A 74-year-old conservative Democrat from a coal state may very well be enjoying his time in the limelight. Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia handed himself a pivotal role in election year politics after he effectively torpedoed the president’s monster $2 trillion economic agenda this week. The administration is still scrambling to try and meet his ever-shifting wish list. Among Manchin’s reported concerns: low-income parents will blow their tax savings on drugs. That aside, Bloomberg’s editorial board predicts clearer priorities and more transparent accounting could still result in some version of Joe Biden’s “Build Back Better” plan becoming law in 2022. Omicron is racing across the globe, thriving in the winter of the Northern Hemisphere and among the millions of unvaccinated. The U.S. government over-counted the number of Americans who are at least partly inoculated, meaning millions more than previously thought remain unprotected. But more data is suggesting that the Covid-19 variant is less likely to land you in the hospital. Bloomberg’s Covid Resilience Ranking has a new leader: Chile, which has the second-most vaccinated population in the world among countries bigger than 1 million people. Formerly the Latin American haven of choice for investors, the country also finds itself marked by exceptionalism again, this time following the election of a 35-year-old socialist as president. Chile President-elect Gabriel Boric Photographer: Cristobal Olivares/Bloomberg Just in case you need them, Bloomberg columnist Shuli Ren has some valuable tips on how to survive 21 days of quarantine in a government-administered hotel room in Hong Kong. Perhaps slightly less cramped, Manhattan luxury-home sales are wrapping up their biggest year ever. It’s been quite a year for Wall Street. The biggest banks made it their most profitable ever and bonuses are bulging. But veterans of previous booms don’t feel so good about this one. And initial public offerings, once considered pretty close to a sure-thing, were a bit, well, meh. Google says the food of the year is TikTok’s baked feta pasta, but Bloomberg food editor Kate Krader reckons it’s actually pizza. And for pure comfort grub, top Maui chef Sheldon Simeon says you can’t beat a grilled cheese-meets-Sloppy Joe island specialty known as a flying saucer. An imperfect but delicious flying saucer. Photographer: Kate Krader/Bloomberg The James Webb telescope should be on its way. It’s New Year’s, but Edinburgh’s famous party is closed. The Ghislaine Maxwell jury resumes deliberations. Susan Arnold succeeds Bob Iger as Disney chairman. U.S. LNG cargoes arrive in a fuel-starved Europe.On the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Soviet Union, Bloomberg asked historians, economists and political analysts why it happened, and what lessons today’s occupants of the Kremlin—and students of President Vladimir Putin’s Russia—should take from it. A Soviet-era statue of Vladimir Lenin at a party inside the Museum of Communism in Prague in 2009. Source: Bloomberg Like getting Weekend Reading? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and gain expert analysis from exclusive subscriber-only newsletters. Wake up with the biggest stories in global politics: Balance of Power, which arrives in your inbox every morning, breaks down the latest political news, analysis, charts and dispatches from Bloomberg reporters all over the world. Sign up here. Download the Bloomberg app: It’s available for iOS and Android. Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can’t find anywhere else. Learn more. |