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Norway PM worried by Musk involvement in politics outside US

Norway PM worried by Musk involvement in politics outside US
Tesla CEO and X owner Elon Musk listens as US President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with House Republicans at the Hyatt Regency hotel in Washington, DC, U.S. on November 13, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 January 2025

Norway PM worried by Musk involvement in politics outside US

Norway PM worried by Musk involvement in politics outside US
  • The German government accused Musk of trying to influence Germany’s upcoming election
  • Musk spent more than $250 million to help Trump get elected

OSLO: Norway’s Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere said on Monday that he found it worrying that billionaire Elon Musk was involving himself in the political issues of countries outside of the United States.
Musk, a close ally of US President-elect Donald Trump, last month endorsed a German anti-immigration, anti-Islamic political party ahead of that country’s national elections in February, and recently made remarks on British politics.
“I find it worrying that a man with enormous access to social media and huge economic resources involves himself so directly in the internal affairs of other countries,” Stoere told Norwegian public broadcaster NRK.
“This is not the way things should be between democracies and allies,” he added.
If Musk were to involve himself in Norwegian politics, the country’s politicians should collectively distance themselves from such efforts, Stoere said.
Musk, the world’s richest person, spent more than $250 million to help Trump get elected and has been tasked by Trump to prune the federal budget as a special adviser.
The German government last week accused Musk, who owns social media platform X and is CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, of trying to influence Germany’s upcoming election with a guest opinion piece for the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.
German Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck said Musk’s support for Germany’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) was a “logical and systematic” play by the billionaire for a weak Europe that will not be able to regulate as strongly. 


US appeals court finds Trump’s tariffs illegally used emergency power, but leaves them in place for now

US appeals court finds Trump’s tariffs illegally used emergency power, but leaves them in place for now
Updated 22 sec ago

US appeals court finds Trump’s tariffs illegally used emergency power, but leaves them in place for now

US appeals court finds Trump’s tariffs illegally used emergency power, but leaves them in place for now
  • The ruling complicates Trump’s ambitions to upend decades of American trade policy completely on his own
  • Trump vows to elevate the case to the Supreme Court, saying the decision "would literally destroy" the US if allowed to stand

WASHINGTON: A federal appeals court ruled Friday that President Donald Trump had no legal right to impose sweeping tariffs but left in place for now his effort to build a protectionist wall around the American economy.
The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled Trump wasn’t legally allowed to declare national emergencies and impose import taxes on almost every country on earth, a ruling that largely upheld a May decision by a specialized federal trade court in New York.
But the 7-4 court did not strike down the tariffs immediately, allowing his administration time to appeal to the Supreme Court.
The president vowed to do just that. “If allowed to stand, this Decision would literally destroy the United States of America,” Trump wrote on his social medial platform.
The ruling complicates Trump’s ambitions to upend decades of American trade policy completely on his own. Trump has alternative laws for imposing import taxes, but they would limit the speed and severity with which he could act. His tariffs — and the erratic way he’s rolled them out — have shaken global markets, alienated US trading partners and allies and raised fears of higher prices and slower economic growth.
But he’s also used the levies to pressure the European Union, Japan and other countries into accepting one-sided trade deals and to bring tens of billions of dollars into the federal Treasury to help pay for the massive tax cuts he signed into law July 4.
“While existing trade deals may not automatically unravel, the administration could lose a pillar of its negotiating strategy, which may embolden foreign governments to resist future demands, delay implementation of prior commitments, or even seek to renegotiate terms,” Ashley Akers, senior counsel at the Holland & Knight law firm and a former Justice Department trial lawyer, said before the appeals court decision.
The government has argued that if the tariffs are struck down, it might have to refund some of the import taxes that it’s collected, delivering a financial blow to the US Treasury.
“It would be 1929 all over again, a GREAT DEPRESSION!” Trump said in a previous post on Truth Social.
Revenue from tariffs totaled $142 billion by July, more than double what it was at the same point the year before. Indeed, the Justice Department warned in a legal filing this month that revoking the tariffs could mean “financial ruin” for the United States.
The ruling involves two sets of import taxes, both of which Trump justified by declaring a national emergency under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA):
— The sweeping tariffs he announced April 2 — “Liberation Day,’’ he called it — when he imposed “reciprocal’’ tariffs of up to 50 percent on countries with which the United States runs trade deficits and a “baseline’’ 10 percent tariff on just about everyone else. The national emergency underlying the tariffs, Trump said, was the long-running gap between what the US sells and what it buys from the rest of the world. The president started to levy modified the tariff rates in August, but goods from countries with which the US runs a surplus also face the taxes.
— The “trafficking tariffs’’ he announced Feb. 1 on imports from Canada, China and Mexico. These were designed to get those countries to do more to stop what he declared a national emergency: the illegal flow of drugs and immigrants across their borders into the United States.
The Constitution gives Congress the power to impose taxes, including tariffs. But over decades, lawmakers have ceded authorities to the president, and Trump has made the most of the power vacuum.
But Trump’s assertion that IEEPA essentially gives him unlimited power to tax imports quickly drew legal challenges — at least seven cases. No president had ever used the law to justify tariffs, though IEEPA had been used frequently to impose export restrictions and other sanctions on US adversaries such as Iran and North Korea.
The plaintiffs argued that the emergency power law does not authorize the use of tariffs.
They also noted that the trade deficit hardly meets the definition of an “unusual and extraordinary’’ threat that would justify declaring an emergency under the law. The United States, after all, has run trade deficits — in which it buys more from foreign countries than it sells them — for 49 straight years and in good times and bad.
The Trump administration argued that courts approved President Richard Nixon’s emergency use of tariffs in a 1971 economic crisis that arose from the chaos that followed his decision to end a policy linking the US dollar to the price of gold. The Nixon administration successfully cited its authority under the 1917 Trading With Enemy Act, which preceded and supplied some of the legal language used in IEEPA.
In May, the US Court of International Trade in New York rejected the argument, ruling that Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs “exceed any authority granted to the President’’ under the emergency powers law. In reaching its decision, the trade court combined two challenges — one by five businesses and one by 12 US states — into a single case.
In the case of the drug trafficking and immigration tariffs on Canada, China and Mexico, the trade court ruled that the levies did not meet IEEPA’s requirement that they “deal with’’ the problem they were supposed to address.
The court challenge does not cover other Trump tariffs, including levies on foreign steel, aluminum and autos that the president imposed after Commerce Department investigations concluded that those imports were threats to US national security.
Nor does it include tariffs that Trump imposed on China in his first term — and President Joe Biden kept — after a government investigation concluded that the Chinese used unfair practices to give their own technology firms an edge over rivals from the United States and other Western countries.
Trump could potentially cite alternative authorities to impose import taxes, though they are more limited. Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, for instance, allows the president to tax imports from countries with which the US runs big trade deficits at 15 percent for 150 days.
Likewise, Section 301 of the same 1974 law allows the president to tax imports from countries found to have engaged in unfair trade practices after an investigation by the Office of the US Trade Representative. Trump used Section 301 authority to launch his first-term trade war with China.
 


Human rights lawyers call for Netanyahu’s arrest on Argentine soil

Human rights lawyers call for Netanyahu’s arrest on Argentine soil
Updated 29 August 2025

Human rights lawyers call for Netanyahu’s arrest on Argentine soil

Human rights lawyers call for Netanyahu’s arrest on Argentine soil
  • The criminal complaint filed in Argentina federal courts calls for Netanyahu’s arrest in the country
  • Netanyahu was expected to visit Argentina in September

BUENOS AIRES: Human rights lawyers said on Friday they have filed a criminal complaint in Argentina’s federal courts seeking the arrest of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he sets foot in the country, amid reports of a possible visit in September that remains unconfirmed.

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT
The criminal complaint filed in Argentina federal courts calls for Netanyahu’s arrest in the country and an investigation into the Israeli political and military authorities for an incident on March 23 in which 15 people were executed, among them several first responders helping victims of a bombing, according to the complaint reviewed by Reuters.

Netanyahu was expected to visit Argentina in September, according to media reports, but the government has not confirmed the visit.

Argentina newspaper Clarin reported on Friday that Netanyahu may instead request a meeting with Argentina President Javier Milei while both leaders are in New York for the United Nations General Assembly at the end of September.

KEY QUOTE
“It is understood that Netanyahu is criminally responsible as a co-perpetrator of the war crime of intentionally causing death by starvation; of crimes against humanity such as homicide, persecution, and other inhumane acts,” said the complaint, which was filed by Argentine human rights attorney Rodolfo Yanzon and Raji Sourani, director of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights.

ADDITIONAL CONTEXT
An arrest warrant for Netanyahu had already been filed in Argentine federal courts in early August by the Association of State Workers (ATE) and the human rights group HIJOS.

The Israeli leader is facing mounting global pressure over Israel’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip, which has killed thousands of Palestinians and displaced most of the population.

Israel has faced accusations of genocide at the World Court while the International Criminal Court has separately issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu over war crimes accusations in Gaza. Israel and Netanyahu deny the charges.


White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy

White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy
Updated 29 August 2025

White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy

White House claims ‘foreign influence’ behind criticism of US envoy
  • “This story from Politico is journalistic malpractice,” Vance said
  • The officials did not offer evidence of any foreign party or government behind the story

WASHINGTON: The White House lashed out Friday what it called a “foreign influence operation” by German-owned US news outlet Politico after it criticized President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff’s Ukraine negotiations.

Vice President JD Vance slammed Politico, bought in 2021 by German media giant Axel Springer, over an article that quoted unnamed officials as saying Witkoff’s “inexperience shines through” in his talks with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

“This story from Politico is journalistic malpractice. But it’s more than that: it’s a foreign influence operation meant to hurt the administration and one of our most effective members,” Vance said on X.


A string of other White House officials made similar attacks, with Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair calling the article a “foreign influence operation run through a German-controlled online media outlet.”

The officials did not offer evidence of any foreign party or government behind the story.

The attacks came as Berlin and France cast doubt on whether Trump’s Ukraine peace efforts would bear fruit, with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz saying the war would last “many more months.”

Witkoff is a property tycoon whom Trump has named as his special envoy for peace talks to end the Ukraine and Gaza wars despite having no diplomatic experience.

The Politico article was one of a series of articles in recent days by several outlets, including The Atlantic, that said Witkoff’s negotiations with Russia have caused confusion.

Witkoff has made a number of trips to Moscow to meet Putin. He was meeting Ukrainian officials in New York on Friday. He said the “statement from our amazing Vice President speaks for itself.”


Kenya’s deadly protests spur outsiders into election battle

Kenya’s deadly protests spur outsiders into election battle
Updated 29 August 2025

Kenya’s deadly protests spur outsiders into election battle

Kenya’s deadly protests spur outsiders into election battle

NAIROBI: After weeks of violent protests, a leading rights activist and former chief justice have emerged as presidential contenders — but can they succeed in the bare-knuckle world of Kenyan politics?
President William Ruto has seen his popularity plummet since coming to power in 2022 over continued economic stagnation, corruption, police brutality, and abductions targeting government critics.
Ruto has stood firm against waves of violent protests seeking to force his resignation in mid-2024 and again in recent months, in which hundreds have died or disappeared.
However, many are now seeking new faces who can challenge him in the next election, scheduled for 2027.
Firebrand human rights activist Boniface Mwangi announced his bid for the top seat on Wednesday, vowing not to work with “anyone who is contaminated.”
“We cannot achieve change by working with people who have been part of the problem,” Mwangi said as he announced his candidature.
He pitched himself as the antithesis of the typical politician — shunning bribes and the lavish cash hand-outs to voters that occur during Kenyan campaigns.
But the 42-year-old faces an uphill struggle. His previous attempt to run a clean campaign — running for a parliamentary seat in 2017 — ended in failure.
Another figure who has entered the fray is former Chief Justice David Maraga, who came out of retirement in June to announce his presidential bid.
In an interview, he said he had not previously considered a political career but was shocked into action by Ruto’s violent crackdown on protesters.
“What I saw horrified me,” he said. It is a “leadership that does not want to follow the law.”
Maraga, 74, made his name in 2017 when his bench of judges in the Supreme Court nullified the results of the presidential election over “irregularities and illegalities” — an unprecedented ruling in Africa.
“Maraga could be our Mohammed Yunus,” said Nelson Amenya, a columnist and whistleblower, on X, referring to the Bangladeshi civil society leader and statesman.
Maraga rejects claims that he lacks the charisma and physical presence required for politics “I am prepared to go into the murky environment,” he said.

“What good is a good reputation for me if ... I see my country going down and I see the youths being killed, being kidnapped?“
Ruto remains defiant, saying only he has a plan for the country, based on mobilizing international investment and reforming public services.

The opposition’s “only plan is that ‘Ruto must go’ — how will that help Kenyans and the country?” he said in a speech during the protests in June.
Ruto has also repeatedly proved his mastery of Kenyan politics — how to exploit its deep-rooted tribal divisions and mobilize voters with financial promises.
While the protests of 2024 and 2025 demonstrated a new generation of educated young Kenyans eager to move beyond that type of politics, analysts say there is still a long way to go.
“Culture does not change overnight,” political analyst Kaburu Kinoti said. No candidate “can appeal to the mass political market without segmenting it into ethnic blocs.”
Patrick Gathara, a political cartoonist, said candidates like Mwangi and Maraga will struggle to stay clean.
“I have no faith that they are not going to be corrupted by the system, because our system is actually built to corrupt people,” he said.
Gathara said the key to Kenya’s future cannot come from politicians but from continued pressure by citizens.
“Change never comes from within,” he said.

 

 


Putin plans to travel to India in December, the Kremlin says

Putin plans to travel to India in December, the Kremlin says
Updated 29 August 2025

Putin plans to travel to India in December, the Kremlin says

Putin plans to travel to India in December, the Kremlin says
  • The Russian leader will discuss his upcoming December visit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday in China
  • Putin and Modi will meet on the sidelines of the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization

MOSCOW: Russia’s President Vladimir Putin plans to travel to India in December, Putin’s aide said Friday.

Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov told reporters that the Russian leader will discuss his upcoming December visit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday in China.

Putin and Modi will meet on the sidelines of the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), which was established by China and Russia in 2001 with a focus on security in Central Asia and the wider region.

Putin is attending the summit and holding multiple bilateral meetings on the sidelines as part of a four-day visit to China on Aug. 31 to Sept. 3.

He also will hold extensive talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing and attend a massive military parade there commemorating the 80th anniversary of the end of World War, according to the Kremlin.

In addition meeting with Modi, the Russian leader on Monday is also scheduled to have bilateral meetings with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, as well as other contacts, Ushakov said.

Russian officials also were “working on the possibility of a bilateral meeting” between Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Beijing, where Kim will also be attending the parade, Ushakov added.

According to Ushakov, Putin’s meeting with Modi will be the first this year, but the two “have repeatedly maintained contact by telephone.”

Modi traveled to Russia last year twice — first to Moscow for talks with Putin in July, his first trip to Russia since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by the Kremlin’s forces in 2022, and then to Kazan in October for the summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies.

Russia had strong ties with India during the Cold War, and New Delhi’s importance as a key trading partner with Moscow has grown since the war in Ukraine.

Modi has avoided condemning Russia while emphasizing a peaceful settlement. Their partnership has become more complicated, however, as Russia has moved closer to China amid international isolation of Moscow over Ukraine.

China and India are key buyers of Russian oil following sanctions imposed by the United States and its allies that shut most Western markets off to Russian exports.