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Biden budget plan highlights differences ahead of elections

By - Mar 12,2024 - Last updated at Mar 12,2024

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden's ambitious 2025 budget proposal, published on Monday, is almost certain to be dead on arrival in the sharply divided US Congress ahead of national elections later this year.

Instead, the 2025 budget serves as a blueprint of the administration's policy priorities, and highlights the sharp divisions between Democrats and Republicans ahead of Biden's likely rematch with former president Donald Trump in November.

In a speech in Washington on Monday before the proposals were published, Biden touted the US economy as a "great comeback story".

"Nearly 15 million new jobs created so far, that's a record. Growth is strong. Wages are rising. Inflation is down," he said.

Here's what is in the budget proposal, why it is unlikely to pass in Congress, and what it means for the upcoming elections:

The $7.3 trillion budget plan contains a number of populist measures proposed previously — without success — including a 25 per cent minimum tax rate for the wealthiest Americans, and a hike in the corporate tax rate from 21 per cent to 28 per cent.

It includes plans to strengthen social spending programs, such as restoring a popular child tax credit, and allocates almost $260 billion to “build or preserve” 2 million housing units, according to a statement from the White House.

In line with Biden’s previous proposals, the 2025 budget would ensure that “people making under $400,000 will not pay a single penny more in taxes,” Biden’s budget director, Shalanda Young, told reporters on Monday.

 

Question over deficit? 

 

Under Biden’s plan, the deficit over the next decade would be $3 trillion lower than under its current trajectory, according to White House estimates. However, the national debt — currently at $34.5 trillion — would continue to increase.

The reduction to the deficit would be paid for through increased taxes for the wealthy and corporations, and by “closing tax loopholes and cutting wasteful spending on Big Pharma, Big Oil, corporate jets and other special interests, and cracking down on wealthy tax cheats”, according to the White House statement.

“The investments in the president’s budget are fully paid for,” US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

She added that the deficit reduction would come “through a combination of smart savings and tax proposals that ensure wealthy individuals and large corporations pay their fair share”.

While many of the policies in this budget proposal are popular with the Democratic base, they face stiff opposition from Republicans as well as more moderate Democrats and independents in Congress, underscoring the challenge the administration now faces.

“The price tag of President Biden’s proposed budget is yet another glaring reminder of this administration’s insatiable appetite for reckless spending and the Democrats’ disregard for fiscal responsibility,” Republican leaders, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, wrote in a statement posted to X, formerly Twitter.

“Biden’s budget doesn’t just miss the mark — it is a roadmap to accelerate America’s decline,” they claimed, accusing the president of seeking to “advance his left-wing agenda”.

 

Could it pass? 

 

Given the stalemate between Republicans and Democrats over the current budget — which has yet to be fully adopted — Congress is highly unlikely to pass anything resembling Biden’s proposal by the end of the current fiscal year on September 30.

Given the looming elections, in which all seats in the House of Representatives and one third of the Senate are up for grabs, along with the presidency, the divisions between the two parties are only likely to grow in the coming months.

Consequently, Monday’s budget proposal reads as more of a wish list of progressive policy proposals for the campaign trail than a long-term plan for funding the US government.

 

NATO prepares for Russian threat in harsh Arctic

By - Mar 12,2024 - Last updated at Mar 12,2024

Italian Marines take position during an amphibious assault demonstration, part of the Nordic Response 24 military exercise on Sunday, at sea near Sorstraumen, above the Arctic Circle in Norway (AFP photo)

BADDEREN , Norway — Finnish conscript Atte Ohman readied himself aboard a US landing ship to storm a snow-swept Norwegian beach as part of a rapid response unit pushing out an invading enemy.

"There is a saying that 'if you want to keep the peace, you need to prepare for war'," the 19-year-old corporal told AFP, clutching his automatic rifle.

"That's what we're doing."

The simulated assault on NATO's frigid Arctic fringe was part of its sprawling, four-month Steadfast Defender exercise — the largest drills staged by the US-led military alliance since the Cold War.

Swedish gunboats sped to shore, Italian paratroopers abseiled from helicopters, and French marines emerged on skis.

The message was clear — NATO is prepared to protect itself in the face of an increasingly aggressive Russia two years into the Kremlin's war on Ukraine.

Last week the alliance got even larger as Sweden became its 32nd member almost a year after its Nordic neighbour Finland joined.

"We're signalling that we are ready to defend our territories and that's very important at the same time as strengthening our capabilities to operate together," Swedish Defence Minister Pal Jonson told AFP, after watching tanks from his country engage in a mock battle on the Norwegian-Finnish border.

"Right now the Russian ground forces are bogged down in Ukraine, but Russia has stated high ambitions to reconstitute itself and adapt its force posture."

As Russia has begun turning the tide on outgunned Ukrainian troops, there have been warnings that Moscow could one day turn its sights on a member of the alliance.

Kyiv's western allies meanwhile have struggled to ramp up production of crucial weaponry, and support for Ukraine is wavering.

Norway's defence chief Eirik Kristoffersen said the number of Russian forces stationed near his country is currently just one fifth of the number before Moscow's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

“But on the maritime side, on the air side, and on the nuclear side, they’ve kept their forces intact in our region,” he told AFP.

“You have this uncertainty about for how long they will continue to lose so much versus Ukraine and then how long will it take for them to rebuild their military.”

 

Arctic focus 

 

One increasingly crucial area of competition with Russia is the harsh Arctic region where the exercise was staged.

Under President Vladimir Putin, Russia has ramped up its capabilities in the region where melting ice due to global warming looks set to open up vital shipping routes and resources.

Now with the membership of Sweden and Finland, seven of the eight Arctic countries are in NATO and the allies say they’re increasingly pushing to compete with Moscow in this vital region.

The Arctic is becoming hugely strategic and “that’s why Russia is investing here a lot, and China is also watching this area,” said Finland’s defence minister Antti Hakkanen.

“The Artic is a new focus area. We must invest in the capabilities to act here in the normal military fields but also in the intelligence side and other fields,” he added.

Rear Admiral David Patchell, deputy commander of the US Second Fleet, said a conservative estimate was that climate would open up resources worth $1 trillion in the region. At the same time, melting ice would mean the Artic would link oceans around the globe for navigation.

“We have to know how to work in the Arctic,” he told AFP.

“We’re playing catch-up but I would say we’re cognisant of Russia’s priority, and they are placing a significant priority on the Arctic.”

Testing troops and hardware from across NATO in punishing Arctic conditions is a key focus of these exericises with the alliance’s Nordic members sharing their expertise.

“It’s a very big shock to come into working conditions like this. We rarely see snow like this on a daily basis,” said US Marine Corporal Joshua Maddox, who deployed from the temperate climes of North Carolina in the southern United States.

“The biggest challenge is just the mental aspect — just being very prepared.”

The Steadfast Defender drill — which involves warships sent from the US in a sign of Washington’s commitment — comes after Donald Trump rattled the foundations of the alliance.

The former president, the Republican challenger to Joe Biden in November elections, warned last month that he would encourage Russia to attack members not meeting financial commitments.

S. Korea starts process to suspend licences of 4,900 striking doctors

By - Mar 12,2024 - Last updated at Mar 12,2024

SEOUL — South Korea said on Monday it had started procedures to suspend the medical licences of 4,900 junior doctors who have resigned and stopped working to protest government medical training reforms, causing healthcare chaos.

The walkout, which started February 20, is over government plans to sharply increase the number of doctors, which it says is essential to combat shortages and serve South Korea’s rapidly ageing population. Medics argue the increase will erode service quality.

Nearly 12,000 junior doctors — 93 percent of the trainee workforce — were not in their hospitals at the last count, despite government back-to-work orders and threats of legal action, forcing Seoul to mobilise military medics and millions of dollars in state reserves to ease the situation.

The health ministry on Monday said it had sent administrative notifications — the first step towards suspending medical licences — to thousands of trainee doctors after they defied specific orders telling them to return to their hospitals.

“As of March 8 [notifications] have been sent to more than 4,900 trainee doctors,” Chun Byung-wang, director of the health and medical policy division at the health ministry, told reporters.

The government has previously warned striking doctors that they face a three-month suspension of their licences, a punishment it says will delay by at least a year their ability to qualify as specialists.

Chun urged the striking medics to return to their patients.

“The government will take into account the circumstance and protect trainee doctors if they return to work before the administrative measure is complete,” he said, indicating that doctors who come back to work now could avoid the punishment.

“The government will not give up dialogue. The door for dialogue is always open... The government will respect and listen to opinions of the medical community as a companion for the medical reforms,” he added.

 

Military mobilised 

 

The government last week announced new measures to improve pay and conditions for trainee medics, plus a review of the continuous 36-hour work period, which is a major gripe of junior doctors.

The strikes have led to surgery cancellations, long wait times and delayed treatments at major hospitals.

Seoul has denied that there is a full-blown healthcare crisis, but Chun said that military doctors will start working in civilian hospitals from Wednesday this week.

The government is pushing to admit 2,000 more students to medical schools annually from next year to address what it calls one of the lowest doctor-to-population ratios among developed nations.

Doctors say they fear the reform will erode the quality of service and medical education, but proponents accuse medics of trying to safeguard their salaries and social status.

Under South Korean law, doctors are restricted from striking, and the health ministry has asked police to investigate people connected to the work stoppage.

The plan enjoys broad public support, but a new poll by local media found some 34 per cent of people believe the warring sides should start negotiating properly.

“Doctors and the government are not in a boxing ring,” said an editorial published on Monday in the Kyunghyang Shinmun newspaper, urging Seoul and the doctors to resume talks.

“People’s patience is wearing thin... The exit from this quagmire must be found through dialogue between the two sides,” it added.

 

Portugal faces uncertainty after knife-edge election

By - Mar 12,2024 - Last updated at Mar 12,2024

Democratic Alliance leader Luis Montenegro celebrates his victory as he addresses supporters at the party’s election night headquarters, in Lisbon on Sunday (AFP photo)

LISBON — Portugal looked set on Monday for a period of political uncertainty after no party won a majority in the election at the weekend and the far-right surged into the role of potential king maker.

The centre-right Democratic Alliance (AD), which won the most seats in Sunday’s vote, is expected to be tapped in coming days to try to form a government.

AD beat the incumbent Socialist Party (PS), but took just 79 seats — far short of a majority in the 230-seat parliament.

Even with the backing of tiny business-friendly party Liberal Initiative, the AD would still need the support of anti-immigration party Chega to reach a majority of 116 seats in the assembly.

Chega posted the biggest gains winning 48 seats, up from just 12 in the last election in 2022, cementing its position in Portugal’s political landscape.

It has demanded to be part of a right-wing coalition government in exchange for parliamentary support, but AD leader Luis Montenegro repeatedly ruled out any post-election agreement with the party branded as xenophobic by its critics.

“Given the distribution of seats, we should not expect much stability,” Filipa Raimundo, a political science professor at Lisbon’s ISCTE university, told AFP.

“It is hard to know how much the opposition parties will be willing to cede to support the minority government.”

‘Challenge is great’ 

 

Javier Rouillet of ratings agency Morningstar DBRS said passage of the 2025 budget will likely be “the first major test” for an AD minority government which “could face significant obstacles to legislating over time and require support on a case-by-case basis”.

“If the new government is unable to pass legislation, this could raise the prospect of another round of elections later this year or early next year,” he added.

While Socialist leader Pedro Nuno Santos has said his party would refrain from bringing down a centre-right minority government he warned it would vote against its first budget.

“We will be the opposition, we will renovate the party and we will seek to win back the Portuguese who are dissatisfied with the PS,” he said early on Monday after the results were out.

Faustino Lopes Baiao, a 70-year-old newspaper vendor, said the election results show voters were “fed up” with Portugal’s two mainstream parties.

“Maybe this will change things a bit for the better,” he told AFP in central Lisbon.

The AD campaigned on promises to boost economic growth by slashing taxes which the Socialists had warned would require cuts to pensions and other social spending.

“We know the challenge is great. It is going demand a great sense of responsibility, a great capacity for dialogue,” Montenegro said in his victory speech.

 

‘Far-right advance’

 

The election results mark another advance for the far-right in Europe, where they either already govern — often in coalition — in countries such as Italy, Hungary and Slovakia, or are steadily gaining, as in France and Germany.

Chega, which means “Enough”, calls for stricter controls over immigration, tougher measures to fight corruption and chemical castration for some sex offenders.

Formed just five years ago, Chega picked up its first seat in Portugal’s parliament in 2019. It was the first far-right party to win representation in the assembly since a military coup in 1974 toppled a decades-long right-wing dictatorship.

There are still four seats left to be assigned representing Portuguese who live abroad, but those results will not be known for days. They have traditionally gone mostly to the centre-right.

The election was called after Socialist Prime Minister Antonio Costa, 62, unexpectedly resigned in November following an influence-peddling probe that involved a search of his official residence and the arrest of his chief of staff.

Though Costa himself was not accused of any crime, he decided not to run again.

 

Right-wing nationalists rising — and divided — as EU vote looms

By - Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

 

BRUSSELS, Belgium — Right-wingers pushing nationalist and Eurosceptic policies are rubbing their hands ahead of EU elections in June.

Voter surveys show growing support for their platforms, which will likely translate into bigger influence over the bloc’s political agenda.

However, a closer look reveals deep splits in the right-wing camp — especially over attitudes toward Russia — that would prevent a united front.

In the European Parliament, far-right forces are settled into two political groups which are mostly rivals and have failed at attempts to join together.

One is the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR). The other is the Identity and Democracy group (ID).

“ECR is pro-Ukraine, pro-enlargement, pro-NATO. ID is ambivalent about Russia, anti-Atlanticist, anti-enlargement,” explained Peggy Corlin, analyst at the Robert Schuman Foundation.

ECR counts Brothers of Italy, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s far-right party, in its ranks, along with Spain’s Vox, Poland’s populist Law and Justice (PiS), and France’s Reconquete!.

ID is made up of France’s National Rally (RN) whose face is Marine Le Pen, as well as Italy’s League Party, Germany’s anti-immigrant AfD, Austria’s FPO and Geert Wilders’ PVV Freedom Party from The Netherlands.

“ECR is more integrated into the EU political game and in the institutional game,” Corlin said. It has two main figureheads: Meloni and Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala.

ID, in contrast, has up to now been treated as something of a political pariah by the other parliamentary groupings.

“The group will take on more importance, to such an extent that I think they can no longer cut us out as they have done since 2019,” predicted one of its EU lawmakers, Jean-Paul Garraud of France’s RN.

Political alliances 

 

However, even within ID there are tensions between those wanting it to appeal more to mainstream voters, as the RN is striving to do, and the likes of AfD -- which is suspected of harbouring neo-Nazi sympathisers.

Those tensions were laid bare recently when Le Pen publicly distanced herself from the AfD after reports that several of its leaders held a meeting with extremists in which they discussed massively deporting immigrants or Germans of foreign backgrounds.

“We want clarification about what happened, and especially the policies held by the AfD,” Garraud said. “We want to be in agreement with our allies.”

The likely bigger ECR and ID footprints in the parliament could create difficulties for the legislature’s three main groups: the conservative European People’s Party (EPP), from which European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen hails; the leftist Socialists & Democrats (S&D); and the centrist Renew Europe.

The majority decisions those three managed to work out in the past could be upset on certain issues.

The EPP has not ruled out working with ECR — although von der Leyen recently warned she would never cooperate with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “friends” or enemies of “the rule of law”.

That is an allusion to Fidesz, the party of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who maintains close ties to the Kremlin and has put obstacles in the path of EU aid for Ukraine. Fidesz is in talks to join ECR.

“Let’s see what that brings,” said Akos Bence Gat, an expert at the think tank MCC Brussels that is backed by Hungary’s government.

“For me, what’s important is for the sovereignist right-wing to be able to come together and form effective cooperation,” he said, adding that he saw scope for areas of agreement to defend “a Europe of nations” that upholds “traditional values” and battles “massive immigration”.

 

Internal rifts 

 

But if Fidesz does join the ECR, that could prompt other parties in the group, such as Finland’s Finns Party, or the Sweden Democrats, “to reconsider their position”, noted Sanna Salo, a researcher at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs.

But, beyond the internecine rifts, “If there is a shift to the right... they can influence the agenda in other ways,” she said, for instance by pushing governments towards their restrictive migration and climate policies.

Already on migration, the EPP seems ready to embrace the far right’s stance: its latest manifesto vows to have asylum-seekers sent to “safe” countries outside the EU.

That echoes what Britain is trying to do under a deal with Rwanda, which has already run afoul of the European Convention on Human Rights, on which EU law in this area is based.

 

Kyiv slams Pope's 'white flag' call, vows no surrender to Russia

Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

Pope Francis addresses the crowd from the window of the apostolic palace overlooking St Peter's square during his Sunday Angelus prayer at the Vatican on Sunday (AFP photo)

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine on Sunday slammed Pope Francis's call to negotiate with Russia two years into its invasion, vowing "never" to surrender after the pontiff said Kyiv should "have the courage to raise the white flag".

The 87-year-old Catholic leader fuelled anger in Kyiv this weekend after he said in an interview that Ukraine should negotiate with Russia, which has seized large swathes of its territory in the offensive.

It is not the first statement by Pope Francis during Moscow's invasion that has caused outrage in Ukraine. The pontiff has also made statements slammed by Russia.

"Our flag is a yellow and blue one. This is the flag by which we live, die and prevail. We shall never raise any other flags," Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.

He was responding to the Pope's interview to Swiss broadcaster RTS in which the Catholic leader raised the prospect of surrender — two years after Kyiv has battled Russian forces on its territory.

"I believe that the strongest are those who see the situation, think about the people, and have the courage to raise the white flag and negotiate," Pope Francis said in an interview the Vatican said was conducted in early February.

In a sign of how angered Kyiv was, Ukrainian officials compared the statement to some of the Catholic Church collaborating with Nazi Germany in World War II.

"At the same time, when it comes to the white flag, we know this Vatican strategy from the first half of the 20th century," Kuleba said, calling on the Holy See to "avoid repeating the mistakes of the past".

Ukraine's ambassador to the Vatican, Andrii Yurash, went further by comparing the Pope's negotiation suggestion to talking to Adolf Hitler:

"[The] lesson is only one — if we want to finish war, we have to do everything to kill [the] Dragon!," he said on social media.

After the interview was aired, Francis offered fresh prayers for "martyred Ukraine", as Vatican officials said his call was simply intended to end fierce fighting.

On Saturday evening, the Vatican issued a statement insisting the Pope’s use of the phrase “white flag” — a widely used sign of surrender on the battlefield — was intended to mean “a cessation of hostilities, a truce reached with the courage of negotiation”.

But the Pontiff’s words were widely understood as a call for surrender and slammed by some Western diplomats.

“Russia is the aggressor and breaks international law! Therefore Germany asks Moscow to stop the war, not Kyiv!”, said Bernhard Kotsch, Germany’s envoy to the Vatican.

Kuleba said Kyiv hoped Francis would visit his war-torn country after more than two years of battling its bigger neighbour.

“We continue to hope that after two years of devastating war in the heart of Europe, the Pontiff will find an opportunity to pay an Apostolic visit to Ukraine to support over a million Ukrainian Catholics, over 5 million Greek-Catholics and all Ukrainians,” Kuleba said.

Francis drew criticism in the first months after Russia’s February 2022 invasion for failing to name Moscow as the aggressor.

He was also criticised by Ukraine last year when he allegedly praised Russian imperial leaders Peter the Great and Catherine II.

The Pontiff has also caused upset in Russia, when he said in winter 2022 that its “cruellest” forces in Ukraine were “not of the Russian tradition”, but minorities like “the Chechens, the Buryati and so on”.

The Vatican then officially apologised to Moscow.

Last year, Pope Francis appointed a top cardinal to try to broker peace in Ukraine who has visited Moscow, Kyiv, Washington and Beijing.

 

Biden and Trump spar on immigration, age in battleground Georgia

By - Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

WASHINGTON — US President Joe Biden and presumptive White House challenger Donald Trump traded barbs Saturday on the key topics of age and immigration, as they targeted the battleground state of Georgia.

Biden, hoping to ride the momentum from a feisty State of the Union speech on Thursday, went to the state's capital of Atlanta to mobilise Black and Hispanic voters.

He once again attacked his Republican predecessor, who has vowed to be a "dictator" for one day.

"When he says he wants to be a dictator, I believe him," Biden told a rally, highlighting US economic strength while promising action to cut costs in areas such as housing, health and education.

In an interview with MSNBC aired Saturday night, Biden said he regretted using the term "an illegal" when referring to the killer of a nursing student last month in Georgia.

“I shouldn’t have used ‘illegal,’ it’s ‘undocumented,’” said Biden, who has been criticised by progressives and members of his own party for using terminology more commonly employed by Republicans.

Trump, who is pledging a crackdown on illegal immigration as a key plank of his campaign, talked at length during his rally on Saturday about the slain student.

“Laken Riley would be alive today if Joe Biden had not willfully and maliciously eviscerated the borders of the United States,” he told a crowd of supporters in Georgia’s Republican-leaning northwestern corner.

He slammed Biden for backtracking on his use of the word “illegal” to describe the Venezuelan suspect in the crime, saying, “Biden should be apologising for apologising to this killer.”

At his rally, Trump also pretended to be a stuttering Biden, mocking his 81-year-old opponent.

Biden’s campaign launched a TV ad Saturday in which the president directly addresses his advanced age, a major concern among voters.

“Look, I’m not a young guy. That’s no secret. But here is the deal. I understand how to get things done for the American people,” he says in the spot.

Trump’s team quickly responded with a video message that starts with Biden’s statement, followed by clips of the president stumbling, falling or looking confused.

Georgia was so closely divided in the 2020 election — carried by Biden by fewer than 12,000 votes — that Trump infamously phoned a top state official to ask him to “find” a few thousand extra votes.

Among his many legal woes, Trump faces criminal charges in Georgia of working to overturn the state’s election results.

 

The twin appearances in Georgia come days after Trump nearly swept the key Super Tuesday primaries, forcing out his last Republican rival, Nikki Haley.

Biden dominated in his own party’s nominating contests. He and Vice President Kamala Harris plan to visit all the battleground states in coming weeks, his campaign said.

Georgia was long reliably Republican but has become more competitive.

Recent polls show Trump holding an edge there — as they do in most of the swing states that may determine the outcome of the November election.

Biden’s campaign announced a $30 million “buy” of television commercials in the closely divided states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina.

 

Fresh test for Meloni in Italy regional vote

By - Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

ROME — Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni faces a fresh test from regional elections on Sunday in Abruzzo, two weeks after a vote in Sardinia delivered her first defeat since taking office.

Meloni and members of her hard-right coalition government have been campaigning hard in the central region, keen to avoid a loss that could give the leftist opposition momentum ahead of European elections in June.

The current president of Abruzzo, Marco Marsilio, in 2019 became the first regional president from Meloni’s far-right Brothers of Italy Party, and is standing again.

While publishing opinion polls is illegal in the run-up to elections, media reports suggest a tight race with centre-left candidate Luciano D’Amico.

The university rector is backed by the main opposition Democratic Party and the Five Star Movement, as well as two small centrist parties.

Deeply divided, Italy’s opposition parties have struggled to make headway against Meloni since she took office in October 2022, with nationwide opinion polls giving Brothers of Italy a consistent seven- or eight-point lead.

But the Sardinia election on February 25 gave them hope, even if the joint Democratic Party-Five Star candidate only triumphed by less than 2,000 votes.

Voters in both Sardinia and Abruzzo are fickle — for the past two decades, the presidency in each region has switched every five years from left to right and back again.

This would suggest Marsilio would break the mould by being re-elected.

Local factors such as healthcare also play a key role in voting behaviour, analysts emphasise.

But Meloni has taken no chances in a region she herself represents in parliament, sending more than a dozen ministers to campaign, who have announced a number of investments.

She also staged a joint rally in Pescara on Tuesday with her coalition partners, Matteo Salvini of the far-right League and Antonio Tajani of the right-wing Forza Italia.

A defeat for Meloni “would certainly amplify the enthusiasm and motivation” among her opponents, noted Giovanni Orsina, political scientist at Rome’s Luiss University, in an article in Sunday’s La Stampa newspaper.

By contrast, he wrote, Marsilio’s re-election for the right “would bring the emotional needle back... more or less where it was before the Sardinian vote, largely cancelling its effect”.

Polls close at 11:00pm (22:00 GMT) on Sunday, with final results expected on Monday.

Seven missing after floods snare cars in southern France — official

By - Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

A bridge submerged by the flooded Gard river is pictured in Dions, on Sunday, following heavy rain (AFP file photo)

DIONS, France — French rescue workers were on Sunday searching for seven people, including two children, missing after violent storms swept the south of the country with most believed to have been swept away in cars on flooded bridges.

A family of four, including two children aged four and 13, was caught in the floods while trying late Saturday evening to drive across a bridge over the river Gardon in the village of Dions, north of the city of Nimes, the prefecture said.

The father and the two children were still missing but the mother, 40, who was also in the car, was found by rescuers and taken to hospital, it added.

In Dions on Sunday a helicopter flew over the village and the bursting waters of the Gardon while large numbers of firefighters engaged in search efforts, helped by drones and dogs. The bridge was still submerged.

Rescuers were also searching for two women, believed to be aged 47 and 50, who made an emergency call on a bridge in the town of Goudargues to the north before contact was lost.

Another driver, of Belgian nationality, was also missing and feared to have been swept away from a bridge in the village of Gagnieres also in the Gard department. The road had been closed and a policeman had told the driver not to drive on the bridge, officials said.

A passenger in his vehicle, also Belgian, managed to get out and take refuge in a tree, before being rescued after more than two hours amid the branches.

In the neighbouring department of Ardeche, the manager of a hydroelectric power station who went to check on the facility has also been missing since Saturday evening in the village of Saint Martin de Valamas. Searches are continuing.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said rescuers had carried out a total of 35 operations as the storm and torrential rains swept across the Ardeche and Gard departments. He added that all the vehicles swept away had been found but there was still “not a trace” of those missing.

The prefecture in the Gard department expressed regret that despite multiple warnings about the incoming storm, “we still see behaviour that is dangerous, first of all for the people themselves but also dangerous for the people whose duty it is to come to their aid.”

Portugal votes with centre-right poised to oust Socialists

By - Mar 10,2024 - Last updated at Mar 10,2024

This photograph taken on Sunday, shows a list of candidates at a polling station in Parque das Nacoes, Lisbon, during the legislative elections held in Portugal (AFP photo)

LISBON — Voters in Portugal went to the polls Sunday in an early election that could see the country join a shift to the right across Europe after eight years of Socialist rule.

Final opinion polls published Friday show the centre-right Democratic Alliance (AD) narrowly ahead of the Socialist Party (PS) but short of an outright majority in parliament, which could make the far-right party Chega a king maker for forming a governing coalition.

But analysts warned the results of the election, Portugal’s second in two years, remained wide open given the large number of undecided voters.

Voting stations in the nation of around 10 million people opened at 8:00am (08:00 GMT) with exit poll projections expected at 8:00pm.

“These elections represent a possible change, there would be little point in doing otherwise,” Pedro Resende, a 56-year-old security officer, told AFP at a polling station in Telheiras, a modern upper middle class neighbourhood in northern Lisbon.

The AD has campaigned on promises to boost economic growth by cutting taxes, and to improve the country’s public services.

“We really must turn the page,” the party’s leader, 51-year-old lawyer Luis Montenegro told a packed final rally at Lisbon’s bullring on Friday night.

He has ruled out any post-election agreement with Chega, but other top AD officials have been more ambiguous.

Analysts say a deal with the anti-establishment party may prove the only way for the AD to govern.

 

Far-right gains 

 

Chega’s leader Andre Ventura, a former trainee priest who went on to become a television football commentator, has said his party is “as legitimate as the others”.

Chega, which means “Enough”, calls for tougher measures to fight corruption, stricter controls over immigration and chemical castration for some sex offenders.

Just five years old, Chega picked up its first seat in Portugal’s 230-seat parliament in 2019, becoming the first far-right party to win representation in the assembly since a military coup in 1974 toppled a decades-long right-wing dictatorship.

It increased its seats to 12 seats in 2022 and polls suggest it could more than double that number this time. 

That would mirror gains by far-right parties across Europe, where they already govern — often in coalition — in countries such as Italy, Hungary and Slovakia, or are steadily gaining, as in France and Germany.

The election was called after Socialist Prime Minister Antonio Costa, 62, unexpectedly resigned in November following an influence-peddling probe that involved a search of his official residence and the arrest of his chief of staff.

Though Costa himself was not accused of any crime, he decided not to run again.

 

‘Time for a change’ 

 

On his watch unemployment has dropped, the economy expanded by 2.3 per cent last year — one of the fastest rates in the eurozone — and public finances have improved.

But surveys indicate many voters feel Costa’s government squandered the outright majority it won in 2022 by failing to improve unreliable public health services and education or address a housing crisis that has sparked large street protests in what remains one of Western Europe’s poorest countries.

“From my point of view things have worsened a bit. It’s time for a change,” Bernardo Guerra, a 28-year-old personal trainer, told AFP after casting his ballot at a high school in central Lisbon.

“In Portugal there is a lot of corruption, Portugal has a bad image abroad... I hope a new government improves this situation.”

The Socialists’ new leader, 46-year-old former infrastructure minister Pedro Nuno Santos, has defended the government’s record even as he acknowledges it could have done better in some areas.

“The right thinks they’re going to win the election with their usual arrogance and lack of humility. It’s the Portuguese people who will decide,” he said at his final rally on Friday night.

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