15/07/24View in Browser

The Guy Fawkes conspiracy revisited

By Georgi Gotev

As the news of shots fired at former US president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump continues to reverberate across the globe, a few tidbits from the not-so-distant past come to mind.

“I can stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue, shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters,” Donald Trump said at a campaign rally in Iowa eight years ago, drawing boisterous laughs from his supporters.

It was Trump again who mocked Nancy Pelosi and her husband Paul when Paul was brutally assaulted in their home in September 2023 by a Canadian far-right conspiracy theorist.

The Trump camp, or people who support him, has also been promoting physical violence against Joe Biden, as this video footage from a Republican fundraising event attests.

Last but not least, Donald Trump has been a staunch ally of the gun lobby, his power base, while the Biden administration has taken a number of steps to try to combat gun violence,

Trump has pledged to continue to defend the Second Amendment (the right to bear arms), which he claims is “under siege,” and has called himself “the best friend gun owners have ever had in the White House”, even as the US faces record numbers of deaths due to mass shootings.

These elements of reflection come to mind after Trump himself was injured in what appears to be the most serious attempt to assassinate a US president or a presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan was shot at in 1981.

Joe Biden and leaders of the world were fast to condemn the assassination attempt as an attack on democracy.

Reportedly Biden upended his strategy in the wake of the shooting, and his team was pulling down television ads and suspending other political communications, including those that had highlighted Trump’s May felony conviction in New York state court relating to hush money paid to a porn star to avert a sex scandal before the 2016 US election.

But Trump’s supporters, who include figures like Elon Musk, decried the lack of empathy in the liberal media, which they traditionally accuse of demonising their political enemy and creating an atmosphere of hate.

This is only the beginning.

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Photo of the day

Minister of Agriculture of Hungary Istvan Nagy speaks with the media at the beginning of the European Agriculture and Fisheries Council in the EU Council in Brussels, Belgium, 15 July 2024. According to EU Commission, the upcoming meeting of EU Agriculture Ministers will address trade-related agricultural issues and strategies to enhance the long-term sustainability of rural communities. The agenda will also include a focus on generational renewal and demographic trends. EPA-EFE/OLIVIER MATTHYS

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The Roundup

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas (Reform party, Renew) submitted her resignation to Estonian President Alar Karis on Monday (15 July) after being nominated as the next European Union’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

Ursula von der Leyen’s speech on Thursday (18 July) at European Parliament will be crucial to ensure the majority she needs to be reelected as Commission president, but to convince all pro-EU coalition lawmakers, she will have to address some key EU policy issues.

NGO Pesticide Action Network Europe found that a ‘forever chemical’ present in 94% of surface water and 63% of bottled water samples far exceeds limits set in the revised drinking water directive.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico (Smer-SD/NI), who recently survived a politically motivated shooting, drew parallels between his experience and the recent assassination attempt on former US President Donald Trump, suggesting that their political opponents are inciting public anger and pushing individuals to resort to violence.

Polish politicians reacted to Saturday’s attack on Donald Trump, with some opposition figures accusing the ruling coalition of fuelling political polarisation and linking Prime Minister Donald Tusk to the assassination attempt.

 

Look out for…

  • Economic and Financial Affairs Council meeting
  • Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council (Social, Employment)
  • Informal meeting of energy ministers
  • European Commission Vice President Vĕra Jourová meets via video conference with Ms Catherine De Bolle, Executive Director of Europol
  • European Commissioner Stella Kyriakides, in Strasbourg France; attends the European Parliament’s Plenary session
  • European Commissioner Nicolas Schmit attends the meeting of employment and social affairs ministers (EPSCO Council) in Brussels
  • European Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi meets with Minister of European Integration of Serbia, Tanja Miščević.
  • European Commissioner Johannes Hahn meets Xavier Bettel, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade and Minister for Cooperation of Luxembourg

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic]

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