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Tag: Presidential elections

  • Japan’s LDP, Ishin Agree to Form Coalition Government, Kyodo Says

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    TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party and the Japan Innovation Party have broadly agreed to form a coalition government, setting the stage for the country’s first female prime minister, Kyodo news agency reported on Sunday.

    Sanae Takaichi, leader of the conservative LDP, and Hirofumi Yoshimura, head of the smaller right-leaning group, known as Ishin, are set to sign an agreement on their alliance on Monday, Kyodo said.

    Ishin’s co-head, Fumitake Fujita, raised expectations for a deal on Friday, saying the two parties had made “big progress” in coalition talks.

    Ishin lawmakers will vote for Takaichi in an election to choose the prime minister in parliament on Tuesday, but the party does not plan to send ministers to Takaichi’s cabinet initially, the news agency said.

    Takaichi’s path to succeed Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba had seemed all but certain after she won her party’s presidency early this month. But then the long-ruling LDP’s junior partner, Komeito, quit their 26-year coalition, setting off a flurry of negotiations with rival parties to select the next premier.

    In an effort to get Ishin on board, the LDP offered to keep working towards banning donations from companies and other organisations and exempting food items from Japan’s sales tax, Kyodo said.

    Ishin has proposed eliminating the tax on food items for two years.

    (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by William Mallard)

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  • Bosnia’s Serb Republic Appoints Interim President, Seals Dodik’s Departure From Post

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    SARAJEVO (Reuters) -The parliament of Bosnia’s Serb Republic appointed Ana Trisic Babic as an interim president on Saturday, acknowledging officially for the first time that former President Milorad Dodik is stepping aside after a state court banned him from politics.

    Trisic Babic, Dodik’s close ally, will hold the position for one month until new presidential elections are held in the Serb Republic on November 23.

    The parliament also annulled a series of separatist laws that were passed over the past year after Dodik had been indicted for defying decisions of the international envoy and the constitutional court.

    Dodik, a pro-Russian nationalist who wants the Serb Republic to secede and join Serbia, had so far refused to step down and continued to perform duties and travel abroad in the capacity of president. He is appealing the state court’s verdict at the constitutional court.

    The U.S. Treasury Department said on Friday it has removed four Dodik allies from a sanctions list, in a move praised by Dodik who has been campaigning to get U.S. sanctions against himself lifted.

    He has been sanctioned by the U.S. and Britain for obstructing the terms of the Dayton peace deal that ended Bosnia’s war in the 1990s, as well as by several European countries that say his separatist policies endanger peace and stability in Bosnia.

    (Reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic; Writing by Renee Maltezou, Editing by Franklin Paul)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Taiwan Opposition Party’s Firebrand New Leader Pledges Peace With China

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    TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan’s main opposition party, the Kuomintang, elected a firebrand new leader on Saturday who opposes increased defence spending but pledged to ensure peace with giant neighbour China.

    Former lawmaker Cheng Li-wun, who will take over as leader on November 1, won the election at a time of rising military and political tensions with Beijing, which views the democratically-governed island as its own territory. Taiwan’s government strongly objects to China’s sovereignty claims.

    While the Kuomintang (KMT) lost the presidential election last year, the party and its ally the small Taiwan People’s Party together hold the most seats in parliament, creating a headache for the ruling Democratic Progressive Party trying to get the budget and its legislation passed.

    The KMT traditionally espouses close relations with China, and speaking at party headquarters in Taipei, Cheng said the KMT under her leadership would be a “creator of regional peace”.

    “The KMT will make our home the strongest shelter for everyone against life’s storms. Because we will safeguard peace across the Taiwan Strait,” she said.

    Cheng, who started out in politics in the DPP, said during the campaign that she did not support increasing the defence budget, a key policy of President Lai Ching-te’s administration, spending which also has strong U.S. backing.

    Chinese state media reported that Cheng had won the vote, but otherwise the government there offered no other immediate comment.

    Cheng, 55, beat the establishment candidate former Taipei Mayor Hau Lung-bin, 73, with slightly more than 50% of the vote, though turnout was under 40% of party members.

    Accusations of Chinese interference in the election from a key supporter of Hau’s, the KMT’s vice presidential candidate last year, Jaw Shau-kong, overshadowed the campaign. Jaw said social media accounts had spread disinformation about Hau.

    China said on Wednesday that the election was a KMT matter, and that online comments did not represent an official stance.

    Cheng, asked by reporters after winning the election about the Chinese interference accusations, said it was irresponsible to use the “red label” – the colour of China’s Communist Party – as a “cheap tool for political struggle”.

    Taiwan will hold mayoral elections next year which, while mostly focusing on domestic issues, will be an important measure of support ahead of the 2028 presidential vote.

    (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • France’s Highest Administrative Court Rejects Le Pen’s Challenge to Electoral Rules

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    PARIS (Reuters) -France’s highest administrative court rejected a challenge to electoral rules by far-right leader Marine Le Pen on Wednesday, dealing a blow to her efforts to overturn a sentence that could derail her candidacy in the 2027 presidential election.

    Le Pen was barred in March from seeking public office for five years after a French court convicted her and other members of her party for misappropriation of funds. Le Pen has said the case and the decision were politically motivated.

    The Paris Criminal Court sentenced Le Pen to four years in prison, including two to be served, a 100,000-euro ($116,230.00) fine and a five-year ban on holding public office, which is immediately enforceable despite pending appeals.

    Le Pen had argued that the immediate application of the law that bars people convicted of certain crimes — including those related to corruption, fraud, or misuse of public funds — unfairly infringed upon her political rights.

    “Today, the Council of State rejected this appeal because it did not seek to repeal regulatory provisions but rather to amend the law, which exceeds the powers of the Prime Minister,” the court said in a statement.

    The contested articles either did not exist, or were unrelated to the execution of ineligibility penalties, the court said.

    The ruling has cast doubt on her ability to run in the 2027 presidential election, where she remains a leading contender. 

    (Reporting by Alban Kacher; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

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  • Cameroon Opposition Candidate Tchiroma Claims Victory in Presidential Poll, Urges Biya to Concede

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    GAROUA (Reuters) -Cameroon opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma declared victory late on Monday in the country’s October 12 presidential election, urging President Paul Biya to accept defeat and “honour the truth of the ballot box”.

    “Our victory is clear. It must be respected,” Tchiroma said in a speech on his Facebook page from his hometown of Garoua in the north of the Central African state. “The people have chosen. And this choice must be respected.”

    Tchiroma, 76, a former government spokesperson and employment minister, broke ranks with Biya earlier this year and mounted a campaign that drew large crowds and endorsements from a coalition of opposition parties and civic groups.

    Biya, 92, the world’s oldest serving head of state, is seeking an eighth term after 43 years in power. Analysts had expected his control over state institutions and a fragmented opposition to give him an edge in the election, despite growing public discontent over economic stagnation and insecurity.

    Tchiroma praised voters for defying intimidation and staying at polling stations late into the night to protect their ballots.

    “I also thank candidates who have already sent me their congratulations and recognised the will of the people,” Tchiroma said.

    “We have placed the regime before its responsibilities: either it shows greatness by accepting the truth of the ballot box, or it chooses to plunge the country into turmoil that will leave an indelible scar in the heart of our nation,” he warned

    The government has not officially responded to Tchiroma’s declaration.

    However, Minister of Territorial Administration Paul Atanga Nji warned over the weekend that any unilateral publication of results would be considered “high treason,” adding that only the Constitutional Council has the authority to announce the winner.

    Cameroon’s electoral law allows results to be published and posted at polling stations, but final tallies must be validated by the Constitutional Council, which has until October 26 to announce the outcome.

    Tchiroma said he would soon release a region-by-region breakdown of vote tallies compiled from publicly posted results.

    “This victory is not that of one man, nor of one party. It is the victory of a people,” he said.

    He also called on the military, security forces and government administrators to remain loyal to the “republic, not the regime”.

    Cameroon’s single-round electoral system awards the presidency to the candidate with the most votes. More than 8 million people were registered to vote in the election.

    (Reporting by Desire Danga Essigue and Blaise Eyong; Writing by Bate Felix; Editing by Michael Perry)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Peru’s ‘Porky’, Mayor of Lima, Quits to Run for President

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    LIMA (Reuters) -The mayor of Peru’s capital, Rafael Lopez Aliaga, said he will resign from his post on Monday to become the first candidate in April’s presidential election, as the country navigates a fresh political crisis following an abrupt change of government.

    The conservative politician and businessman said in a television interview on Sunday night that he would submit his resignation as mayor of Lima, as he seeks to make a second consecutive run for the presidency.

    “I will resign tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. (2030 GMT), because Peru cannot remain in this state of indifference,” Lopez Aliaga told Panamericana Television. 

    Lopez Aliaga is the only candidate polling in double digits at this early stage of the 2026 race, with 10% support according to the latest Ipsos survey.

    Over a third of Peruvian voters, 39%, remained undecided.

    Known as “Porky” by residents who see a resemblance to a cartoon character called Porky Pig, Lopez Aliaga has embraced his nickname, using a pig as his personal mascot and frequently deploying the animal at public events.

    All Peruvian officials must resign six months before elections if they wish to run for office. General elections have been scheduled for April 12 next year.

    Lopez Aliaga’s Popular Renewal was among the right-wing parties that historically supported former President Dina Boluarte, but last Thursday it backed a fresh push to remove her from office. Hours later, Congress lawmakers removed her in a unanimous vote.

    She was replaced by Congress president Jose Jeri, who stood next in the line of succession as she did not have a vice president.

    The electoral jury has so far approved 39 parties and alliances from across the political spectrum to put candidates forward, setting the scene for another polarized electoral campaign in the region.

    An upcoming election in neighboring Chile is meanwhile set to pitch a progressive leftist against a far-right hardliner on migration and security issues in a presidential vote next month.

    The removal of Boluarte, one of the world’s least popular leaders who left office with approval ratings between 2% and 4%, has resulted in Peru averaging one and a half presidents per year since 2018.

    Three former presidents are currently behind bars.

    (Reporting by Marco Aquino; Writing by Sarah Morland; Editing by William Maclean)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Moldova’s Prime Minister Says He Will Not Seek New Term Following Election

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    CHISINAU (Reuters) -Moldovan Prime Minister Dorin Recean said on Monday he would not seek a new term, paving the way for a new head of government following the pro-Western governing party’s victory in a parliamentary election.

    President Maia Sandu’s Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) secured a majority in the election on September 28, and will appoint a new government in coming weeks tasked with taking former Soviet republic Moldova further out of Russia’s orbit.

    The pro-EU Recean, in office since February 2023, said he would also give up his parliamentary seat with PAS as part of his expected departure, and return to the private sector when a new government is in place.

    “My term ends simultaneously with that of the current government’s,” he told a joint press conference with parliamentary speaker Igor Grosu.

    “Immediately after we approve the new government in parliament, I will resign my mandate.”

    Moldova’s Constitutional Court will confirm the election results on October 16, after which Sandu will nominate a new prime minister who will present their new cabinet for parliamentary approval.

    A new prime minister will in particular be expected to tackle a sluggish economy hit by Russia’s invasion of neighbouring Ukraine.

    PAS defeated an opposition bloc that wanted to steer Moldova away from closer ties with the European Union. The outcome was a setback for Russia, which has troops stationed in a pro-Russian eastern separatist region of the country, more than three decades after Moldova won independence from the Soviet Union.

    PAS is aiming to secure Moldovan membership of the EU by 2030.

    (Reporting by Alexander Tanas; Writing Dan Peleschuk)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Trump’s Arab American Backers Hail Gaza Deal but Worry It Won’t Hold

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    DEARBORN, Michigan (Reuters) -Lifelong Democrat Samra’a Luqman became a vocal backer of Donald Trump in 2024, helping to rally support for him among the pivotal Arab American community in Dearborn, Michigan, in the hope that he could end the Gaza war.

    Now, after Trump helped to broker a ceasefire deal, Luqman feels thrilled and a bit vindicated after months of backlash from neighbors angry over Trump’s support for Israel.

    “It’s almost an ‘I told you so moment,’” said Luqman, who is Yemeni American. “No other president would have been able to force Bibi to approve the ceasefire,” she said, referring to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Luqman and other Arab American Trump supporters who spoke to Reuters expressed guarded optimism about the recently announced agreement, but said they worried that Israel could violate the ceasefire, as it has done in the past in Gaza and Lebanon.

    “We’re all holding our breath,” said Mike Hacham, a Lebanese American political consultant and Dearborn resident who campaigned hard for Trump in 2024. “I gotta give credit where credit is due … but this isn’t a peace deal. It’s just the end of a bloody war and those lives that were lost on the Israeli side and the Palestinian side aren’t going to be brought back.”

    GUARDED OPTIMISM OVER GAZA BUT MISTRUST OF ISRAEL

    Israeli airstrikes in Qatar and other Arab nations in recent months fueled deep mistrust of Israel among Michigan’s more than 300,000 people of Arab heritage. But the agreement is the biggest step yet to end two years of war that Palestinian health authorities have said killed more than 67,000 people in Gaza.

    In addition to a ceasefire, the deal calls for releasing the last 20 of 250 hostages seized by Hamas when it started the war with the October 7, 2023, attacks that killed more than 1,200 people, according to the Israeli government.

    It comes after months of deepening frustration among Arab Americans over what they see as Trump’s failure to rein in Netanyahu and end the war. Trump’s renewed ban on travel from several majority-Muslim countries and crackdowns on freedom of speech targeting pro-Palestinian protesters have also unnerved many, according to more than a dozen Arab American voters who backed Trump in Michigan last year and spoke to Reuters in recent weeks.

    Many of those interviewed also felt disappointed that their community’s support — thousands of votes that helped to push Trump to victory in Michigan — did not translate into more senior high-profile posts for Arab Americans and Muslims in his administration. It remains unclear whether the ceasefire deal will sway skeptical voters as Trump’s Republicans face competitive congressional and gubernatorial elections in Michigan next year, as well as the 2028 presidential election.

    Hacham said Trump would be hailed as a “champion of peace” after brokering the Gaza ceasefire, but added that Arab American voters could turn against him and other Republicans if it fails.

    “We are willing to abandon the Republicans and move back to the Democrats,” Hacham said. “We’ve shown Donald Trump that we have the power to swing whichever way we want.”

    ANGER OVER GAZA FUELED SWITCH TO TRUMP

    Trump won Michigan by more than 80,000 votes in 2024, reversing his 154,000-count loss to Democrat Joe Biden in 2020. An October 2024 Arab American Institute poll had shown Trump favored by 42% of Arab Americans nationwide versus 41% for Kamala Harris — down 18 percentage points from Biden’s share in 2020. 

    In addition to anger over the Gaza war, Trump’s 2024 campaign tapped into concerns raised by some conservative community members about Democrats’ defense of transgender rights, Luqman said. She expected those voters probably would stick with Republicans. But a larger group of Arab Americans voted for Trump in 2024 “out of spite” at Democrats, and their continued support for the Republican Party likely depends on what happens with Gaza, Luqman said.

    “I don’t think they’ve found their political home with the Republicans just yet,” she said, adding that Trump’s pressure on Netanyahu could “solidify support for JD Vance in the next election and for the midterms for any Republicans that run.”

    Imam Belal Alzuhairi joined Trump on stage in Michigan just days before the 2024 election, alongside 22 other clerics, convinced that he offered the best chance for peace, but he said many Yemeni Americans later grew disenchanted after Trump reimposed a travel ban on many Muslim countries.

    “Now, a lot of people are very upset. They are fearing for themselves and their families. There’s a mistrust after the travel ban,” he said.

    After facing personal backlash for his endorsement, the Yemeni American cleric says he is pulling out of “soul-consuming” politics to focus on religion and his family.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MOVES TO TAMP DOWN FRUSTRATION

    Special envoy Richard Grenell, a Michigan native tapped by Trump to lead his outreach to Arab American and Muslim voters, returned to the Detroit area last month for his first in-person meetings with community leaders since November. His mission? To tamp down the mounting frustration and prevent Arab Americans from swinging to the Democratic Party, as they did after Republican President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq in 2003. 

    Alzuhairi, Luqman and a dozen others grilled Grenell at a coffeehouse in Dearborn over the travel ban and U.S. arms sales to Israel. At a separate session, he was asked why the administration is not doing more to help Christians in Iraq.

    Grenell, former acting director of intelligence during Trump’s first term, told Reuters the dialogue was important.

    “I continue to believe that the Arab and Muslim communities in Michigan are the key to winning the state,” Grenell said. “I know these leaders well and they want and deserve access to political decision makers.”

    Although Grenell faced tough questions from Arab American leaders during four events in the Detroit area, he said he would remain closely engaged, and emphasized Trump’s commitment to peace around the world.

    “You can’t show up right before an election and expect to be a credible voice for any community,” he told Reuters. 

    Ali Aljahmi, a 20-year-old Yemeni American who helped to galvanize young Arab Americans for Trump with a video viewed nearly 1 million times on X, credited him for coming to Dearborn twice during the 2024 campaign. But it’s too soon to predict the next election, said Aljahmi, whose family operates four restaurants in the Detroit area.

    “Trump promised a lot,” he said. “Okay, you came and showed your face, but I still think it’s a mixture. Three years from now, we’ll see what they’re doing.”

    (Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Sergio Non and Edmund Klamann)

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  • Peru’s Boluarte Rose From Vice President to Embattled Leader

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    BOGOTA (Reuters) -Peruvian President Dina Boluarte’s tenure was marked by turmoil from the moment she assumed power, but the unpopular leader was able to hang on for years until she was removed from office y Congress in the early hours of Friday.

    Boluarte, a 63-year-old mother of two from a village in the mountainous region of Apurimac, was elected as vice-president in 2021. She became Peru’s first female head of state when former President Pedro Castillo was ousted and arrested after trying to dissolve Congress in late 2022.

    Castillo was a cowboy-hat wearing leader popular with Peru’s indigenous and rural populations and his arrest was met with widespread protests around the country. The government responded to the unrest with a heavy-handed approach that led to the death of dozens of protesters in regions outside the capital.

    Boluarte, who has indigenous roots, defended the use of force and has since faced investigations into the deaths of protesters but was later shielded by Peru’s constitutional court.

    She also faced a number of corruption scandals, including her brother given pre-trial detention over corruption charges and an investigation into her use of luxury watches and jewelry.

    Boluarte has also been criticized for the country’s rising crime rates, which have sparked a number of protests in the capital and around the country. Boluarte had an approval rating of just 2%-3%, making her one of the most unpopular leaders in the world.

    In September, Gen Z activists took to the streets to protest against Boluarte, leading to clashes between demonstrators in police.

    Despite everything, Boluarte had managed to hold on to power until Thursday night, when Congress called an emergency session to discuss four different motions to impeach her.

    Congress voted to move forward with the debate and Boluarte, whose term was originally meant to last until July 2026, was then removed from office in a vote just after midnight.

    (Reporting by Alexander Villegas; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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  • Brazil Justice Barroso to Leave Supreme Court, Opening New Appointment for Lula

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    BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Luis Roberto Barroso said on Thursday he is stepping down from the court, well ahead of a deadline for his mandatory retirement in 2033.

    Barroso’s decision creates a new vacancy on the Supreme Court, allowing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to appoint a third nominee to the country’s 11-member top court during his current term.

    “It’s time to move in a new direction. I have no attachment to power and would like to live the rest of my life without the responsibilities of the role,” Barroso said during the court’s session.

    Barroso, 67, was appointed to a Supreme Court seat in 2013 by former President Dilma Rousseff, and has served as President of the court for two years until September.

    He held the top post when a panel of the court last month sentenced former President Jair Bolsonaro to more than 27 years in prison for plotting a coup to remain in power after losing the 2022 election. Barroso did not vote in the case, as he was not part of the panel that issued the ruling.

    (Reporting by Ricardo Brito; Writing by Fernando Cardoso; Editing by Chris Reese and Natalia Siniawski)

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  • Seychelles President Bids to Avoid Opposition Sweep in Run-Off Election

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    VICTORIA (Reuters) -Voters in Seychelles will return to the polls on Thursday for a run-off election between the sitting president and the leader of the Indian Ocean archipelago’s longtime governing party, which has already reclaimed a majority in parliament.

    In the first round last month, Patrick Herminie, a former National Assembly speaker from the United Seychelles party, outpaced President Wavel Ramkalawan by over 2 percentage points with 48.8% of the more than 64,000 ballots cast.

    Seychelles is Africa’s wealthiest country per capita, located across 1.2 million kilometres (463,000 square miles) in the western Indian Ocean and a prime tourist destination as well as a target for investment from, and security cooperation with, China, Gulf nations and India.

    The nation of 115 islands is, however, also among the world’s most climate vulnerable, and has one of the highest per-capita rates of heroin use.

    ELECTION COULD PRODUCE DIVIDED GOVERNMENT

    Voting will begin on the outlying islands and for some essential workers on Thursday, with polling stations on the three main islands opening on Saturday. Results are due on Sunday.

    Ramkalawan, a former Anglican priest, came to power in 2020, becoming the first president from outside United Seychelles – formerly the Seychelles People’s Progressive Front – since a coup one year after independence from Britain in 1976.

    He has touted his management of Seychelles’ economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, saying he needs a second five-year term to build social protection and infrastructure while defending the country’s neutrality to draw investment.

    His Linyon Demokratik Seselwa coalition lost its parliamentary majority in last month’s vote, meaning he would preside over a divided government should he win.

    “I think the people of Seychelles want a balance of power to get the best deal,” Ramkalawan told Reuters.

    OPPOSITION CANDIDATE BOOSTED BY ENDORSEMENTS

    Herminie, who was arrested in 2023 on charges of witchcraft that were later dropped, is aiming to restore United Seychelles’ control of both the presidency and parliament for the first time since 2015.

    His campaign has been boosted by endorsements from eliminated candidates, including Marco Francis, who received around 2% of the vote in the first round.

    “We needed just 1% to win State House,” Herminie told supporters at a rally. “That means 500 votes. And today, I’m telling you: we will get those 500 votes and go to State House on October 11.”

    His platform includes lowering the retirement age that Ramkalawan raised and cancelling a hotel project environmentalists say threatens a UNESCO-listed coral atoll.

    (Editing by Aaron Ross and Ed Osmond)

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  • Former French PM Philippe in Favour of Early Presidential Election

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    PARIS (Reuters) -Former French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said on Tuesday that he was in favour of an early presidential election, due to the current political crisis engulfing the country.

    Philippe, once a close ally of President Emmanuel Macron, said he favoured new presidential elections in an interview with radio station RTL, following the Monday resignation of outgoing Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu, whose government was rejected by both allies and opponents.

    Philippe’s comments were echoed by Jordan Bardella, the leader of the far-right party National Rally, who said in a separate interview on BFM TV that he supported first a dissolution of the parliament, followed by parliamentary elections or early presidential elections.

    (Reporting by Inti Landauro, Bertrand Boucey and Nicolas Delame;Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta)

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  • Ex-Minister and Left Winger Vie for Irish Presidency After Football Coach Withdraws

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    DUBLIN (Reuters) -Ireland’s presidential election will be contested by a former minister and a left-wing lawmaker after a third candidate, a former Gaelic football coach, pulled out of the contest following questions about his time as a landlord almost 20 years ago.

    The withdrawal by Jim Gavin on Sunday, the candidate for Fianna Fail, one of Ireland’s two governing parties, means the contest for the largely ceremonial role will now be a straight shootout between independent lawmaker Catherine Connolly and ex-minister Heather Humphreys.

    The Irish Independent newspaper reported a claim by a former tenant that Gavin had failed to return a rent overpayment of more than 3,000 euros ($3,500) that was the result of a banking error.

    In a statement, Gavin said that recent days had given him “cause to reflect”.

    “I made a mistake that was not in keeping with my character and the standards I set myself. I am now taking steps to address the matter,” he said.

    Connolly, one of the leading pro-Palestinian voices in parliament, has built up a coalition representing most of the opposition, including the largest member Sinn Fein, which opted not to put forward a candidate of its own.

    Fine Gael, Ireland’s other ruling party, is backing Humphreys, a former social affairs minister.

    A poll for the Sunday Independent newspaper published on Sunday morning put Connolly at 32%, Humphreys at 23%, and Gavin at 15%.

    (Reporting by Graham Fahy; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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  • As Shutdown Drags On, US Voters See Blame Game Threatening Democrats and Republicans

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    VIRGINIA BEACH, Virginia (Reuters) -Betty Snellenberg and Grace Cook stood on opposite sides of the walkway into the early voting center in Virginia Beach – one promoting the Democratic ticket for the November 4 statewide election, the other distributing pamphlets for the Republican nominees.

    Flanking the entrance, the two women embodied the country’s partisan split as a days-old government shutdown threatened to cleave the political left and right further apart, with each side blaming the other for the paralysis in Washington.

    Yet Snellenberg and Cook shared a common concern: their parties risk losing the messaging war if the shutdown goes on for weeks or months, especially in an area of their state so dependent on civil service and military jobs. Tens of thousands of workers have been furloughed or are working without pay.

    A long shutdown could severely damage the economy of the Hampton Roads area of Virginia, home to multiple military installations, including the world’s largest naval base in Norfolk and a base for fighter jets in Virginia Beach.

    Snellenberg, an 84-year-old Democrat, said she was worried that in a prolonged shutdown voters would eventually come to care more about the broader economic toll than the extension of healthcare subsidies that are at the core of Democrats’ demands.

    “I don’t want the Dems to back down because it shows weakness,” said Snellenberg, who worked at a nearby naval intelligence center prior to retirement. “But it’s going to come back and bite us if it goes on longer than a month.”

    Cook, Snellenberg’s Republican counterpart, said she was unsure if the shutdown would prove to be a critical factor in the off-year election’s headline race for governor between Democratic former Representative Abigail Spanberger and Republican Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears.

    But she worried a protracted shutdown could boomerang on Republicans heading into the 2026 midterm elections. Democrats are seeking to oust the Republican incumbent in a competitive congressional seat that includes the city of Virginia Beach in their bid to retake control of the House of Representatives. 

    “It might hurt us in the midterms,” said Cook, 61, a former Department of Defense employee who was wearing a T-shirt bearing the word “Freedom” in a tribute to slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk. “In this area – only because we’re a lot of Navy and a lot of DOD and federal jobs.”

    About 335,000 civilian employees at the Defense Department – nearly half its workforce – were slated for furlough under its shutdown plan.

    Public opinion surveys echo Snellenberg and Cook’s shared anxieties: that both parties stand to lose support, though more people seem ready, at least for now, to fault President Donald Trump and his Republican Party, which controls both chambers of Congress.

    A poll by Marist, PBS News and NPR conducted in late September prior to the shutdown found that 31% of respondents would blame both sides equally, while 38% said they would hold Republicans culpable and 27% said they’d blame Democrats.

    The shutdown is already factoring into a key state-level November 4 race, with incumbent Democrat Michael Feggans last week releasing a 30-second ad highlighting the potential economic damage to his lower house district in Virginia Beach.

    “Someone who’s always spoken about the art of the deal is going on another shutdown,” Feggans, referring to Trump and his self-branding as a deal-maker, said in an interview. “We didn’t have any government shutdowns during the Biden administration.”

    Tim Anderson, his Republican opponent, said he believes Democrats, who have the votes to block a stopgap funding bill in the U.S. Senate, will be seen by most Americans as the intransigent party at the outset of the shutdown.

    “But if this continues for a while, voters will start looking at the president as the responsible entity in the shutdown,” Anderson told Reuters, adding that he could see an ongoing shutdown hurting his chances on November 4. “The longer this goes, the worse it’s going to hurt Republicans.”

    The shutdown, which entered its fifth day on Sunday, has suspended scientific research, financial oversight, economic data reports, and a wide range of other activities. With some exceptions, most federal employees will not be paid until a deal to reopen the government is made.

    Nearly 60,000 people in the Hampton Roads area work for the federal government, while another 85,000 in the area are active duty military, according to Bob McNab, chair of the economics department at Old Dominion University. Because of a pullback in their spending, the region could lose $1 billion a month in economic activity during a sustained shutdown, McNab said.

    In interviews with more than two dozen voters, federal employees and elected officials in Virginia Beach and the nearby city of Chesapeake on Thursday, nearly all expressed worries about the financial impact on themselves or their loved ones.

    But several Republicans told Reuters that they wanted Trump to hold his ground, even if it meant economic pain for the region, arguing that Democrats were wrong as a matter of principle for using their leverage to block the proposed short-term spending bill.

    Democrats say they do not trust Republicans to honor any agreement that would first reopen the government and then tackle the healthcare subsidies, which were passed as part of a 2021 Democratic COVID relief package and now help 24 million Americans pay for coverage.

    Jan Callaway, a Republican poll watcher, said depending on how Trump went about it she could support him using the shutdown to fire more civil servants, as he has threatened to do, even with 300,000 already set to be pushed out by the end of 2025.

    “I’m concerned if it goes on for a long time, but I think the Democrats are shooting themselves in the foot,” Callaway, 69, said. “I trust Trump … he’s the king of making deals.”

    Two Democratic-leaning independents told Reuters that they were worried that Republicans were winning the messaging battle, gaining traction by repeatedly making the false claim that the Democratic spending proposal would extend health coverage to people who are in the country illegally.

    “They have not done a very good job in selling the truth,” said Stuart, who would only give her first name, referring to leaders of the Democratic Party. “It seems to me, unfortunately, that the Republicans have the larger megaphone.”

    Much like their parties, Snellenberg and Cook have not crossed the aisle, or in their case the walkway, to discuss the shutdown. Volunteers for both parties were mostly keeping to themselves, when Reuters visited this week.

    (Reporting by Nathan Layne in Virginia Beach, editing by Ross Colvin and Diane Craft)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Georgian PM Says Protesters Aimed to Topple the Government, Accuses EU of Meddling

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    TBILISI (Reuters) -Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said on Sunday that protesters who sought to force entry to the presidential palace had been trying to topple the government and accused the European Union of meddling in Georgian politics.

    Georgian riot police used pepper spray and water cannons to drive demonstrators away from the presidential palace and detained five activists on Saturday, as the opposition staged a large demonstration on a day of local elections.

    Kobakhidze said that up to 7,000 people attended the rally but their “attempt to overthrow the constitutional order” had failed despite what he said was support from the EU.

    “They moved to action, began the overthrow attempt, it failed, and then they started distancing themselves from it,” Georgian news agency Interpress cited the prime minister.

    “No one will escape responsibility. This includes political responsibility.”

    He accused EU Ambassador Paweł Herczynski of meddling in Georgian politics and urged him to condemn the protests.

    “You know that specific people from abroad have even expressed direct support for all this, for the announced attempt to overthrow the constitutional order,” Kobakhidze said.

    “In this context, the European Union ambassador to Georgia bears special responsibility. He should come out, distance himself and strictly condemn everything that is happening on the streets of Tbilisi.”

    There was no immediate comment from the EU on the claims, but in July the EU’s diplomatic service rejected what it said was the “disinformation and baseless accusations” by the Georgian authorities about the EU’s alleged role in Georgia.

    “Recent statements falsely claiming that the EU seeks to destabilize Georgia, drag it into war or impose so-called ‘non-traditional values,’ constitute a deliberate attempt to mislead the public,” it said in July.

    The governing Georgian Dream party said on Saturday it had clinched victory in every municipality across the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million people in an election boycotted by the two largest opposition blocs.

    Georgia’s pro-Western opposition has been staging protests since October last year, when GD won a parliamentary election that its critics say was fraudulent. The party has rejected accusations of vote-rigging.

    Once one of the most pro-Western nations to emerge from the ashes of the Soviet Union, Georgia has had frayed relations with the West since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

    (Reporting by Reuters in Moscow and Tbilisi; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Georgian Police Clash With Protesters as Ruling Party Says It Wins Local Elections

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    By Lucy Papachristou and Felix Light

    TBILISI (Reuters) -Georgian riot police used pepper spray and water cannon to force protesters away from the presidential palace on Saturday as the opposition staged a large demonstration on the day of municipal elections.

    The governing Georgian Dream (GD) party said it had clinched victory in every municipality across the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million in an election boycotted by the two largest opposition blocs.

    Shortly before polls closed on Saturday, a group of demonstrators attempted to force entry to the presidential palace in the capital Tbilisi, a Reuters witness said, after opposition figures called for a “peaceful revolution” against GD, which they accuse of being pro-Russian and authoritarian.

    PROTESTS UNDER WAY SINCE LAST OCTOBER

    Georgia’s pro-Western opposition has been staging protests since October last year, when GD won a parliamentary election that its critics say was fraudulent. The party has rejected accusations of vote-rigging.

    Once one of the most pro-Western nations to emerge from the ashes of the Soviet Union, Georgia’s ties with the West have frayed since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    The government froze accession talks to the European Union soon after last year’s vote, abruptly halting a longstanding national goal and triggering large demonstrations that have continued since.

    On Saturday, thousands of protesters gathered on Tbilisi’s central Freedom Square and Rustaveli Avenue, waving Georgian and EU flags.

    Davit Mzhavanadze, who attended the demonstration, said the protests were part of “a deep crisis which is absolutely formed by our pro-Russian and authoritarian government.”

    “I think this protest will continue until these demands will be responded to properly from our government,” he said.

    A smaller group of demonstrators marched to the presidential palace and were repelled by police after attempting to break into the building. Some of them then barricaded a nearby street, lighting fires and facing off with riot police.

    Georgian Dream, which is widely seen as controlled by founder Bidzina Ivanishvili, the country’s richest man and a former prime minister, denies it is pro-Moscow. It says it wants to join the EU while preserving peace with Russia, its huge neighbour to the north.

    (Reporting by Lucy Papachristou and Felix Light; Editing by Mark Potter and Timothy Heritage)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Rolex-Loving Daughter Defies Cameroon’s Aged Leader on TikTok

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    DAKAR (Reuters) -Cameroon’s 92-year-old President Paul Biya faces an unexpected challenge as he runs for an eighth term in office: a viral TikTok video by his daughter Brenda Biya saying she will not vote for him.

    Previously known for posting images of herself posing on top of a Rolls-Royce, flashing a diamond-studded Rolex or boarding a private jet, the 27-year-old stunned the nation with her defiant message in the run-up to the October 12 vote.

    “Do not vote for Paul Biya, not because of me, but because he has made too many people suffer,” she said, looking deeply into the camera in an oversized hoodie and pink-tinted hair. 

    “I hope we will have another president,” she added, saying she was renouncing her family and their financial support. 

    In power for 42 years, Biya has presided over economic stagnation and political repression in his nation of 30 million people. Transparency International lists his government as one of the most corrupt in the world.

    The average Cameroonian lives on less than $5 a day, World Bank data shows, while GDP per capita is lower than it was at its peak in 1986.

    Clashes between troops and armed separatists in Cameroon’s Anglophone region have killed over 6,500 people since 2017 but received little attention abroad.

    DAUGHTER UNLIKELY TO CHANGE CAMEROON ELECTION OUTCOME

    Brenda Biya has benefited from her father’s rule. 

    She attended a prestigious high school in Switzerland and studied in California, where she posted about paying $400 for one-way trips to class in luxury cars.

    Her mid-September video on TikTok has been viewed by millions and was replayed by local news networks across West Africa, but is unlikely to sway the outcome given her father’s enduring grip.

    Another victory as expected for Paul Biya would extend his mandate until he is almost 100 years old. He has not named a potential successor, though local media speculate his son Franck is being groomed for the role.

    “The more corrupt a country is, the more difficult it is to change the regime,” said Muna Akera, a former official at Transparency International now part of a coalition seeking to unseat Biya.

    “The infrastructure is in bad shape. The roads are in bad shape. Yaounde looks like an open air dustbin with rubbish everywhere,” he told Reuters. 

    Paul Biya has not responded to his daughter’s video and his office did not answer a request for comment. Brenda Biya, speaking through her U.S. lawyer Emmanuel Nsahlai, declined to discuss the election.

    Paul Biya has previously said his office takes the fight against corruption seriously, introducing new measures to improve governance last year. He says boosting economic development is a key priority for his campaign.

     The U.N. has warned that arrests and threats targeting civil society and political opponents meant the election was unlikely to be free and fair. Paul Biya’s main political rival, Maurice Kamto, was disqualified by the electoral commission in July.

    BRENDA BIYA HAD ALREADY SHOWN DEFIANCE OVER HOMOSEXUALITY

    Brenda Biya quickly deleted her viral post, but it was too late to stop its spread.

    She has since issued an apology video, calling her father a great man and urging followers to form their own opinions, but without saying she would vote for him. She appeared to be reading from a document reflected in huge sunglasses that hid much of her face.

    Viewers joked that her father had cut off her allowance, or that she spoke under duress. “Take off your glasses if you’re in danger” and “blink twice” were among the reactions.

    The original video was her second public act of defiance after she came out as lesbian last year by posting an intimate photo of herself with a Brazilian model. In Cameroon, homosexuality is punishable by up to five years in jail.

    “It was really a blessing for the LGBT community, the best way to give her father a slap in the face,” said Shaqiro, a transgender woman and social media influencer who was arrested for homosexuality in Cameroon in 2021.

    Shaqiro, who fled Cameroon while on bail and now lives in Brussels, struck up an online friendship with Biya after she came out.

    “For me, God is paying Paul Biya back by giving him a very stubborn child,” she said.

    SWISS TRIAL REVEALS CAREER CHANGES, LIFE IN FIVE-STAR HOTEL

    Details of Brenda Biya’s life emerged from a trial in Switzerland this year in which she was convicted of defaming an online influencer.

    She told the court she had made no money from business ventures including a hair company in Beverly Hills and a hotel in Yaoundé, but was supported by her parents.

    The trial revealed that she had Swiss residency and appeared to live at the five-star Intercontinental Hotel in Geneva where rooms are booked for her all year round. The hotel did not respond to a request for comment. 

    In 2017, the OCCRP, a global network of investigative journalists, reported that the Biya family had spent about $65 million on luxury hotel stays in Switzerland since coming to power in 1982.       

    (Additional reporting by Amindeh Blaise Atabong; Editing by Estelle Shirbon and Andrew Cawthorne)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Explainer-What Investors Are Watching in Cameroon’s Presidential Election

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    NAIROBI (Reuters) -Cameroon’s voters will decide on October 12 whether to grant 92-year-old President Paul Biya, the world’s oldest head of state, an extension of his four-decade rule. Here is what investors are watching in the race to lead central Africa’s biggest economy:

    WHO ARE THE CANDIDATES IN THE ELECTION?

    Biya, who has been in power since 1982, is facing a dozen other candidates in an election in which more than 8 million voters are eligible to cast ballots. But at the helm of the ruling Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM) party, he controls the electoral machinery and is almost certain to win.

    The main opposition challengers include Issa Tchiroma Bakary, a former minister of employment, and Bello Bouba Maigari, whom Biya appointed as his first prime minister when he took power.

    But the opposition is more noteworthy for one absence: Maurice Kamto, Biya’s main rival. The electoral commission rejected his candidacy in July without giving a reason.

    Kamto secured 14% of the votes cast during the last election in 2018, which Biya won amid fraud allegations.

    WHAT ARE THE TOP ISSUES FOR INVESTORS?

    Cameroon, like other Sub-Saharan African countries, started issuing Eurobond debt in the last decade, putting it on the radar of frontier market investors.

    It issued its maiden international bond in 2015, before tapping the market again last year with an issue that will mature in 2032.

    The country also had a $689.5 million International Monetary Fund programme, as well as $181.7 million from the Resilience and Sustainability Facility, both of which ended in July. Investors will be watching to see if it will secure a new arrangement.

    Cameroon’s economy is reliant on commodities exports; it is the world’s fifth biggest cocoa producer and also exports oil, gas and timber. This leaves it vulnerable to the vicissitudes of commodity price slumps. 

    WHAT ECONOMIC CHALLENGES WILL THE WINNER FACE?

    The IMF classifies Cameroon’s debt as sustainable – but at high risk of distress. Analysts have warned that its rising reliance on borrowing as well as inefficiencies in its debt management could increase the country’s vulnerability to shocks.

    That could pose a problem for the winner as the government seeks to borrow $1.6 billion locally and abroad to plug a financing gap, amid falling disbursements from donors.

    Cameroon’s debut $750 million bond also matures next month, which could drain some cash from government coffers, although officials have not yet commented on plans to manage the maturing bond.

    The winner will also have to address the financial sector in order to exit the global Financial Action Task Force’s “grey list”, a determination that its system is susceptible to money laundering.

    Cameroon has also been dealing with increased climate catastrophes, including droughts and floods, which have pressured the agriculture sector and could curb production of key commodities.

    ARE THERE ANY OTHER FACTORS AT PLAY?

    Investors also closely watch Biya’s health, as his advanced age and the lack of a clear succession plan, raise concerns over the country’s stability.

    Biya would be nearly 100 years old at the end of the eighth term in office he is seeking.   

    His health is the subject of frequent speculation, and he already often spends long periods of unexplained time in Europe, including last year when he disappeared from public view for a 42-day stretch. 

    He has brushed off concerns about his health and said he was determined to serve the country. 

    Cameroon also faces a host of serious security challenges, including a conflict with Anglophone separatists in the southwest and the northwest and threats from Nigeria-based Islamist fighters in the north.

    (Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Editing by Libby George and Gareth Jones )

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Guinea Announces First Post-Coup Presidential Vote on December 28

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    CONAKRY (Reuters) -Guinea will on December 28 hold its first presidential election since a coup in 2021, according to a decree read on state television.

    The announcement was made on Saturday, a day after the Supreme Court validated the results of a referendum approving a new constitution that could allow coup leader Mamady Doumbouya to run. Doumbouya has not said whether he plans to.

    The coup in Guinea was one of eight that swept West and Central Africa between 2020 and 2023.

    Guinea is of international financial significance as the home to the world’s largest reserves of bauxite.

    It also has the world’s richest untapped iron ore deposit at Simandou.

    Some countries that experienced coups, such as Chad and Gabon, have since held elections formally marking transitions to civilian rule, while others, including Mali and Niger, have approved lengthy transition periods without the need for a vote.

    Doumbouya’s government proposed a two-year transition to elections in 2022 after negotiating with regional bloc ECOWAS, but it missed that deadline.

    The new constitution replaces the transitional framework that had barred members of the junta from contesting elections, opening the door for Doumbouya’s candidacy.

    It also introduces institutional changes, such as longer presidential terms, from five years to seven, renewable once, and a new Senate.

    It passed with 89% of the vote, according to results published late Friday by the Supreme Court that put turnout at 92%.

    Opposition politicians have contested the turnout figure, saying it did not square with their observations at polling stations that indicated sparse voter participation.

    (Reporting by Guinea newsroom;Writing by Robbie Corey-Boulet; editing by Barbara Lewis)

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  • Could We Have The First Native American Woman Governor? DEI Expert Weighs In On What Allyship Should Look Like If History Is Made. | Entrepreneur

    Could We Have The First Native American Woman Governor? DEI Expert Weighs In On What Allyship Should Look Like If History Is Made. | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    As the 2024 election season comes to a close, we’re encountering a year of historic firsts — nationally and locally. If Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz were to win the White House this year, the highest-ranking Native American woman in the country would become the governor of Minnesota. That woman is Peggy Flanagan.

    Lauded as one of Minnesota’s rising stars and currently the highest-ranking Native woman elected to executive office, Peggy Flanagan is a politician, community organizer and Indigenous activist from the White Earth Nation. She has been serving as the lieutenant governor of Minnesota since 2019 and is currently next in line to assume the governorship if Tim Walz becomes vice president.

    So what does this all mean? History could be made this November and help catapult the first Native woman — and consequently, long-overlooked Native issues — into broader American public discourse. It’s perfect timing, too, as we approach Native American History Month this November.

    Even though we’re zooming in on politics in this piece, entrepreneurs across the spectrum can learn something about positioning diverse leaders in the right spaces and supporting their work and advancement throughout their tenure.

    Flanagan needed allies like Walz and others to lift her voice and put her into positions where she could make an impact. We can all learn more about what it means to be a better ally for those who are the “firsts” in their space. Here are three strategies around allyship I recommend to my diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) consultancy clients.

    Related: The Burden of Breaking Barriers is Pushing Black Leaders to Breaking Point. This DEI Expert Reveals Where We Are Going Wrong.

    Let diverse leaders lead

    There have been many firsts in the realm of politics in recent years. There was the first Black president, Barack Obama, in 2008, then the first openly gay governor, Jared Polis, from Colorado in 2019, and potentially, the first woman and Southeast Asian president, Kamala Harris, in 2024.

    All these great firsts had this in common: they had allies and partners that let them take the lead and shine. Peggy Flanagan has been an outstanding leader in the realm of DEI for decades. In 2017, she helped form Minnesota’s first People of Color and Indigenous Caucus (POCI). She worked tirelessly to improve education, health and economic outcomes for Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) in her state.

    In addition, she has been a fearless advocate of Indigenous people’s rights. While serving as a legislator, she sponsored a first-of-its-kind task force focused on Missing Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW), a phenomenon happening across the country where Indigenous women experience violence and go missing shortly thereafter. Local police municipalities in many states often don’t search for missing Indigenous women or investigate their disappearances. Unfortunately, MMIW cases usually go unsolved. All that is to say that when we let diverse leaders lead, they can do powerful things by raising awareness about issues that may have never crossed our minds. As allies, our job is to lift these leaders up and amplify their work.

    Beware of performative allyship

    While many people want to take credit for knowing the trailblazers in politics and DEI and take pride in having supported them on their way up, the truth is that it can be a lonely journey for many leaders who had to actualize their dreams on their own. They sponsored their legislation and wrote it themselves with their teams. They sat in rooms with decision-makers where they worked hard to get colleagues on board with their bold new initiatives. They attended many thankless events where they carried the burden of organizing, leading and managing the outcomes alone.

    Many people want to take credit for the work BIPOC has been doing by saying they were “there” at the event or “support” so-and-so leaders’ work wholeheartedly. But still, BIPOC individuals are often the people who did all the work, and still, the allies are nowhere to be found. Performative allyship can often look like claiming to be an ally when it’s politically or socially advantageous but not during times when true grit, work, and dedication are required — and the cameras and spotlights are off. Avoid falling into the trap of lifting up leaders like Flanagan when it’s most convenient for you and not for the leaders and their causes.

    Related: How Brands Can Go From Performative Allyship to Actual Allies

    Be a success partner

    What’s most helpful for rising leaders whom you wish to support is not only to say you stand behind certain causes but to actually show up and prove it. Support bills that improve Indigenous health, education and rights. Speak about Flanagan’s work in the public domain, thereby ensuring colleagues who might be interested in those issues are aware of them. Donate to organizations and nonprofits that bolster the work that Indigenous leaders are doing to move the needle on change. It’s not enough to say, “I’m for Indigenous people’s rights,” or to do a land acknowledgment when you haven’t actually done the work, spent the time, or put your money where your mouth is.

    Related: It’s Not Enough to Simply Acknowledge Indigenous People’s Day. Here Are 4 Ways Employers Can Take Action, Help and Support Native Americans.

    Final thoughts

    No matter what happens this November, leaders like Peggy Flanagan are on the rise. When one person moves on to a higher office, BIPOC and LGBTQ+ officials who have been waiting for their moment to shine can finally rise, too. The future is bright for a new generation of leadership in the U.S. that better represents the diversity of the country while inspiring more just, equitable and inclusive policies at local and national levels.

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