Meet Fiona Hill: Inside the collapse of Theresa May’s government

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Meet Fiona Hill: Inside the collapse of Theresa May’s government Listen on Spotify Apple Music Google Play EN_Google_Podcasts_Badge Created with Sketch. Stitcher .st0{fill:#EB8A23;} .st1{fill:#FAC617;} .st2{fill:#612368;} .st3{fill:#3792C4;} .st4{fill:#C33727;} Acast Co-host Aggie Chambre sits down for a rare interview with former Downing Street chief of staff Fiona Hill to talk about her central role in Theresa May’s first government, the astonishing highs and di...

Istanbul lays bare Turkey’s electoral fault lines

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Istanbul lays bare Turkey’s electoral fault lines “Nothing will be the same.”In a country still reeling from last month’s devastating earthquake, these words from Istanbul’s Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu highlight how the disaster now entirely pervades and steers national politics — with significant potential consequences for the two-decade-long rule of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who faces an election on May 14. İmamoğlu is one of the main opposition politicians seeking to eject the sitting president from power in two months time, and it has escaped no one’s attention that Erdoğan before him had used the Istanbul mayorship as a springboard to national office. And while Turkey’s opposition has rallied behind former bureaucrat Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu as the unity candidate to defeat Erdoğan in the race for the presidency, İmamoğlu has been identified as a vice-president in the wings. Addressing a crowd that greeted him with rapturous applause, İmamoğlu’s main theme at the March 1 event was the need to steel Istanbul itself —...

Missing! The mystery of Britain’s vanishing workforce

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Missing! The mystery of Britain’s vanishing workforce LONDON — It’s a mystery testing the finest minds in Whitehall.What exactly has happened to more than half a million British workers who have vanished from the U.K. workforce since the outbreak of COVID-19?U.K. Treasury officials have been left scratching their heads by statistics showing that while unemployment is at a historic low, there are 516,000 more working-age Brits classed as “economically inactive” than there were before the pandemic.The collapse in productivity has served a crippling blow to the already-struggling British economy, which the IMF predicts will be the only major Western economy to shrink in 2023.The scale of the problem is such that U.K. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt now plans to make tackling economic inactivity one of the centerpieces of his first budget statement next week. “The U.K. is really quite unique among rich countries in having had a persistent fall in the size of its workforce after the pandemic,” said Xiaowei Xu, senior research econo...

Bravo Poland for supporting Ukraine. Now make nice with Germany

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Bravo Poland for supporting Ukraine. Now make nice with Germany Arndt Freytag von Loringhoven is a senior adviser at Berlin Global Advisors. He is a former German Ambassador to Poland.As Ukraine’s staunchest supporter, Poland’s place both in Europe and the world has been transformed. And with United States President Joe Biden recently completing his second visit to the Polish capital — even though he’s yet to visit Berlin or Paris — Europe’s heart, so it seems, now beats in Warsaw.Yet, the Polish government’s ongoing nationalist, illiberal policies continue to undermine Europe’s unity at the very same time.From a personal perspective, as a former German Ambassador to Poland, the most painful — and counterproductive — part of Polish policy is its antagonism toward my country. And if Europe is to succeed in beating Russian aggression, Warsaw and Berlin must learn to work together.Before Russia’s invasion, U.S.-Polish relations had hit rock bottom. As a presidential candidate, Biden cited Poland alongside Belarus as a ...

Move over Trump, Johnson and Fabricant, there’s a new terrible haircut in town

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Move over Trump, Johnson and Fabricant, there’s a new terrible haircut in town Welcome to Declassified, a weekly humor column.That sound you can hear is Michael Fabricant screaming in anger.Fabricant is a British member of parliament far better known for what we might charitably call his haircut than for any of his political beliefs (although this week he did say that older people are better at spelling, which is competlie nonspence).Imagine someone cosplaying as Boris Johnson never having actually seen Boris Johnson and you’re getting close to the horror show that is Fabricant’s hair do (maybe hair don’t would be better). It looks very much like a wig but he says he isn’t, although he has admitted that “there is some — but only some — enhancement of the follicular area.”Anyway, Fabricant would almost certainly be horrified if he knew that he is now not even close to having European politics’ oddest haircut. Please welcome to the stage Rain Epler, a former government minister from the Estonian nationalist party EKRE, who was...

Submarine scramble: Tech issues could threaten 3-nation megaplan for the Pacific

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Submarine scramble: Tech issues could threaten 3-nation megaplan for the Pacific On Monday, the leaders of the U.S., U.K. and Australia will gather in San Diego on the edge of the Pacific Ocean to announce how they plan to work together to build nuclear-powered submarines for the Australian navy.The AUKUS agreement, a sprawling military pact first announced 18 months ago, promises to bring seismic changes to how the world’s most secretive military technologies are shared among allies, with strategic implications on how the three longtime friends can band together to stare down China in the coming decades.The three governments have agreed to a highly complex three-part deal that will come in stages to stagger the massive industrial muscle movements necessary to carry it through, according to two people close to the talks. The people, like others interviewed for this story, requested anonymity to speak about the deal before it is formally announced.Most immediately, Australia is expected to serve as a forward base for a small number of U.S. submarines by the end o...

Zelenskyy has no choice but to ask his fighters to hold Bakhmut — for now

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Zelenskyy has no choice but to ask his fighters to hold Bakhmut — for now Jamie Dettmer is opinion editor at POLITICO Europe.French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was famously averse to retreating. “However skillfully effected a retreat may be, it always lessens the morale of an army,” he noted. “In a battle the enemy loses practically as much as you do; while in a retreat you lose and he does not.”Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appears to be of like mind — over the course of the war, he was reluctant to pull out of the salt-mining town of Soledar earlier this year after a nearly six month-long fight, and he has now rejected calls to withdraw from an even more prolonged and ferocious fight in nearby Bakhmut.There’s been some behind-the-scenes disquiet among the Ukrainian ranks about continuing with this almost 9-month-long battle at Bakhmut. And earlier this week, United States Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters that “if the Ukrainians decide to reposition, I wouldn’t view that as an operational or strategic setback.”Russia, meanwhile, has...

‘No one wanted to employ me’: Fiona Hill lifts the lid on life after Downing Street

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

‘No one wanted to employ me’: Fiona Hill lifts the lid on life after Downing Street LONDON — Theresa May’s all-powerful former chief of staff Fiona Hill has revealed her despair at being fired from Downing Street in 2017, and told how she struggled for “years” to find work in the aftermath.Hill — one of the most powerful women in Britain as May’s joint-chief of staff in No. 10 — was forced to resign amid a flurry of bad headlines after the disastrous 2017 general election, in which May lost her majority. In a rare interview with POLITICO’s Westminster Insider podcast, Hill said she was “in shock” after the June 2017 result and unable to find work for an extended period.“I was worried about money and I was worried about what I would do next,” she said.“I remember thinking — ‘I do not want to become a bitter person,’” she added. “I read the prayer of St. Francis of Assisi over and over again. It was almost like doing the rosary or something. “It was just something in my head, I was fixated with it. I kept saying to m...

Sunak and Macron seek Indo-Pacific team-up at Paris summit

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

Sunak and Macron seek Indo-Pacific team-up at Paris summit LONDON — Rishi Sunak and Emmanuel Macron will discuss combining British and French military resources in the Indo-Pacific region when the pair meet Friday.At a bilateral summit in Paris — the first between a British prime minister and a French president in five years — the two leaders are expected to send a strong message of unity to the Kremlin and pledge continued support to Ukraine in its fight against Russia.And No. 10 Downing Street said ahead of the meeting that the pair will talk about ways to ensure a permanent presence of like-minded European allies in the Indo-Pacific, where China is increasingly assertive.This could include an agreement to place European warships permanently in the region by alternating the deployment of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales carriers and France’s Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier.Sunak’s official spokesman told reporters that Europe’s security “is indivisible from Indo-Pacific security, so the U.K. will work together to incr...

North End residents discuss neighborhood’s outdoor dining debate

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 02:37:32 GMT

North End residents discuss neighborhood’s outdoor dining debate A group of residents in Boston’s North End neighborhood gathered Thursday to discuss developments in the neighborhood’s ongoing debate over outdoor dining. The North End Residents’ Association held the meeting to hear what community members had to say. Speaking during the event, some backed recent actions by Mayor Michelle Wu, saying they don’t want outdoor dining in the area.“People don’t understand, it’s not just cars on the street, there are all of the serving stations, there are the umbrella tables, there are the dividers between restaurants,” Mary McGee told 7NEWS.“There are ten thousand plus residents and everybody seems to have forgotten about us,” McGee continued. Boston city officials announced new outdoor dining rules earlier this year requiring restaurants in the North End to take tables off streets. Under the new policy, outdoor dining in the North End will be limited to sidewalks and patios. Where some residents have celebrate...