Categories
-Top News India News

With G-20 Presidency, India assumes leadership on world stage

India has announced that its G20 Presidency will comprise around 200 events covering 32 sectors to be held in 50-55 cities across all the states and Union Territories of the country. The endeavour would be to create a uniquely Indian experience which is spiritually invigorating and intellectually rejuvenating, writes Ashok Sajjanhar

India takes over the Presidency of the G20 (Group of 20) countries, one of the most consequential amongst current day multilateral bodies, on December 1. This decisively signals the emergence of India as a significant player on the global scene.

While most countries in the world, both developed and developing, have found it difficult to effectively handle the challenges thrown up by the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, India, through its bold and visionary leadership and prudent policies, has been, thus far, able to successfully navigate the headwinds it has encountered.

The G20 is an international forum which includes 19 of the world’s largest economies including both industrialized and developing nations, and the European Union. Its core mandate is to address the major challenges related to the global economy and financial architecture such as international financial stability, climate change mitigation, and sustainable development among others. It seeks to evolve public policies to resolve them.

Together, the G20 members represent 85% of the global gross product; 75% of international trade; two thirds of the world population; 80% of global investments in research and development, and 60% of the world land area.

Because the G-20 is a forum, its agreements or decisions are not legally binding but they do influence countries’ policies and spur global cooperation.

The G20 is small and cohesive enough to allow concrete in-person discussions to find solutions to the new challenges on the international economic and financial agenda, and is broad and inclusive enough to represent the vast majority of world economic production.

The G20 was conceived in 1999, while the repercussions of the Mexican peso crisis (1994), Asian financial crisis (1997) and the Russian ruble crisis (1998) were still being felt. In a meeting of finance ministers and presidents of central banks of the G7, it was decided to expand the group and make it more representative in order to generate policies that would have a wider impact on the global economy. A group of key emerging economies was invited to a new forum of finance ministers and presidents of Central Banks. This became the G20.

The G20 was upgraded to the Summit level from the finance ministers and presidents of central banks, and became the main instrument to face the global financial crisis of 2007-’08 and beyond.

While economic and financial issues tend to lead the agenda, other areas have gained prominence in recent years. New additions include participation of women in the labour market, sustainable development, global health, fight against terrorism and inclusive ventures, among others.

The group’s stature has risen significantly during the past decade. It is, however, also criticized for its limited membership, lack of enforcement powers, and for the alleged undermining of existing international institutions. Summits are often met with protests, particularly by anti-globalization groups.

The G20 seeks to enrich the content of its dialogues by encouraging the participation of civil society through affinity groups. Each of them focuses on an issue of global importance and meets independently throughout the year. From the dialogue in the various meetings, each group delivers a series of recommendations to the G20. Currently, the affinity groups comprise of: Business 20 (B20), Civil 20 (C20), Labour 20 (L20), Science 20 (S20), Think 20 (T20), Women 20 (W20), Youth 20 (Y20).

On the conclusion of the Indonesian presidency, India will assume the leadership of the G20 from 1st December, 2022.

Releasing the logo, theme and web-site of India’s G20 Presidency on 8th November, 2022, PM Modi stated: ‘’India’s G20 presidency is coming at a time of crisis and chaos in the world. The world is going through the after-effects of a disruptive once-in-a-century pandemic, conflicts and lot of economic uncertainty.’’

The world has been subjected to huge instability and volatility over the last 3 years and more. The Covid-19 pandemic adversely affected all the 200 countries of the world in health and social as well as economic arenas.

The ongoing conflict in Europe has had global implications through high inflation, shortages of food, fertilizers and energy, unsustainable debts, supply chain disruptions and more. In addition, the challenges of climate change, terrorism, nuclear proliferation, achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and others continue to unsettle the global economy and community. It is in these circumstances that India has been entrusted with the responsibility of steering the activities of the G20 in the coming year.

Because of its impressive performance in handling the shocks of the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, India has emerged as a beacon of hope in an otherwise dark and gloomy global scenario.

The logo released by PM Modi  is in the vibrant colours of India’s national flag – saffron, white and green, and blue with the Earth reflecting India’s pro-planet approach to life, one in perfect harmony with nature. The lotus is symbolic of what is auspicious, pure, eternal, and detached. Inclusion of the lotus in the logo denotes success amidst the current challenges faced across the globe. A senior official in the government who was part of the decision-making process said, “Lotus is known for its ability to bloom unblemished in the murkiest of waters. It is a poignant symbol for humanity to emerge victorious from its challenges.”

During its presidency, India is committed to focusing on issues of critical importance to the world. The theme identified by India for its presidency is ‘’One Earth, One Family, One Future.’’ This flows from the philosophy of ‘’Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam’’ (The World Is One Family) which appears in our ancient scriptures and forms the foundation of our foreign policy. The logo and the theme together convey a powerful message of India’s G20 Presidency for just and equitable growth for all as the world navigates through turbulent times. The logo, theme and website reflect India’s message and overarching priorities during its presidency of the G20.

The concept of LiFE was introduced by PM Modi during the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference of Parties (COP26) in Glasgow, 2021. Mission LiFE was launched by PM Modi in the presence of UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres at the Statue of Unity, Gujarat in October, 2022. Mission LiFE is envisioned as an India-led global mass movement that will encourage individual and collective action to protect and preserve the environment. India can be expected to highlight LiFE as a critical focus area for discussion and action during its presidency.

India, as a result of its own experience, particularly during the pandemic, believes that digital technology and digital public platforms are key to deepening engagements of government with citizens, reducing corruption, and promoting expeditious delivery of services and financial transactions. Digital solutions to traditional problems have transformed and elevated the lives of people across the world. During India’s presidency, it would like to share its success stories in this field for the benefit of the global community.

Photo taken on Nov. 12, 2022 shows the logo for the upcoming 17th Group of 20 (G20) Summit outside Apurva Kempinski, the main venue for the summit in Bali, Indonesia. (Xinhua/Wang Yiliang/IANS)

India will aspire to deliver outcomes in areas of critical interest such as integrating the climate and development agenda, accelerating progress towards achieving the SDG 2030 mandate, furthering development cooperation, supporting small and marginal farmers, enhancing food security and nutrition, addressing global skill gaps, promotion of blue economy and coastal sustainability, digital health solutions, green hydrogen and tech-enabled learning.

India would also like to promote the outreach and potential of its initiatives in the climate change and disaster risk reduction spheres as envisaged in the International Solar Alliance and Coalition for Disaster Risk Initiative projects.

India would like to ensure that the G20 stays committed to its original mandate of dealing with the financial and economic challenges and not allow important but extraneous geo-political issues like the Russia-Ukraine conflict to adversely impact the broader agenda. The G20 should exhibit the necessary leadership and flexibility to accommodate differences among its members to effectively deliver outcomes.

India has announced that its G20 Presidency will comprise around 200 events covering 32 sectors to be held in 50-55 cities across all the states and Union Territories of the country. The endeavour would be to create a uniquely Indian experience which is spiritually invigorating and intellectually rejuvenating.

While releasing the logo, theme and web-site of G20, PM Modi called upon all State governments, political parties and individuals to not look upon India’s G20 Presidency as the responsibility only of the Central government. This honour and prestige belongs to the whole country, he said, and there should be an ‘’all of the country’’ approach to make the year-long event successful and memorable.

Bangladesh, Egypt, Mauritius, Netherlands, Nigeria, Oman, Singapore, Spain and the UAE have been invited as “guest countries” at the event. All these are significant countries in their own right and close and strategic partners of India. There has been an uncomfortable feeling among several countries in the world that their voices and problems do not get the attention they deserve. India has invited these countries to provide a platform to their leaders to articulate their views, expectations and aspirations.

The G20 Leaders’ Summit will be held in New Delhi on 9-10 September, 2023. The Leader’s Summit would be the climax of the G20 process through the year which includes Sherpa meetings (in charge of carrying out negotiations and building consensus among leaders), working groups and special events.

In addition to the plenary meetings that will take place at the venue of the Summit, a significant takeaway from such mega, multilateral gatherings is the one-to-one bilateral deliberations that the participating countries are able to conduct. India being the host will have the opportunity to interact with all the visiting heads of states and governments and advance its bilateral partnerships with them to a significantly higher level. This is the first time that India can expect to receive all the top leaders of the most consequential countries of the world as well as the heads of several major international organizations and global bodies. It is expected that around 42 heads of states/governments and of multilateral agencies will visit India in September, 2023 to participate in the G20 Summit.

A successful year long G20 Presidency and Summit can be expected to provide a huge shot in the arm to India’s growing prestige and influence in the world.

Conclusion

India will receive the mantle of the G20 Presidency from Indonesia on 1st December, 2022. India will hand over the baton to Brazil at the end of November, 2023.It is for the first time in the history of the G20 that the troika comprising of the current, past and future Presidencies will comprise of three major developing and emerging economies. This provides a unique opportunity to India, supported by Indonesia and Brazil, to make a significant contribution to peace, security, stability and prosperity in the world.

(Ashok Sajjanhar is a former Ambassador of India to Kazakhstan, Sweden and Latvia. He is an Executive Council Member at the Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis and President, Institute of Global Studies. Views expressed are personal and exclusive to India Narrative)

(The article is carried under a special arrangement with indianarrative.com)

ALSO READ: Biden meets Widodo, Modi on sidelines of G20 summit

Categories
-Top News USA

It’s official: Trump announces 3rd bid for White House

The former President read from a teleprompter, which he had disparaged earlier as a prop for less accomplished speakers, and stuck to the script, which was also unusual…reports YASHWANT RAJ

Former US President Donald Trump has officially announced his third run for the White House, kicking off the 2024 presidential election cycle even as the country is still wrapping up the 2022 midterms, which have left him a much diminished figure on account of the defeat of Republican candidates backed by him.

“To make America great again, I am today announcing my candidacy for the President of the United States,” Trump announced at an event on Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago, his resort-cum-residence in Palm Beach, Florida.

The former President read from a teleprompter, which he had disparaged earlier as a prop for less accomplished speakers, and stuck to the script, which was also unusual. And, he seemed to lack the energy that he is known to display at campaign rallies.

It was a very mellowed version of Trump that Trump put up.

Trump also never once repeated his lies about losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden because of fraud, which appear to have been rejected summarily by voters in the November 8 midterm elections.

Candidates he backed rode those lies in the expectation of winning, but didn’t.

Trump’s case for seeking a second term was simply this: at the end of his administration in 2020, the US was in a great shape, and it’s been in decline under his successor.

“We were a strong nation and importantly, we were a free nation,” he said, adding: “But now we are a nation in decline. We are a failing nation. For millions of Americans, the past two years under Joe Biden have been a time of pain, hardship, anxiety and despair.”

Trump slammed Biden on inflation, Afghanistan, gas prices, immigration — influx of migrants at the southern border with Mexico, his pet theme — and for paying far too much attention to climate change when nuclear weapons posed a graver and more urgent threat to humanity.

By attacking Biden, Trump was setting it up as a direct fight between him and the president. He did not name any of the other Republicans who are said to be toying a run such as Ron DeSantis, the Governor or Florida, who has emerged as a frontrunner after his massive re-election victory.

Former Vice President Mike Pence is also said to be toying a run, as is former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Trump’s advisers had urged him to delay the announcement as the midterm isn’t over yet; there is a run for the Senate race in Georgia in December and Republicans wanted the party and donors to focus on it. But the former president wasn’t persuaded and there he was, becoming the first in.

President Biden, who is in Bali attending the G20 summit, has said he has every intention of running for a second term and will make an announcement sometime early next year after consulting his family.

But he is said to clearly relish running against the man he beat in 2016.

Biden tweeted what looked like an attack ad on Trump earlier Tuesday. In a split screen video, Biden is shown signing into law a massive investment on infrastructure, while Trump is shown promising that same investment, which in the end never came.

“Talking” is the caption for Trump, and “Delivering” for Biden.

The president posted another attack video around the time of Trump’s announcement, saying “Donald Trump failed America”.

The 2024 presidential election is well and truly underway.

ALSO READ: Big blow to Trump as Democrats keep control of Senate

Categories
-Top News USA

McCarthy likely to become next US House Speaker

McCarthy will be officially elected speaker in a vote on the floor of the House on January 3…reports Asian Lite News

Republican lawmakers re-elected Kevin McCarthy as their leader, moving him one step closer to speakership of the US House of Representatives, a position that will make him second in line to succeed the president after the vice-president.

McCarthy was elected in a closed-door voting, beating Representative Andy Biggs, a leading member of the Republican party’s Freedom Caucus, a group of ultra-conservatives.

McCarthy will be officially elected speaker in a vote on the floor of the House on January 3. He will need 218 votes in the 435-member chamber to make it through. The Republicans are still one vote shy of the majority number – they were at 217 to 204 of the Democrats, with 14 seats still undecided.

Republicans will get the House with a razor-thin majority, while Democrats will keep the Senate, which is a result few people could have anticipated on November 3, when polling ended for the 2022 US midterms.

Republicans were expected to win both chambers, especially the House and with a huge majority in keeping with history. The party in control of the White House has always lost the first midterm of the incumbent president’s first term, and by huge numbers. In 2010, President Barack Obama’s first midterm, Democrats lost the House by 63 seats; and in 2018, President Donald Trump’s first midterm, the Republicans lost the House by 41 seats.

McCarthy will be the next speaker in all likelihood, especially if he continues to be in the good graces of former President Trump. But he will be looking over his shoulders all the time.

ALSO READ: U.S. midterm polls give Biden a chance to course correct in Eurasia

Categories
-Top News UK News

UK to launch new visa scheme for Indians

The move comes as Sunak met Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the first time on the sidelines of the ongoing G20 summit in Indonesia…reports Asian Lite News

In a new scheme introduced by British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to fortify bilateral and economic ties, 3,000 Indians will be granted visas annually to come to the UK.

Under the new UK-India Young Professionals Scheme, the country will offer 3,000 places annually to 18-30 year-old degree educated Indian nationals to come to the UK to live and work here for up to two years.

The move comes as Sunak met Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the first time on the sidelines of the ongoing G20 summit in Indonesia.

“The Indo-Pacific is increasingly crucial for our security and our prosperity. It is teeming with dynamic and fast-growing economies, and the next decade will be defined by what happens in this region,” Sunak said in a statement released by the Prime Minister’s Office.

“I know first-hand the incredible value of the deep cultural and historic ties we have with India. I am pleased that even more of India’s brightest young people will now have the opportunity to experience all that life in the UK has to offer, and vice-versa, making our economies and societies richer.”

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak walks past Larry the Cat, Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office as he leaves 10 Downing Street to attend PMQ’s at the Houses of Parliament. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street

The scheme will be reciprocal.

Nearly a quarter of all international students in Britain are from India, and Indian investment into the UK supports 95,000 jobs across the UK.

“The launch of the scheme is a significant moment both for our bilateral relationship with India and the UK’s wider commitment to forging stronger links with the Indo-Pacific region to strengthen both our economies,” the Downing Street statement read.

The UK is also negotiating a trade deal with India, which would build on the UK-India trading relationship, already worth 24 billion pounds, and allow the UK to seize the opportunities presented by India’s growing economy.

ALSO READ: After FATF, Pakistan out of UK’s ‘High Risk Countries’ list

Categories
-Top News India News

Indian students in US universities increased by 19%

The rise in Indian students moving to the US is likely to overtake China in 2022-23, with 82,000 visas issued between June and August – the highest number among all countries…reports Asian Lite News

The presence of Indian students in American universities has increased by 19 per cent compared to the last year, and nearly 21 per cent of over one million foreign students are Indian students, a US government report said.

In 2021-22, 1,99,182 students with India as their place of origin were pursuing higher education in the US, as against 1,67,582 in 2020-21, according to the Open Doors Report, an annual survey on international students released Monday. In 2012-13, there were 96,654 Indian students in higher education in the US.

The rise in Indian students moving to the US is likely to overtake China in 2022-23, with 82,000 visas issued between June and August – the highest number among all countries.

The year 2021-22 saw 62,000 student visas being issued, said Don Heflin, Minister Counsellor for Consular Affairs at the US embassy in New Delhi.

In contrast, China fell behind India as strict quarantine norms and travel restrictions due to Covid made it harder for Chinese students to acquire visas. Heflin said that around 110,000-120,000 visas are issued to Chinese students, which fell to around 50,000.

In 2021-22, China and India collectively accounted for 52 per cent of all international students in the US, the report, which is sponsored by the US Department of State and implemented by the non-profit Institute of International Education (IIE), said.

China showed a drop of nine per cent in the latest round, with the number of Chinese students pursuing higher education in the US going down from 3,17,299 in 2020-21 to 2,90,086 in 2021-22.

A decade ago, there were 2,35,597 Chinese higher education students in the US. The rise in Indian numbers came after the slump caused by pandemic years.

Between 2018-19 and 2019-20, as well as 2019-20 and 2020-21, the number of Indian students enrolled in US universities had fallen by 4.4 per cent and 13.2 per cent respectively.

The 19 per cent increase in Indian students studying in America was largely driven by graduate students, Heflin said. A majority of Indian students chose Math and Computer Science, Engineering and Business, and Management, according to a US embassy official.

Overall, the total number of international students pursuing higher education in the US went up from 9.14 lakh in 2020-21 to 9.48 lakh in 2021-22.

“It is clear that Indian students and their parents recognize the value of US education, one that prepares them to leverage their newly gained know-how to tackle the world’s challenges and readies them for future opportunities, whether that’s in Artificial Intelligence, emerging technologies or entrepreneurship and innovation,” Gloria Berbena, minister counselor for Public Diplomacy, said.

ALSO READ: G20 hold tough on Russia

Categories
-Top News India News USA

Biden meets Widodo, Modi on sidelines of G20 summit

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden and Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo met on the sidelines of the ongoing G-20 summit in Bali in Indonesia…reports YASHWANT RAJ

Leaders of India, the US, and Indonesia on Tuesday reaffirmed their commitment to the G-20 as the premier body for global economic cooperation and discussed ways to use it to tackle climate change, food and energy crisis and other significant challenges facing the world.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden and Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo met on the sidelines of the ongoing G-20 summit in Bali in Indonesia, which is the outgoing chair of the group. India takes over the year-long rotating presidency in November and will host the next summit.

In a readout of the meeting released by the US, Biden congratulated Widodo for Indonesia’s “leadership to galvanise countries around the world to launch the Financial Intermediary Fund (FIF) for Pandemic PPR hosted by the World Bank (Pandemic Fund) to address gaps in pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response”.

He added: “This success has laid the foundation to take forward substantive health-finance collaborations during India’s G-20 presidency.”

Indonesia’s presidency of the group came at a troubled time for the global economy, which was hit by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine just as it was recovering from the debilitating effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. The world was divided politically and economically and Indonesia came under pressure from the western G-20 member countries to not invite President Vladimir Putin of Russia, which is a member of the group, to the summit and when Jakarta did not budge, they pressured it to invite Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy. In the end, Putin himself resolved the issue by skipping the summit meeting. Some analysts are calling this summit the G-19 summit.

Russia was expelled from the G-7 group of countries for invading Ukraine in 2014 and annexing Crimea.

President Biden also reaffirmed US commitment to supporting the G20’s global leadership “for developing improved and innovative financing models for multilateral financial institutions to provide solutions to challenges like climate change, pandemics, economic fragility, reducing poverty and achieving SDGs, and to support inclusive development, strengthen economic security and global supply chains.They also discussed the importance of leveraging public and private financing to close the infrastructure gap”.

“President Biden applauded Indonesia’s G20 Presidency for its efforts on a successful G20 Leaders’ Summit,” the readout said further, adding: “He looks forward to continuing to support the G20’s work under India’s Presidency.”

ALSO READ: G20 hold tough on Russia

Categories
-Top News EU News

EU to plug defence spending gaps with €70 bn by 2035

Pieter Wezeman, a senior researcher at Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, told Euronews that it is these areas where the focus will be…reports Asian Lite News

EU countries are planning to increase their defence expenditure by €70 billion by 2025 in order to fill existing capability gaps, according to the EU’s foreign policy chief.

Speaking in Brussels at a meeting of the bloc’s defence ministers, Josep Borrell also said the European Commission is pushing to procure weapons jointly across the EU, similar to the model used to obtain vaccines during the pandemic.

“The important thing is to go together, to avoid splitting the market, to avoid competition,” Borrell told reporters on Tuesday.

“We have to avoid what happened with the vaccines. Everybody together, altogether, makes for a better price, better quality, and better time.”

Some analysts argue that a dash for new weapons without a set of rules risks making a highly fragmented market even more disjointed.

They also say that the EU countries which have supplied weapons to Ukraine are now seeing gaps in certain areas of their weapons stockpiles, including munitions, artillery grenades and certain types of missiles.

Pieter Wezeman, a senior researcher at Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, told Euronews that it is these areas where the focus will be.

“When it comes to really standard types of equipment, such as ammunition, where the sums are involved, the financial sums involved are not necessarily that high.” Wezeman said.

“I think it is quite reasonable to expect that such cooperation can take place and again, within the NATO framework, we have seen really good examples of that.

“But when we talk about larger projects, when we talk about, let’s say, the acquisition of combat aircraft, ships, tanks, there is a long history of attempts to operate within the EU or within NATO, and often enough they have failed.

Wezeman added there’s also concern that this process can take a very long time – even years, if not decades – to come to an agreement on what to acquire, who will make it, and who will take the lead role.

ALSO READ-India a leading player on Climate Action: European report

Categories
-Top News USA

US media change tune after midterms

Biden has lost just 11 seats in the Congress against Trump’s 40, Clinton’s 50 and Obama’s 63 in the November midterms, a rare feat. Yet both Obama and Clinton won their 2nd term in office in the White House…writes T.N. Ashok

Even as Democrats celebrate retaining control of the US Senate by winning 50 seats and reducing the margin in the House, US President Joe Biden faces innumerable challenges in the remaining two years of his term with which the Senate coincides and over 1400 key appointments of his hang in the balance to courts, cabinet, legislatures and ambassadors.

The US Media, which predicted largely a ‘Red Wave’ under former President Donald Trump against inflation, is now changing its tune and calling Biden’s retention of the Senate and narrowing losses in the House of Representatives, as a ‘Blue Tsunami’ that was not a referendum on the President’s governance or economic policies, but more about Trump and his choice of “racist and extreme right wing” candidates.

“Democrats are celebrating their retention of the Senate as their singular victory and rejection of GOP’s right wing extremism,” the Washington Post said in a report.

Democrats on Sunday celebrated retaining their majority in the Senate after Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) was reelected, even as they were not sure they could retain control of the House having won just 204 seats against 212 of the Republicans. Catherine’s victory got the vital 50th Senate seat for Democrats and quashed Republican hopes of retaking control of both chambers of Congress, as many had predicted in the weeks leading up to Election Day, media reports said.

“When far-right Republicans said they knew better, I knew we would prove them wrong,” Cortez Masto said in a victory speech Sunday after winning the vital Nevada seat. With the Senate runoff in Georgia next month between Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D) and Republican Herschel Walker, Democrats have a chance to pick up a 51st seat, a stunning feat in a midterm election year that typically does not favour the party in power.

Biden has lost just 11 seats in the Congress against Trump’s 40, Clinton’s 50 and Obama’s 63 in the November midterms, a rare feat. Yet both Obama and Clinton won their 2nd term in office in the White House.

The Georgia seat is of utmost importance to the Democrats, which they are likely to win on December 6, because that win would ensure that Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer (D) does not have to enter into a power sharing agreement with the Republicans and can get Biden to confirm his judicial appointments to different courts after being reelected as the Senate majority leader.

Another significant breakthrough for the Democrats is that all the Senate committees under the chairmanship of Democrats will continue to function and there would be no disruption or discontinuity in their work, many of them are investigating committees such as the Congressional panel on Jan 6 Capitol Hills insurrection, political analysts observed.

Schumer on Saturday night called the results a “vindication” for the Democratic agenda and a rejection of Republican extremism. Rep. Chris Pappas (D-N.H.) clinched a third term – a feat that hasn’t happened in his district in 25 years – he hammered Trump acolyte Karoline Leavitt for her stances on social security, the Post said.

In a stunning reverse, Democrats flipped a seat in a red leaning district in Washington State as Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez beat Trump-backed Republican challenger Joe Kent.

The former president promoted Kent in the primary over Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler, who voted to impeach Trump after the Jan 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The TIME magazine said that the current tally had Republicans leading with 211 seats. And Democrats are lagging behind at 204 of the 218 needed to gain control of the House, but ballots were still being counted in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Maine, Oregon and New York. The 2022 Midterm Election defied odds with Democratic candidates delivering major upsets and retaining more Senate and House seats than expected following Tuesday’s vote.

Political pundits had long predicted a red wave, with many pointing to the president’s low approval rating at 41 per cent since September 2021 that never climbed and rising inflation as a strong campaign that could influence Americans to support a conservative majority. But that did not fructify, the publication said.

CNN, a “confirmed supporter” of the liberals that provoked Trump to call it the Clinton News Network, said that the Democratic Party pulled off a midterm election for the record books. Midterms are for the opposition party to shine, especially as in November this year when there is once in a generation inflation making the vast majority of Americans think that country is on the wrong track.

Instead, Biden and the Democrats are in a position to have one of the four best midterms for the party controlling the White House in the last century, CNN analysts observed.

In the November midterms, voters punished Republican candidates who were perceived as “too extreme” – on issues such as abortion and/or for being too closely tied to the former President, tainted by the alleged Capitol Hill’s insurrections, tax frauds and spiriting away top secret documents to his Florida home.

Biden has followed the pattern of 1934, 1962 and 2002, monumental achievements for the president’s party and major exceptions to rule, that an incumbent party always lost seats in a midterm.

Democrats victory has cascaded down into the state legislatures as well as the blue party has for the first time since 1934 had a net gain of governorships in a president’s first midterm. Only Ronald Reagan had a net gain of governorship in 1986 though he lost heavily in the senate.

NBC news network quoted a study by Edison Research to say that the 2022 midterm election turned out to be nearly as much of a referendum on the defeated former president Trump than it was on incumbent president Biden. Edison cited exit polls to advance its argument against Trump’s campaign and wrong selection of candidates boomeranging on him.

Trump loomed large in the minds of voters and dragged down his party’s candidates – nationally and in key swing states, despite being out of power. This took the edge off the impact of Biden’s unpopularity and widespread economic pain, helping Democrats buck a political gravity to pull them down but hold their own, reports said.

In a nationwide poll, 32 per cent of voters in 2022 had earlier said they opposed Biden, but 28 per cent said their vote was “to oppose Trump”, even though Trump was out of office. The former president’s continued dominance over the GOP made the 2022 election, in the minds of voters, almost as much about a defeated former president as it was about the current president and party in power.

“It was a Trump problem, and independents didn’t vote for candidates they viewed as extreme and too closely linked with the former president”. The exit polls suggested that Independent voters constituted 31 per cent of the electorate who favored Democrats over Republicans by a margin of 49 per cent to 47 per cent. This was a significant departure from the past midterms.

ALSO READ: G20 hold tough on Russia

Categories
-Top News Asia News

After FATF, Pakistan out of UK’s ‘High Risk Countries’ list

In April 2021, the UK government added Pakistan to the list of undesirable 21 high-risk countries with unsatisfactory money laundering and terrorist financing controls…reports Asian Lite News

In recognition of the effective measures taken by Pakistan against money laundering and terror financing, the US has now officially removed the nation from its list of “High Risk Third Countries”.

Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari announced the “good news” while sharing a letter of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office on Twitter, Geo News reported.

“Some good news. The UK has officially removed Pakistan from its list of ‘High Risk Third Countries’ following our early completion of FATF action plans,” he tweeted.

“His Majesty’s Treasury issued an amendment to the UK’s High-Risk Third Countries’ list ON November 14, 2022, through a Statuary Instrument. The amendment removes Pakistan from the list in accordance with the decision taken by the FATF on October 21, 2022,” the official document read.

“The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office recognizes the progress Pakistan has made to improve money laundering and terrorist financing controls.”

In April 2021, the UK government added Pakistan to the list of undesirable 21 high-risk countries with unsatisfactory money laundering and terrorist financing controls, Geo News reported.

This list of 21 countries, released by the UK government, replicated the list of countries named by the FATF as high-risk or under increased monitoring. Pakistan shared the list at number 15 with conflict-ridden countries such as Syria, Uganda, Yemen and Zimbabwe.

However, last month (October) the FATF, a Paris-based global money-laundering and terrorism-financing watchdog, finally removed Pakistan from its grey list after four years.

The global body’s President Raja Kumar had announced that Pakistan’s name has been removed from the “grey list” as the country addressed all 34 points of the action plan.

ALSO READ: Pakistan’s default risk surges significantly
Categories
-Top News Asia News

India, Indonesia share rich legacies: PM Modi

The Prime Minister further said that India is a ray of hope for the world in the 21st century, adding that “today’s India doesn’t think small…reports Asian Lite News

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday said that both India and Indonesia have been partners in good and bad times and also have shared legacies and culture.

Addressing a gathering of the Indian diaspora in Bali, he said that in 2018, when Indonesia was affected by an earthquake, India immediately started operation Samudra Maitri.

“That year (2018) when I came to Jakarta, I had said that India and Indonesia may be 90 nautical miles apart, but in reality, we are not 90 nautical miles apart but 90 nautical miles close,” he said.

Invoking the Ram temple which is coming up in Ayodhya, Modi said: “At a time when the grand Ram Temple is taking shape in India, we also proudly remember the Ramayana tradition of Indonesia.”

The Prime Minister further said that India is a ray of hope for the world in the 21st century, adding that “today’s India doesn’t think small. Today India is doing work at unprecedented scale and speed”.

Modi further added that a few months back India celebrated its 75th Independence Day on August 15, while Indonesia’s Independence Day falls on August 17.

“But Indonesia was fortunate to attain independence two years before India. There is a lot that India can learn from Indonesia. But in its 75-year-old long development journey, there is a lot that India can give to Indonesia. India’s talent, technology, innovation, industry have made an identity for themselves before the world. Several big companies of the world have an Indian-origin CEO,” Modi added.

ALSO READ: G20 hold tough on Russia