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|    seattle.politics    |    Whats happening in the land of Nirvana    |    102,158 messages    |
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|    Message 101,760 of 102,158    |
|    a425couple to All    |
|    =?UTF-8?Q?Can_anyone_stop_Europe=E2=80=9    |
|    19 Dec 25 15:58:59    |
      [continued from previous message]              Europe, populists echo Donald Trump’s dangerous belief that the       continent will be safer if it is less united, and if each state pursues       its national interests. They also show a blinkered weakness for the       autocrats in Russia and China. Vladimir Putin must be cheering them on.       National elections are 18 months away in France, due in March 2029 in       Germany and as late as August 2029 in Britain. Much can change in that       time. If mainstream politicians spend it shrilly demonising populists,       they will doubtless make themselves feel better, but they will not help       their countries. They would be wiser to subject governments-in-waiting       to the democratic scrutiny they deserve. ■              -----------------------       By Edward Carr Deputy editor The Economist. Think back to the       presidential campaign Joe Biden (and then Kamala Harris) fought against       Donald Trump. The Biden camp’s clinching argument was supposed to be       that Mr Trump was a threat to democracy and the Republic. It didn’t       wash: Mr Trump took back power with a bigger share of the vote than in       2016, when he beat Hillary Clinton. I was reminded of all that in our       cover package on the European populist right this week. As we report,       support for the Alternative for Germany, National Rally and Reform UK is       surging. In response, the very respectable leaders of Britain, France       and Germany have warned of the catastrophe facing Europe. Just last       week, Britain’s prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, told Zanny Minton       Beddoes, The Economist’s editor-in-chief, that Reform UK was a challenge       to “the very essence of who we are as a nation”. The doctrines of the       populist right do indeed contain much to condemn. Yet talking about them       in apocalyptic terms is destined to fail. The doom-mongering of       mainstream politicians smacks of an attempt to draw attention away from       their own failures in office. Given the strikingly normal way Giorgia       Meloni is running Italy, their apocalyptic predictions are not credible.       For their own sake, and for the good of their countries, mainstream       politicians and their supporters urgently need a different approach. On       the Insider show this week, Zanny and I debate China’s rise with two of       our experts, David Rennie and Alice Su. This year we have run a series       of covers on China’s successes—in artificial intelligence, green tech       and industries such as pharma and driverless taxis. We have also said       that it is winning the trade war against America. In the show we assess       China’s economic and geopolitical power, before probing its strengths       and weaknesses. You can watch us now on the Insider hub.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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