Netanyahu hoping for Trump’s triumph in US presidential race, say analysts

Netanyahu hoping for Trump’s triumph in US presidential race, say analysts
In a choice between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump for US president, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will likely be hoping that the man with whom he has a close relationship and who delivered multiple diplomatic victories for Israel, will triumph. (AFP)
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Updated 27 October 2024

Netanyahu hoping for Trump’s triumph in US presidential race, say analysts

Netanyahu hoping for Trump’s triumph in US presidential race, say analysts
  • An isolationist, Trump as a Republican president might give Netanyahu more freedom to navigate the conflicts that continue to rage in Gaza and Lebanon
  • “His experience with Republicans is very good... unlike with the Democrats who are much tougher on him,” says former Netanyahu chief of staff

JERUSALEM: With the US presidential election heading into the home stretch, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will likely be hoping for Donald Trump to return to the White House.
Trump’s last time in office was good for Netanyahu, and in the lead-up to the November 5 vote, the former president has sent mixed messages on his Middle East policy.
His remarks have ranged from encouraging Netanyahu to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities — which Israel refrained from in its strikes Saturday — to criticizing the Israeli leader, saying “the October 7 attack would never have happened if I was president” and that he will pressure Israel to end the wars.
Yet it is these unclear policies, combined with Trump’s “make America great again” campaign slogan, that analysts say Netanyahu is hoping for.
An isolationist, Trump as a Republican president might give Netanyahu more freedom to navigate the conflicts that continue to rage in Gaza and Lebanon.
“One of Netanyahu’s milestones is the US election. He is praying for a Trump victory, which he thinks will give him a lot of freedom of movement, which will let him do what he aspires,” Gidon Rahat, political science professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told AFP.
Aviv Bushinsky, a political commentator and Netanyahu’s former chief of staff, similarly said: “His experience with Republicans is very good... unlike with the Democrats who are much tougher on him.”

Pro-Israel moves

In 17 years as prime minister, Netanyahu has only served opposite one Republican leader, Trump.
During his presidency, Trump went ahead with several moves that boosted Netanyahu’s domestic standing while upending some long-standing US policies on Israel, its conflict with the Palestinians and the wider region.
The Republican president moved the US embassy to Jerusalem, which Israel claims as its undivided capital, recognized Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights, and oversaw the normalization of ties between three Arab states and Israel.
Trump also withdrew from a landmark nuclear deal with Israel’s arch-foe Iran and reimposed tough economic sanctions on the Islamic republic.
President Joe Biden, meanwhile, has long had a frosty relationship with Netanyahu despite insisting on his “ironclad support” for Israel.
Unlike Trump, Biden had warned Netanyahu against striking Iran’s oil production and nuclear facilities.
Trump and Netanyahu also enjoy a close personal relationship, with the former US president boasting this week of having had frequent phone calls with the Israeli premier.
“We have a very good relationship,” Trump said at a rally in Georgia. “We’re going to work with them very closely.”
Those positives will outweigh any concerns, said Bushinsky.
“I think Netanyahu would be willing to take the risk of Trump’s unpredictability,” he said.

Trump popular with Israeli public

Trump is popular not just with Netanyahu but with the Israeli public.
An opinion poll conducted in September by Mitvim, the Israel Institute for Regional Foreign Policies, said 68 percent of Israelis see Trump as the candidate who will best serve Israel’s interests.
Only 14 percent chose Vice President Kamala Harris, despite her repeatedly declaring her support for Israel and its right to defend itself.
“In Israel, more than any other liberal democracy outside the United States, Trump is more popular than Harris,” said Nadav Tamir, a former Israeli diplomat to the United States and a member of Mitvim’s board of directors.
A new Trump administration, though, could come with surprises, according to Tamir.
The former president has increasingly surrounded himself with Republicans “who are isolationists and don’t want America to be the leader of the free world or international alliances,” he said.

No better choice for Palestinians
Among Palestinians there is little enthusiasm for either candidate, said Khalil Shikaki, a Palestinian political scientist and pollster.
“Palestinians distrust both candidates and see little difference between them,” he said.
Taher Al-Nunu, a Hamas official, told AFP that he believed “successive US administrations have always been biased” toward Israel.
On the street, Palestinians said no matter who wins, life in their territories will not improve.
“I do not believe that the American elections will have a positive impact on our political reality,” said Leen Bassem, a 21-year-old student at Birzeit University in the occupied West Bank.
Hassan Anwar, 42, a sound engineer, also said he did not believe there was any difference, “because American policy is completely clear in its support and backing of Israel.”


Bolivian right eyes return in elections marked by economic crisis

Updated 8 sec ago

Bolivian right eyes return in elections marked by economic crisis

Bolivian right eyes return in elections marked by economic crisis
LA PAZ: Bolivians head to the polls Sunday for elections marked by a deep economic crisis that has seen the left implode and the right eyeing its first shot at power in 20 years.
The Andean country is struggling through its worst crisis in a generation, marked by annual inflation of almost 25 percent and critical shortages of dollars and fuel.
Polls show voters poised to punish the ruling Movement toward Socialism (MAS), in power since 2005 when Evo Morales was elected Bolivia’s first Indigenous president.
Center-right business tycoon Samuel Doria Medina and right-wing ex-president Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga are the favorites to succeed Morales’s unpopular successor, Luis Arce, who is not seeking re-election.
Polls showed Doria Medina, 66, and Quiroga, 65, neck-and-neck on around 20 percent, with six other candidates, including left-wing Senate president Andronico Rodriguez, trailing far behind.
A run-off will take place on October 19 if no candidate wins an outright majority.
The two frontrunners have vowed radical changes to Bolivia’s big-state economic model if elected.
They want to slash public spending, open the country to foreign investment and boost ties with the United States, which were downgraded under the combative Morales, a self-described anti-capitalist anti-imperialist.
Marcela Sirpa, a 63-year Indigenous street seller who traditionally voted for MAS, has thrown her support behind Quiroga.
“They (MAS) left us all in the gutter,” she explained at a candidate’s street party in La Paz.
All seats in Bolivia’s bicameral legislature are also up for election on Sunday.


Analysts say the election resembles that of 2023 Argentina, where voters dumped the long-ruling leftist Peronists and elected libertarian candidate Javier Milei in a bid to end a deep crisis.
“What people are looking for now, beyond a shift from left to right, is a return to stability,” Daniela Osorio Michel, a Bolivian political scientist at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies, told AFP.
Unlike Milei, who was a political newcomer, Doria Medina and Quiroga are both on their fourth run for president.
Doria Medina, a millionaire former planning minister, made a fortune in cement before going on to build Bolivia’s biggest skyscraper and acquire the local Burger King franchise.
Seen as a moderate, he has vowed to halt inflation and bring back fuel and dollars within 100 days, without cutting anti-poverty programs.
The tough-talking Quiroga, who trained as an engineer in the United States, served as vice president under reformed ex-dictator Hugo Banzer and then briefly as president when Banzer stepped down to fight cancer in 2001.
“We will change everything, absolutely everything after 20 lost years,” he trumpeted during his closing rally in La Paz on Wednesday.


Bolivia enjoyed over a decade of strong growth and Indigenous upliftment under Morales, who nationalized the gas sector and plowed the proceeds into social programs that halved extreme poverty.
But underinvestment in exploration has caused gas revenues to implode, falling from a peak of $6.1 billion in 2013 to $1.6 billion last year.
With the country’s other major resource, lithium, still underground, the government has nearly run out of the foreign exchange needed to import fuel, wheat and other foodstuffs.
Bolivians have repeatedly taken to the streets to protest rocketing prices and hours-long wait for fuel, bread and other basics.
“In these past 20 years, we’ve had good income, but the government didn’t invest in anything or propose new directions for... how to better expand our economy,” 21-year-old student Miguel Angel Miranda said.
Morales, who was barred from standing for a fourth term, has cast a long shadow over the campaign.
The 65-year-old has called on his mostly rural Indigenous supporters to spoil their ballots over the refusal by electoral authorities to allow him run again.
Matilde Choque Apaza, the pro-Morales leader of a rural and Indigenous women’s association, backed his call for a “voto nulo.”
“We don’t want to go back to the 20th century,” she said, vowing that Bolivians, ever prone to revolt, “will rise up at any time.”

Northern China flash flood kills 8

Northern China flash flood kills 8
Updated 29 min 26 sec ago

Northern China flash flood kills 8

Northern China flash flood kills 8
  • The banks of a river running through the grasslands of Inner Mongolia burst at around 10 p.m. on Saturday
  • China has suffered weeks of extreme weather since July, battered by heavier-than-usual downpours

BEIJING: At least eight people have died in a flash flood in northern China, state media reported on Sunday, with four others still missing, as the East Asian monsoon continues to unleash atmospheric chaos across the world’s second-largest economy.
The banks of a river running through the grasslands of Inner Mongolia burst at around 10 p.m. (1400 GMT) on Saturday, the report said, washing away 13 campers on the outskirts of Bayannur city, a major agricultural hub. One person has been rescued.
China has suffered weeks of extreme weather since July, battered by heavier-than-usual downpours with the monsoon stalling over its north and south.
Weather experts link the shifting pattern to climate change, testing officials as flash floods displace thousands and threaten billions of dollars in economic losses.
Bayannur is an important national grain and oil production base, as well as a sheep breeding and processing center.
At the other end of the country, a three-and-a-half-month fishing suspension in the southern province of Hainan ended on Saturday, state media reported, after agricultural affairs officials ordered ships to shelter in port owing to persistent, heavy rain.
The deluge in Inner Mongolia follows a deadly downpour in Beijing – just under 1,000km away – late last month which killed at least 44 people and forced the evacuation of more than 70,000 residents.
The central government announced last week 430 million yuan ($59.9 million) in fresh funding for disaster relief, taking the total allocated since April to at least 5.8 billion yuan.


‘Planting food, not hate’: Brazil’s Lula razzes Trump over tariff-hit grapes

‘Planting food, not hate’: Brazil’s Lula razzes Trump over tariff-hit grapes
Updated 50 min 42 sec ago

‘Planting food, not hate’: Brazil’s Lula razzes Trump over tariff-hit grapes

‘Planting food, not hate’: Brazil’s Lula razzes Trump over tariff-hit grapes
  • South American powerhouse reels from Washington’s 50-percent tariffs
  • The tariffs imposed on Brazil are among the steepest to hit a US trading partner

BRASILIA: President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said on Saturday that he hopes Donald Trump can come and get to know the real Brazil, as the South American powerhouse reels from Washington’s 50-percent tariffs.
In a video taken while he planted grapes – one of the tariff-hit goods – Brazil’s leftist leader addressed Trump.
“I hope you can visit someday so we can talk and you can get to know the true Brazil, the Brazil of people who love samba, carnival, soccer, the United States, China, Russia, Uruguay, and Venezuela. We love everyone,” Lula said.
The tariffs imposed on Brazil are among the steepest to hit a US trading partner.
And unlike with other countries, the measures against Brazil have been framed in openly political terms, with the Republican president justifying the move by alleging Brasilia is conducting a “witch hunt” against his ally, former president Jair Bolsonaro.
Bolsonaro is being tried for an alleged coup attempt against Lula in 2022, and the United States recently sanctioned the judge in the case, along with seven other Supreme Court magistrates.
Lula has backed the Supreme Court and promises to defend “the sovereignty of the Brazilian people.”
His administration has also vowed to combat Trump’s tariffs, including by lodging an appeal if necessary.
The levies, which affect several key exports from the largest economy in Latin America, sweep aside centuries-old trade ties and a surplus that Brasilia put at $284 million last year.
In his message on X, Lula said he was giving an example of “planting food, and not planting violence, or planting hate.”
“I hope that someday we can talk, President Trump, so you can learn about the quality of the Brazilian people,” he adds.


Meet the actor with Down syndrome who wants to run for president of Chile

Meet the actor with Down syndrome who wants to run for president of Chile
Updated 17 August 2025

Meet the actor with Down syndrome who wants to run for president of Chile

Meet the actor with Down syndrome who wants to run for president of Chile
  • Sebastian Solorza positions himself as a “point of balance” between the far right and the far left, a fierce ideological battle that dominates Chile’s political scene.
  • Should he enter the electoral race, his platform will focus on greater inclusion, improved health care and education, and enhanced security, a main concern of citizens who have been grappling with an unprecedented crisis of violence in recent years

SANTIAGO: Sebastián Solorza is already a familiar face to many Chileans, having starred in a popular Netflix series and won national acting awards. Now, the 43-year-old actor with Down syndrome wants to enter the race for president in Chile’s national election this year.
Solorza is racing against the clock to gather 35,000 signatures by Aug. 18, a requirement for him to run as an independent candidate. He positions himself as a “point of balance” between the far right and the far left — a fierce ideological battle that dominates Chile’s political scene.
“I listen with my heart,” Solorza told The Associated Press, adding that his condition allows him to offer a softer communication style.
Should he enter the electoral race, his platform will focus on greater inclusion, improved health care and education, and enhanced security — a main concern of citizens who have been grappling with an unprecedented crisis of violence in recent years.
Chile will choose its new president on Nov. 16, with the campaign so far defined by the mutual attacks between the two main contestants: The far-right José Antonio Kast, who lost to current leftist president Gabriel Boric in 2021, and Jeannette Jara, the ruling coalition’s communist nominee.
With three months remaining until the election, polls show Kast and Jara vying for the top two spots. This scenario suggests they would face each other in a second-round runoff on Dec. 14.
Solorza argues that his candidacy offers a middle ground between political extremes, while working toward a “more inclusive country.”
“I’ve spent my entire life breaking down prejudices, as an actor, as a worker and as a citizen,” he said last month when announcing his plans to run as an independent candidate. “We all deserve the same opportunities.”
The actor hopes his candidacy will give greater visibility to people with Down syndrome and other disabilities. While it’s unlikely he will secure the necessary support to run for president — he has collected a little over 600 of the 35,000 signatures required — he sees his political foray as a success.
Demystifying myths and prejudices
Solorza keeps a tight schedule, balancing an acting career with a day job at a construction company. In his limited free time, he spends time visiting Congress, talking with members of the Parliament and meeting with constituents to promote his campaign.
On the streets of Huechuraba, a quiet and green neighborhood in the northern part of Chile’s capital, Solorza is often greeted by supporters, fans, and workers from restaurants and cafés where he is a regular. Always smiling, he walks slowly, making time for anyone who wants a photo or a brief chat.
In Valparaíso — a coastal town about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Santiago, where the Congress is based — Chileans show up to the Parliament to express their support. “Good luck with the signatures,” one supporter said last week. “Let it be the people who ultimately decide our future.”
Solorza’s political aspirations open the door to “raise the voices of people with Down syndrome” and help to “demystify myths and prejudices still present in society,” said Carolina Gallardo, director of the Chilean nonprofit Down Up Foundation, which offers support and community for families raising children with Down syndrome.
Fueled by the arts
The attempt at a political debut is just the latest in a long line of barriers Solorza has overcome.
He was born and raised in the 1980s, a time with far less knowledge about Down syndrome than today. His mother, Jenny Solorza, recalls his early years as “very dark,” because doctors never provided a clear diagnosis for their son, leading them to search for information on their own.
“We wanted to do our best and always encouraged him with music,” she said. As a result, “Sebastián has a very broad musical culture, and that’s what he grew up with.”
Solorza attended special schools where he developed his passion for the arts, fueled by music, rather than focusing on traditional academics. At 18, he received a scholarship to join a theater school and began performing regularly on stage and appearing in popular TV talk shows.
He later rose to national fame for his leading role as Tomy in the Chilean thriller “Chromosome 21.” The series, which follows a detective trying to determine if a young man found at a murder scene is a witness or a suspect, ranked second on Netflix in Chile just two days after its release in 2022.
The part earned Solorza the Best New Actor award at the 2023 Caleuche Awards, one of the most important ceremonies in the Chilean film industry.
Despite social media criticism that he lacks preparedness and political experience to run for office, he insists he will not be deterred.
“I know my candidacy would be uncomfortable for many,” he said. “But I am here to support minorities.”


’Pickypockets!’ vigilante pairs with social media on London streets

’Pickypockets!’ vigilante pairs with social media on London streets
Updated 17 August 2025

’Pickypockets!’ vigilante pairs with social media on London streets

’Pickypockets!’ vigilante pairs with social media on London streets
  • Diego Galdino, from a family of police officers in Brazil, said he has become expert at identifying likely thieves
  • Sceptics however, have raised concerns about such vigilante content-creators, arguing they are ill-trained to intervene in potentially dangerous situations

LONDON: On a recent weekday, Diego Galdino was on the hunt for pickpockets in central London, patrolling tourist hotspots for familiar suspects and telltale signs of those about to commit thefts.
Galdino, however, is not a policeman.
The Brazilian food app delivery rider has become a popular, social media-fueled vigilante targeting pickpocketing in the British capital.
He started filming — and then trying to disrupt — thieves in action after witnessing several incidents.
And his videos on Instagram, TikTok and other platforms under the handle “pickpocketlondon” have proved a hit.
One posted late July on TikTok amassed nearly 27 million views — another on Instagram showing a suspect spitting at him garnered more than 12 million.
“I didn’t know nothing about TikTok, I didn’t know nothing about uploading a video,” Galdino told AFP.
“I catch them stealing, I catch a lot of situations and I upload daily and grow very quickly,” he said.
Similar accounts have emerged in other European cities including Venice and Paris, as the era of mass tourism, social media and side hustles collides with crime and vigilantism.
Galdino said he was “completely surprised” by the response.
“My life’s changed a lot,” he added. Now, he said, he was inundated with media interview requests and got recognized by supporters and suspects alike.


Galdino, from a family of police officers in Brazil, said he has become expert at identifying likely thieves.
They appear well organized, are often women and work in pairs. They mainly target tourists, dressing like them to blend in, he said.
Standing outside Buckingham Palace, the 32-year-old said he could change his “perception” while patrolling to create a kind of tunnel vision.
A network of around 20 other delivery riders helps out, sending tip-offs via WhatsApp when suspects are spotted.
Once on the scene, Galdino swoops in filming with an attached camera, shouting a signature “pickypockets” warning to sound the alert.
“Watch out, pickypockets!” he yells.
His presence is not always welcomed though, and Galdino said he had faced violence.
But focus, adrenalin and a sense of “injustice” at the thefts overrode any fear, he said.
“I hate this kind of thing,” Galdino added. “These people get up in the morning ... (to) steal. They don’t pay tax, they don’t produce nothing to society.”
On the streets, locals as well as visitors seemed to appreciate his efforts.
“Keep doing what you’re doing!” said passerby Tom, 37, after recognizing Galdino.
“Hopefully tourists (who) come to London who maybe don’t know about the phone-snatchers see your videos.”
Sceptics however, have raised concerns about such vigilante content-creators, arguing they are ill-trained to intervene in potentially dangerous situations.


“We’ve got a kind of performative form of crime vigilantism for clicks,” criminologist Jennifer Fleetwood told AFP.
“I’m sure the guy is very well-meaning, but honestly this is not an effective form of crime control,” she added.
“He’s not going to be out there for the next 10 years, is he?” said Fleetwood, a university lecturer in criminology who wrote the book “What We Talk About When We Talk About Crime.”
London’s leaders insist they are tackling pickpocketing.
Labour Mayor Sadiq Khan boosted police numbers in the center to curb theft, robbery and antisocial behavior.
“We’ll be targeting hotspot areas with both plain-clothed and uniformed patrols, building on the progress we’ve already made,” the Metropolitan Police said.
Their statement did not comment directly on Galdino, but it did note a 15.6 percent reduction in “theft from the person” in the six weeks since their boost began April 6.
However, force’s statistics show it recorded more than 32,000 “thefts from the person” in the year to July in central Westminster.
That is up on the previous 12 months and a considerable increase on the year from July 2022.
Fleetwood argued the social media fixation on pickpocketing risked exaggerating the problem.
Statistics show such thefts are no more prevalent in the capital than other English cities and regions, she said.
“I’ve seen so much stuff on social media about London being unfriendly or London being dangerous.
“But ... is it the case that you’re more likely to be a victim of personal crime in London? Actually, no.”