
-
End of the line for Britain's royal train
-
FIFPro warns of 'wake-up call' over extreme heat at Club World Cup
-
Sean Combs sex trafficking jury ends first day without decision
-
Fluminense stun Inter Milan to reach Club World Cup quarters
-
Thailand's ruling political dynasty faces day of legal peril
-
NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix
-
Trump dismantles Syria sanctions program as Israel ties eyed
-
Meta's AI talent war raises questions about strategy
-
Twenty bodies, some headless, found in Mexican cartel bastion
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill over 50 as ceasefire calls mount
-
Alcaraz survives scare, Sabalenka cruises on Wimbledon's hottest opening day
-
Only Messi can shirk defending: warns Monterrey coach before Dortmund clash
-
White House says Canada 'caved' to Trump on tech tax
-
Eight-country coalition aims to tax luxury air travel
-
Wimbledon qualifier Tarvet vows to get creative with expenses
-
Iran unleashes 'wave of repression' after Israel war: activists
-
Alcaraz survives Fognini scare to launch Wimbledon title defence
-
Peace deal with Rwanda opens way to 'new era', says DR Congo president
-
Kneecap, Bob Vylan Glastonbury sets spark police probe and global criticism
-
'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill 48 as ceasefire calls mount
-
Sabalenka boosted by hitting with Djokovic and Sinner at Wimbledon
-
Nigeria theme park offers escape from biting economy
-
Jury considers verdict in Sean Combs sex trafficking trial
-
Wall Street stocks rally further on trade and tax deal optimism
-
Sabalenka cruises on Wimbledon's hottest opening day as Alcaraz launches title bid
-
Bosch breaks through as South Africa set Zimbabwe huge target
-
S.Africa's ex-transport bosses charged over Zuma-era graft case
-
'No panic' says Medvedev after shock Wimbledon exit
-
Rescuers evacuate 50,000 as Turkey battles wildfires
-
ADB acting on US concerns over China, bank chief tells AFP
-
Archer misses out as England unchanged for second India Test
-
US Senate begins nail-biting vote on Trump spending bill
-
Top seed Sabalenka cruises into Wimbledon second round
-
Medvedev suffers shock early Wimbledon exit
-
Wall Street stocks rally further on trade deal optimism
-
Britain's Tarvet says 'not here for the money' after landmark Wimbledon win
-
Tennis fans sizzle as heatwave hits Wimbledon
-
Tearful Jabeur forced to retire from Wimbledon first-round clash
-
No relief for Southern Europe as punishing heatwave persists
-
PKK disarmament process to begin early July: report
-
Alcaraz, Sabalenka in action on day one at sizzling Wimbledon
-
France court jails migrant smugglers over 2022 Channel deaths
-
Stocks muted as investors eye US trade talks
-
China says aircraft carriers conduct combat training in Pacific
-
NGO loses bid to block UK export of military equipment to Israel
-
Three talking points from Austrian Grand Prix
-
Wimbledon 'ready' for soaring temperatures
-
UN chief urges aid surge in world of 'climate chaos, raging conflicts'
-
French injury worries mount ahead of first All Blacks Test

Trump's return darkens mood as Germany heads to elections
Donald Trump's return to the White House has darkened the mood in Germany a month before elections, as multiple crises shake the foundations on which Europe's biggest economy built its post-war prosperity.
Russia's war in Ukraine drove up energy prices, hammering the German economy just as Chinese demand for its exports has waned, while Trump's comeback throws doubt on the future of the NATO security umbrella.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz's three-party coalition buckled under the cascading challenges and broke apart on November 6, the day Trump won re-election, hurtling Germany into turmoil and towards early elections on February 23.
"The word 'crisis' doesn't begin to capture the magnitude of the challenges Germany faces," said analyst Michael Broening. "The country is being forced to redefine its economic, energy and security foundations."
The strong election frontrunner so far is conservative Friedrich Merz, the leader of Angela Merkel's CDU, who brings business world experience but, at age 69, is as yet untested in any government leadership post.
His CDU-CSU alliance is polling at around 30 percent, strongly ahead by about 15 percent of Scholz's Social Democrats (SPD), which would spell the labour party's worst showing since World War II.
Embattled Scholz hopes for a late-campaign surge against Merz -- whose personal popularity ratings are low -- like the comeback that propelled the SPD leader to victory in 2021 when he took over from Merkel.
Merz has pledged to revive Germany's battered political and economic standing after "three lost years" under Scholz and his allies the Greens and, until last year's bust-up, the liberal Free Democrats.
- Far-right rising -
A long-term rival to centrist Merkel, Merz has vowed to return the CDU to its conservative roots, with tight border controls, a tough law and order drive, and steps to get ailing Germany Inc back on its feet.
He has voiced confidence that he can manage relations with the mercurial US president, but faces a tough charm offensive ahead after Team Trump has openly courted Germany's far right.
Tech billionaire Elon Musk has trolled Scholz on his X platform and implored Germans to vote for the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which is polling around 20 percent.
If the rise of a right-wing extremist party breaks a political taboo in Germany, which has been at pains to atone for Word War II and the Holocaust, support for the AfD from Washington has stunned Berlin.
More potential havoc lies ahead for Germany and its economy if Trump makes good on his threat to levy high tariffs on imports.
Economists have warned that such protectionist measures could spell a blow hard enough to wipe one percent off Germany's gross domestic product and kill 300,000 jobs.
Trump has also demanded NATO allies step up defence spending to as high as five percent of GDP -- equating to 100 billion euros a year for Germany, which it can ill afford.
- 'On the wrong foot' -
Merz's Bavarian ally, CSU leader Markus Soeder, said the second Trump administration "will be a difficult test because one can feel the growing distance to Europe, and especially to Germany".
Given Germany's dire economic troubles, he told Welt TV, this is hitting the country "absolutely on the wrong foot".
Germany, as a strong military backer of Ukraine, also faces a hostile Russia which it accuses of waging a "hybrid war" ranging from spy drones and severed Baltic Sea cables to online election interference.
Other unknown risks lie ahead, including a feared scenario where Trump would strike a Ukraine peace deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the heads of Kyiv and its EU allies.
As both Putin and Trump seek to "make their countries great again," wrote the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, "we are experiencing a paradigm shift in territorial policy that fundamentally questions the current world order".
Jacob Ross of the German Council on Foreign Relations said he was certain that "Trump will continue to single out Germany as the favourite victim in this blame game against Europe".
Meanwhile, the fragmentation of Germany's political landscape threatens to complicate the post-election coalition building process, which could drag on for weeks or even months.
Whoever leads Germany next will have to convince voters they have the answers to the myriad challenges.
"If any of the top candidates possess a convincing blueprint to lead the country out of this quagmire, they have so far failed to convince the public," said Broening of the Friedrich Ebert Foundation.
"With no single candidate enjoying anything close to widespread popularity, German voters seem less focused on hoping for the best and more intent on avoiding the worst."
X.Karnes--AMWN