criminal weapons possession charges.

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More Black Americans Support SCOTUS’ Affirmative Action Ruling Than Oppose It: POLL

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

More Black Americans Support SCOTUS’ Affirmative Action Ruling Than Oppose It: POLL

Harold Hutchison on July 9, 2023

A plurality of black Americans support the Supreme Court’s decision last month that struck down race-based admission policies at colleges, according to a YouGov/The Economist poll.

In the survey, 44% of black respondents said they at least somewhat supported the Supreme Court’s rulings in Students for Fair Admission v. University of North Carolina and Students for Fair Admission v. Harvard, which struck down the use of race-based admissions policies. By comparison, 36% of the black respondents to the poll disapproved of the decision.

Do you approve or disapprove of Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action?

White: 65% approve, 23% disapprove
Hispanics: 45%-30%
Blacks: 43%-36%

Both sexes, all races, every age group, every level of income. All reject race-based governance. https://t.co/a74PiCnGBh pic.twitter.com/VF2qDVBZ0p

— Richard Hanania (@RichardHanania) July 9, 2023

Overall, nearly three-fifths of respondents, 59%, approved of the Supreme Court ruling, compared to 27% who disapproved, with 45% of Hispanic respondents supporting the decision, compared to 30% disapproval. The poll did not reveal reactions from Asian-Americans to the ruling.

The YouGov poll, conducted from July 1-5 for The Economist, surveyed 1,500 adults, 1,350 of whom were registered voters, including 198 black and 200 Hispanic respondents, and had a 2.9% margin of error.

Harvard University hinted that the Ivy League school would be seeking to circumvent the court’s ruling in a press release following the decision. Essays by applicants that discussed how race affected their lives could be taken into consideration during the admissions process, the Supreme Court’s opinion stated.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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US congressional Democrats raise concerns on cluster bombs for Ukraine

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Kanishka Singh and Joey Roulette

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Democratic U.S. Senator Tim Kaine and Representative Barbara Lee raised concerns on Sunday over the decision by President Joe Biden’s administration to send cluster bombs to Ukraine to combat the Russian invasion.

The United States said on Friday it would supply Kyiv with the widely banned bombs as part of a new $800 million security package that brings total U.S. military aid to more than $40 billion since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022.

Rights groups and United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres have questioned Washington’s decision on the munitions.

Kaine said he had “some real qualms” about the U.S. decision to send cluster bombs to Ukraine because it could inspire other countries to sidestep an international convention barring the munitions.

“It could give a green light to other nations to do something different as well,” Kaine told Fox News Sunday. However, he added he “appreciates the Biden administration has grappled with the risks.”

“They’re not gonna use these munitions against Russian civilians,” Kaine, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said of Ukraine’s potential use of those bombs, adding Kyiv had given assurances that were outlined by the White House.

Jake Sullivan, White House national security adviser, told reporters on Sunday that Ukraine in its written assurances said it would not use cluster bombs in Russia or in populated areas.

Cluster munitions are prohibited by more than 100 countries. Russia, Ukraine and the United States have not signed on to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans production, stockpiling, use and transfer of the weapons.

They typically release large numbers of smaller bomblets that can kill indiscriminately over a wide area. Those that fail to explode pose a danger for decades after a conflict ends.

Lee urged the Biden administration to reconsider the step.

“Cluster bombs should never be used. That’s crossing a line,” she told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, adding the United States risked losing its “moral leadership” by sending cluster bombs to Ukraine.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby defended the decision and said the United States was very focused on demining efforts in Ukraine.

“We are very mindful of the concerns about civilian casualties and unexploded ordnance being picked up by civilians or children and being hurt,” Kirby said in an interview with ABC’s “This Week.”

“But these munitions do provide a useful battlefield capability,” he said. He added that Russia is using cluster munitions in Ukraine and “indiscriminately killing civilians,” while the Ukrainians will be using them to defend their own territory.

Support for Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion has mostly been bipartisan in the United States. The Biden administration and many U.S. lawmakers from the Democratic and Republican parties have defended the decision to send the controversial weapons to Ukraine, saying they were needed to accelerate Kyiv’s counteroffensive.

Republican U.S. Representative Michael McCaul, chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, said Ukraine’s counteroffensive was going slowly and that the cluster bombs could be a “game changer” for the Ukrainians.

“They would be a game changer in the counteroffensive. And I’m really pleased the administration has finally agreed to do this,” McCaul told CNN on Sunday.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh and Joey Roulette, Additonal reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Scott Malone and Andrea Ricci)

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JOSH HAMMER: Democrats Cry Crocodile Tears About ‘Our Democracy’ While Trying To Tear It Down

by The Daily Caller July 9, 2023
By The Daily Caller

JOSH HAMMER: Democrats Cry Crocodile Tears About ‘Our Democracy’ While Trying To Tear It Down

Josh Hammer on July 9, 2023

At least as far back as the inauguration of President Donald Trump in January 2017 and the “Women’s March” that followed the next day, Democrats and left-wing activists have invariably complained about the imminent perils threatening “our democracy.” Time and again, Democrats have depicted virtually any action they do not approve of — from uncouth Trump tweets to state-level GOP-led election integrity initiatives to standard originalist Supreme Court picks — as ushering in proto-authoritarianism or “democratic backsliding,” to use the corporate media’s favorite term of art.

Taken at their word, Democrats and left-wing activists’ stipulated concerns about “our democracy,” which proliferated in particular after the Jan. 6, 2021, jamboree at the U.S. Capitol, would suggest a heightened concern with popular sovereignty and self-determination, and an acute opposition to consolidated governmental or corporate power. But Democrats and left-wing activists should not be taken at their word. Their actions tell a completely different story: For all their sanctimonious preening about the modern Republican Party’s purported threat to “our democracy,” prominent Democrats and left-wing activists have themselves led their own tremendous assault against American democracy.

Consider the U.S. Supreme Court, which the Constitution’s Framers intended as an anchor of “our democracy” insofar as it protects certain structural safeguards and individual rights against the excesses of majoritarianism run amok. In September 2018, Senate Democrats discarded millennia of “innocent until proven guilty” civilizational norms with their vicious, unhinged and unprecedented character attack on then-Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh. That weekslong Democratic disinformation campaign, meant to mark a soon-to-be Supreme Court justice with a permanent scarlet letter as a “rapist,” culminated with grassroots progressives quite literally banging on the door as Kavanaugh took his ultimate oath of office inside. How “democracy”-enforcing.

In March 2020, then-Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) stood on the steps of the Supreme Court to openly threaten Trump’s first two Court picks if they did not rule correctly in a forthcoming abortion decision. Schumer intoned: “I want to tell you (Justice Neil) Gorsuch. I want to tell you (Justice Brett) Kavanaugh. You have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. You won’t know what hit you if you go forward with these awful decisions.” That outburst triggered a rare public rebuke from the typically mild-mannered Chief Justice John Roberts: “Threatening statements of this sort from the highest levels of government are not only inappropriate, they are dangerous.” Later that same year, Trump’s nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the high court elicited nonstop hysterical comparisons of — and risible public demonstrations about — the “Handmaid’s Tale” dystopia that would come if Barrett’s nomination succeeded.

On May 2, 2022, in an unfathomable and unprecedented breach of democratic norms, a draft of the forthcoming abortion decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization was leaked to Politico. Curiously, the leaker has never been “found,” or at least publicly identified, but the evidence and basic incentive structure overwhelmingly point to a clerk for a liberal justice or perhaps even one of the liberal justices him/herself. Following the leak — in an action the leaker surely could have reasonably anticipated, and perhaps even desired — a deranged pro-abortion California leftist named Nicholas Roske flew to the nation’s capital with a plan to assassinate Justice Kavanaugh. Roske thankfully aborted his scheme at the last minute.

While Roske was the only confirmed assassination attempt of that stressful post-Dobbs leak/pre-Dobbs decision period, countless other leftists protested outside the right-leaning justices’ private homes in Virginia and Maryland and attempted to intimidate them to change their votes in Dobbs, in flagrant violation of 18 U.S. Code Section 1507. To the surprise of no one, Attorney General Merrick Garland never brought any charges.

More recently, in the aftermath of the just-completed Supreme Court term, many notable Democrats have resuscitated the threat of court-packing, which had momentarily died down following the ambiguous conclusions and recommendations of President Joe Biden’s “Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States,” which disbanded on Dec. 8, 2021. (It is curious that Democrats have chosen to do this now, even as this term had fewer 6-3 “ideological” splits than the prior term and even as the two justices who found themselves in the Court majority least frequently this term were the two most consistent conservatives, Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas.)

There are few threats as vehemently anti-“democratic” as that of packing the Supreme Court. As even the Democrat-dominated Senate Judiciary Committee concluded in its bone-chilling 1937 report issued after Democratic presidential icon FDR’s own court-packing proposal: “Let us of the Seventy-fifth Congress, in words that will never be disregarded by any succeeding Congress, declare that we would rather have an independent Court, a fearless Court, a Court that will dare to announce its honest opinions in what it believes to be the defense of the liberties of the people, than a Court that, out of fear or sense of obligation to the appointing power, or factional passion, approves any measure we may enact. We are not the judges of the judges. We are not above the Constitution.”

Consider also the extraordinary preliminary injunction granted earlier this week by Judge Terry Doughty in the case of Missouri v. Biden, which pertains to what this column has previously referred to as the Biden Regime’s intentional “collapse” of the “‘public’-‘private’ distinction.” In a whirlwind 155-page ruling, Judge Doughty validated the plaintiffs’ complaints that the Biden administration eroded the First Amendment by dictating that social media companies censor specific users, accounts and posts to tamp down on COVID-19 “disinformation” and “misinformation.” In Doughty’s own words, that should terrify anyone even remotely concerned about the actual state of American democracy: “The United States Government seems to have assumed a role similar to an Orwellian ‘Ministry of Truth.’” Yikes.

But the Biden Regime disagrees. Indeed, the administration has already appealed the grant of the preliminary injunction to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. We should not mince words here: The Biden Department of Justice is appealing to the Fifth Circuit for the “right” to jawbone putatively “private” companies into censoring disfavored online speech when it comes to certain sensitive subjects that implicate Regime priorities. That is simply astonishing. So much for “our democracy”; the Left would prefer that the “public” and “private” merge together to squash all who dare to dissent from Regime orthodoxy. In political science 101 class, most freshmen learn that this is a trademark trait not of “democracy,” but of “fascism.”

In reality, the Left’s crocodile tears about the fate of “our democracy” can be easily explained by the fact that when Democrats and left-wing activists speak of “democracy,” they really mean “progressivism.” It is quite a sleight of hand. The victim of that sleight of hand, unfortunately and ironically, is actual American democracy itself.

To find out more about Josh Hammer and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

July 9, 2023 0 comments
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Netanyahu bristles at protests as Israel’s judicial reform edges ahead

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

By Steven Scheer

JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday summoned his attorney-general to explain the police’s handling of resurgent demonstrations against his plan to overhaul the justice system, as the reform bill edges ahead.

The bill that would limit “reasonableness” as a standard of judicial review – and which critics argue would open the door for abuses of power – is scheduled for the first of three ratification readings in parliament on Monday.

Critics say such reforms curb court independence. Netanyahu – who is on trial on graft charges he denies – says the aim is to restore balance among branches of government.

Compromise talks hosted by Israel’s president between the government and opposition stalled last month. Street protests that had subsided are flaring anew.

“An agreement is attainable. And yet, still no one is willing to sit down and talk, now, without preconditions. This is a blunder of historic proportions,” said President Isaac Herzog, whose post is largely ceremonial.

Protesters plan to converge on Israel’s main airport as parliament debates the “reasonableness” bill. A major mall chain announced a one-day shutdown if Monday’s vote passes.

In televised remarks before the cabinet session, Netanyahu said it was “unthinkable” that his religious-nationalist coalition would abridge the right to demonstrate or support any violence against protesters.

But he argued such freedom should not be extended to “violations of the law that harm the basic rights of millions of citizens and are taking place on an almost daily basis,” citing disruptions at Ben Gurion Airport, calls for disobedience within the military, main road closures and the heckling of elected officials.

He said Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara must “give an accounting” at Sunday’s cabinet. As the meeting began, Israeli media carried leaked quotes of some ministers calling for her to quit.

Baharav-Miara, according to a person briefed on the session, said she hoped the government was not asking her to say a more aggressive crackdown was needed even if it was inconsistent with the judgement of police commanders on the ground and prosecutors.

“I hope the government does not expect the law-enforcement apparatus to maintain ‘quotas’ of arrests or indictments of protesters,” she was quoted as saying.

Announcing the plan to shut all 24 of its malls on Tuesday, Big Shopping Centers called the “reasonableness” bill, if it passes its first reading, a “serious step on the way to clearly illegal governmental corruption, and another step on the way to dictatorship”.

“Such legislation would be a fatal blow to Israel’s business and economic certainty and would directly and immediately endanger our existence as a leading company in Israel,” it added in an open letter.

Shares of Big fell 3.1%. Cabinet minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said he would boycott Big unless it retracted what he deemed its politicised “bullying”.

The furore has dented the economy. TheMarker financial news site on Sunday estimated economic losses of some 150 billion shekels ($41 billion), citing weaker shares and the shekel, and higher inflation as a result of a more than 5% drop in the shekel versus the dollar that has helped fuel inflation and the cost of living.

($1 = 3.6951 shekels)

(Additional reporting by Dan Williams; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Sharon Singleton)

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At least 300 migrants missing at sea near Spanish Canary Islands, aid group says

by Reuters July 9, 2023
By Reuters

MADRID (Reuters) – At least 300 people who were travelling on three migrant boats from Senegal to Spain’s Canary Islands have disappeared, migrant aid group Walking Borders said on Sunday.

Two boats, one carrying about 65 people and the other with between 50 and 60 on board, have been missing for 15 days since they left Senegal to try to reach Spain, Helena Maleno of Walking Borders told Reuters.

A third boat left Senegal on June 27 with about 200 people aboard.

The families of those on board have not heard from them since they left, Maleno said.

All three boats left Kafountine in the south of Senegal, which is about 1,700 kilometres (1,057 miles) from Tenerife, one of the Canary Islands.

“The families are very worried. There about 300 people from the same area of Senegal. They have left because of the instability in Senegal,” Maleno said.

The Canary Islands off the coast of West Africa have become the main destination for migrants trying to reach Spain, with a much smaller number also seeking to cross the Mediterranean Sea to the Spanish mainland. Summer is the busiest period for all attempted crossings.

The Atlantic migration route, one of the deadliest in the world, is typically used by migrants from sub-Saharan Africa. At least 559 people – including 22 children – died in 2022 in attempts to reach the Canary Islands, according to data from the U.N.’s International Organisation for Migration.

(Reporting by Graham Keeley; Editing by David Holmes)

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