Energiskiftet ritar om global maktordning

Energiskiftet ritar om global maktordning

Sällsynta mineraler som behövs i batteriframställning är koncentrerade till ett fåtal länder, som nu flexar sina muskler för att ta hem en större del av vinsten. Några av dem har varit föremål för exploatering som går tillbaka till kolonialtiden. Detta är deras chans att ta tillbaka makten över sitt öde, skriver Financial Times. Samtidigt är mineralerna inte lika oersättliga som oljan. Dels är de mer utspridda över jordklotet, även om utvinningen i nuläget är koncentrerad till ett fåtal platser. Dels sker utvecklingen snabbt och nya kemiska sammansättningar, som exempelvis koboltfria batterier, kan hela tiden vända på efterfrågan. In the first part of a series, countries that produce the metals central to the energy transition want to rewrite the rules of mineral extraction. By Leslie Hook, Harry Dempsey and Ciara Nugent

Financial Times, 8 August 2023 The red-brown landscape of Tenke-Fungurume, one of the world’s largest copper and cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo, is covered by tens of thousands of dusty sacks. The bags stacked up by the roadside and piled next to buildings contain a stash of cobalt hydroxide powder equivalent to almost a tenth of the world’s annual consumption — and worth about half a billion dollars. The haphazard stockpiles of this bright green powder, a key ingredient in electric car batteries, point to how the DRC, the world’s largest producer of cobalt, is starting to flex its muscles when it comes to the metals needed for the energy transition. CMOC, the Chinese operator of the Tenke-Fungurume mine, agreed in April to pay $800mn to the government to settle a tax dispute which had seen the company slapped with an export ban for the previous 10 months. And now the DRC government is undertaking a sweeping review of all its mining joint ventures with foreign investors. “We’re not satisfied. None of these contracts create value for us,” says Guy Robert Lukama, head of the DRC’s state-owned mining company Gécamines. He would like to see more jobs, revenue and higher-value mineral activities captured by the DRC. This is the first in a two-part series on how the shift to renewables is transforming the economics and geopolitics of energy. Tomorrow: How China came to dominate clean energy technology At the entrance to his office, a cabinet display of highly mineralised rocks makes his point about the riches on offer. Lukama also advocates government intervention to keep cobalt prices high: “Excess of supply needs to be organised properly. Some export quotas will be useful,” he says.  The DRC is far from alone. As the world moves from an energy system built on fossil fuels to one powered by electricity and renewables, global demand for materials such as copper, cobalt, nickel and lithium is transforming the fortunes of the countries that produce them. The mining of certain metals is highly concentrated among just a few countries. For cobalt, the DRC accounts for 70 per cent of global mining. In nickel, the top three producers (Indonesia, the Philippines and Russia) account for two-thirds of the market. While for lithium, the top three producers (Australia, Chile and China) account for more than 90 per cent.  Demand is only going to grow in coming years. Under current plans, none of these key commodities will have enough operating mines by 2030 to build the infrastructure necessary to limit global warming to 1.5C above preindustrial levels, according to the International Energy Agency. By the end of this decade, the nascent lithium market needs to triple in size, while copper supply will be short by 2.4mn tonnes, it says.  The growing demand for these commodities is starting to shake up both the economics and the geopolitics of the energy world. The supply chains for some of these metals are becoming entangled in the rising tensions between the west and China, which dominates processing capacity for lithium, cobalt and rare earths and is considering restricting exports of some materials. Governments from Washington to Brussels to Tokyo are assessing where they can reliably source critical minerals without going through Beijing’s orbit. This shift is also transforming some smaller and historically under-developed countries into commodity superpowers. And their governments are now intent on rewriting the rules of mineral extraction. Many are trying to capture more of the value of their minerals, by moving more processing and value-added manufacturing domestically. Some are also attempting to control the supply, by nationalising mineral resources, introducing export controls, and even proposing cartels. Where once some of these resource-rich countries were victims of exploitation that can date back to colonial times, now they are becoming empowered to take back control of their fates. Just in the past 12 months, Zimbabwe and Namibia banned exports of raw lithium; Chile increased state control over lithium mining; while Mexico plunged its nascent lithium industry into uncertainty with a new review of mining concessions. Meanwhile, Indonesia added export controls on bauxite (a key ingredient in aluminium) to its pre-existing ban on exports of raw nickel ore. “Every government will seek a deal with the mining industry that’s a fair one, that is a winner for the country and the winner for the industry,” says Jakob Stausholm, chief executive of Rio Tinto, which has itself recently been to the negotiating table in Chile and in Mongolia. While he dismisses the idea that rising ‘nationalism’ is behind this, he does acknowledge there has been a change. “It’s probably going to be more and more difficult just to mine and extract and export; very often a nation wants to have some processing facilities associated with the mining.” The subtle shift in power towards the producers of sought-after battery metals is similar to other commodities shifts of the past, like the rise of coal during 19th century or the rise of tin during the 20th. But how far will producers go to take advantage of this moment? And how long can they make it last? The poster child for harnessing value from materials is Indonesia, which produces nearly half of the world’s nickel, a key ingredient in electric car batteries. Years of export controls on raw nickel have already succeeded in building an extensive domestic smelting industry, as well as battery plants, and several electric vehicle factories.  After the country banned exports of raw nickel in 2014, it attracted more than $15bn of foreign investment in nickel processing, primarily from China. Today Indonesia has banned exports of everything from nickel ore to bauxite, with an export ban on copper concentrate coming into effect next year. Not everyone agrees with these policies. however: the EU has challenged them at the World Trade Organization and won an initial hearing. Indonesia is appealing against the verdict. But government officials say the country’s efforts to build domestic industry and encourage manufacturing are straight from the same playbook that western countries used a century ago. “This is not something we are doing out of the blue,” says Investment Minister Bahlil Lahadalia. “We are learning from our developed country counterparts, who in the past have resorted to these unorthodox policies.” He points to the way the UK banned exports of raw wool during the 16th century, to stimulate its domestic textile industry. Or the US, which used high import taxes during the 19th and 20th centuries to encourage more manufacturing to take place domestically. Lahadalia wants to take things one step further, by creating an Opec-style cartel to keep prices high for nickel and other battery materials. “Indonesia is studying the possibility to form a similar governance structure [to Opec] with regard to the minerals we have,” he says. Whether or not that happens, the rise of nickel has certainly given Indonesia a higher profile. When President Joko Widodo, or “Jokowi,” as he is typically known, visited the US last year, he met both President Joe Biden in Washington and Tesla CEO Elon Musk in an out-of-the way stopover in Boca Chica, Texas. Jokowi later said he encouraged Musk to build Tesla’s entire supply chain in the country, “from upstream to downstream.” Not every country will follow the same trajectory as Indonesia, however. A new report from the International Renewable Energy Association finds that metals producers will be able to wield influence in the short term, while production is concentrated and demand is growing, but they are unlikely to have the kind of lasting geopolitical power enjoyed by oil and gas producers. One challenge is that battery metals like lithium are well distributed around the globe — at least in terms of geological reserves, if not in actual mine production. Today’s high lithium prices are making it efficient to develop deposits that were previously too expensive to access, and fuelling the broader expansion of hard-rock lithium mining in places like China and Australia. An example of how mineral production can shift is lithium mining in South America. Chile is today the region’s dominant producer, but neighbouring Argentina, which has more business-friendly mining policies, could eventually overtake it. Argentina’s 23 provinces control their own natural resources, and have enthusiastically courted mining business. With roughly $9.6bn of lithium investment announced in the past three years, and 38 projects in the pipeline, officials say Argentina’s production should go up six-fold over the next five years. “Investment in lithium has never stopped and I think that has to do with the fact that we are open to private investment, and with uncertainty about the policies being rolled out in other countries,” says Fernanda Ávila, Argentina’s mining minister. Argentina’s position as an anomaly among South American lithium-holding countries has helped it attract investment, even as it has dried up in other sectors of the economy amid triple-digit inflation. While some politicians in South America’s “lithium triangle” — Chile, Argentina and Bolivia — have floated the idea of an Opec-style lithium cartel, Ávila is less than enthusiastic about the idea. Although “we have a very good relationship with our neighbouring countries”, she says, “that’s not a topic that’s on the agenda.” This is another reason why producing battery metals is different than producing oil: it is very hard to form a successful cartel. During the 20th century, several key commodities were controlled by cartels. Tin was managed through the International Tin Council from the 1950s to the 1980s — and Indonesia, Bolivia and the then Belgian Congo were all producer members. Likewise coffee producers banded together in a cartel during the 1960s and ‘70s; and natural rubber producers maintained a cartel until the 1990s. John Baffes, head of the Commodities Unit at the World Bank, who has studied these groups, says successful cartels have three characteristics: a small number of producers, who share a well-defined objective, over a short timetable. He thinks it will be difficult for battery metals producers to form cartels. “You may have some countries that come together, to create an environment that may be beneficial for them, such as keeping prices high,” says Baffes. “But that will be the seeds of failure, because more entities will come in, from outside of the group.” The speed at which battery technologies are evolving, and their ingredients changing, could also undercut efforts at cartelisation. Unlike oil, which is very hard to replace as a fuel source, battery metals have a much higher risk of substitution. The laboratories developing new battery chemistries are constantly evolving their formulas to use less of the metals that are expensive or hard to acquire. This is already starting to happen with cobalt, which carmakers are trying to reduce in their batteries due to its high cost, as well as concerns about human rights in the DRC. In a cautionary tale of how quickly the demand outlook can change, the use of cobalt-free batteries in China has surged from 18 per cent of the EV market in 2020, to 60 per cent this year, according to Rho Motion, an EV consultancy. Manganese-rich batteries are also on the horizon, which could further reduce cobalt use. “One of the consequences of the rise in non-cobalt batteries is that shortages previously forecast for cobalt for around 2024 and 2025 may not materialise,” says Andries Gerbens, a trader at Darton Commodities. “It may suggest cobalt prices remain lower.” The recent fall in prices of cobalt, nickel and lithium could damp efforts by producer countries to extract more rent and build up domestic manufacturing. After cobalt and lithium experienced a huge price rally in 2021 and 2022, driven primarily by demand from electric vehicle batteries, the market this year has been much calmer. A slowdown in China’s production of electric vehicles, combined with an increase in production, has brought cobalt hydroxide and lithium carbonate prices down 30 per cent and 40 per cent, respectively, during the first six months of the year, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.  Veteran miners say this cycle has played out many times before. Resource nationalism tends to increase when commodity prices are high, or when elections are approaching, says Mick Davis, founder of Vision Blue Resources and former chief executive of Xstrata.  During these times, “[politicians] inevitably try to capture more of the rent than they initially envisioned and agreed,” says Davis. “The result always ends in tears. It means that the development of their mineral resources takes longer and longer to happen.” Yet while the cycle still allows producer countries to flex their powers, they are intent on seizing the moment however they can. Earlier this year Chile, the world’s second-largest lithium producer, announced a plan to semi-nationalise the industry: it will give greater control of two giant lithium mines in the Atacama Desert to a state mining company when the current contracts end in 2030 and 2043, with both those projects and all future ones becoming public-private partnerships. Chilean President Gabriel Boric said the plan to increase state control of lithium is the best chance Chile has to become a “developed economy” and to distribute wealth in a more just way. “No more ‘mining for the few’. We have to find a way to share the benefits of our country among all Chileans,” he said.  And many producers are succeeding in taking steps up the value chain, in a bid to create sustainable economic growth. In the DRC, the country’s second copper smelter is under way near the Kamoa-Kakula copper mine. Chile, meanwhile, is offering preferential prices on lithium carbonate to companies who set up value-added lithium projects in the country. The first taker is China’s BYD, one of the world’s largest electric vehicle manufacturers, which announced in April that it would build a lithium cathode factory in northern Chile, with 500 jobs expected in the investment phase. Argentina is set to open a small lithium ion battery factory — Latin America’s first — in September, with a larger plant to follow next year. Owned by state energy research company Y-TEC, the plant in the province of Buenos Aires will use lithium mined in Argentina by US firm Livent, to produce the equivalent of 400 EV batteries a year. Indonesia’s attempts to build out an electric vehicle industry are bearing fruit at an even larger scale. Earlier this year, Ford announced an investment in a multibillion-dollar nickel processing facility. This summer, Hyundai broke ground on a battery plant, its second manufacturing facility in the country. As the energy transition starts to recast the systems of power and wealth that dominated the 20th century, the new battery metals producers are just getting started. Many see this shift in the power dynamic as a welcome change. “It is absolutely essential that we rewrite the legacy of the mining industry, so that mineral rich countries can capture more of the economic value,” says Elizabeth Press, director of planning at Irena, and author of the report on critical minerals. “We see a greater awareness from both sides that things cannot continue as they were.” ©The Financial Times Limited 2023. All Rights Reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd. Not to be redistributed, copied or modified in any way.

Donald Trump har anlänt till Vita huset – lovar en smidig övergång

Donald Trump har anlänt till Vita huset – lovar en smidig övergång

I det Ovala rummet skakade de hand, den nyinvalde presidenten Donald Trump och den avgående Joe Biden. – Politik är tufft, och i många fall är det inte en särskilt trevlig värld. I dag är det en trevlig värld, och jag uppskattar det väldigt mycket, säger Trump i samband med handskakningen. Därtill lovade han en smidig övergång. Samtidigt kommer uppgifter från The New York Times om att Trumpadministrationen inte kommer att ge mer stöd till Ukraina. Talmannen för USA:s representanthus Mike Johnson ska ha pratat om detta under ett möte bakom stängda dörrar i dag. Melania nobbade inbjudan Även Melania Trump var bjuden till Vita huset för att träffa Joe och Jill Biden, men tackade nej, skriver CNN. Enligt källor ska anledningen vara ett evenemang kring sin nya bok, där hon ska medverka. Den nobbade inbjudan bryter traditionen efter ett amerikanskt presidentval. Tidigare under dagen sa Donald Trump att han är öppen för att vara president en ytterligare, tredje mandatperiod, vilket inte är tillåtet enligt nuvarande lagstiftning.

"Netanyahu är väldigt glad över att Trump vann valet"

"Netanyahu är väldigt glad över att Trump vann valet"

Förra veckan vann Donald Trump valet i USA och i slutet av januari flyttar han tillbaka in i Vita huset. Men varför blev just Trump den som vann? Varför fick Kamala Harris 14 miljoner färre röster än vad Joe Biden fick i förra valet?  Och vad händer egentligen nu när vi får ytterligare fyra år med Trump vid rodret på världens mäktigaste militära och ekonomiska skuta? Hör allt om det här i Läget, Expressens dagliga nyhetspodd, i spelaren! Eller: Lyssna direkt på Spotify! Lyssna direkt på Podcaster!

Trump-sonens hån mot Zelenskyj: "Oroväckande, inte överraskande"

Trump-sonens hån mot Zelenskyj: "Oroväckande, inte överraskande"

Osäkerheten kring USA:s stöd till Ukraina har återigen hamnat i fokus efter att Donald Trumps äldsta son, Donald Trump Jr, delat en video på president Volodymyr Zelenskyj på sociala medier. ”Ni är 38 dagar från att förlora er ersättning” skriver han i inlägget. – Det är naturligtvis oroväckande att Donald Trump jr går ut med sådana här utfall. Det är inte särskilt överraskande att han gör det. Han har en historia av att säga sådana här saker också var en rätt extrem person när man ser till åsikter om vit makt och annat, säger Joakim Paasikivi. Stor osäkerhet Paasikivi säger vidare att Donald Trump historiskt sett har samlat sin släkt omkring sig, men att det är svårt att säga exakt vilket inflytande hans son kommer att ha. Den nyvalde presidenten har tidigare uttryckt att han vill skära ner på stödet till Ukraina och hans inställning till Ryssland varit hett omdebatterad under valkampanjen. – Det finns en stor osäkerhet kring vilken linje Trump avser att ha. Trump själv har redan ringt till Putin, enligt uppgift utan att det amerikanska utrikesdepartementet skulle ha varit inkopplat eller att några officiella amerikanska tolkar var med. Så det är väldigt svårt att säga hur stödet till Ukraina eller eventuella indragningar kommer utvecklas. ”Extremt befogad” Joe Biden uppges nu försöka säkra omfattande vapenleveranser till Ukraina innan Donald Trump tillträder som president den 20 januari. Enligt Politicos källor tar ett sådant stöd ofta månader att få till, och enligt Paasikivi råder stor oro för krigets framtid. – Och den är extremt befogad. Det handlar inte bara om Ukraina, den yttersta konsekvensen är ju Ukrainas överlevnad som nation, men i övrigt handlar det om vilken roll USA avser att ta och för oss i Europa, säger han och fortsätter: – Utan USA så blir situationen avsevärt svårare. Ukraina kommer inte att kollapsa omedelbart, men förutsättningarna för en långsiktig framgångsrik strid kommer att förändras. Ukraina går nu in i sin tredje krigsvinter sedan Rysslands fullskaliga invasion 2022, och befaras bli den värsta hittills. Det luftvärnssystem som landet blivit lovat för att skydda sig mot ryska attacker har ännu inte kommit, enligt landets president. Om du har gett ditt ord så måste du leverera, säger Zelenskyj till TT.

Sonen pekas ut efter Trumps seger: "Det var det som fällde avgörandet"

Sonen pekas ut efter Trumps seger: "Det var det som fällde avgörandet"

När Dana White, chefen för kampsportsorganisationen UFC, fick ordet efter Donald Trumps segertal i tisdags natt tackade han en grupp poddare och youtubers som få inom amerikansk mainstream, för bara några år sen, kände till. “Jag vill tacka Nelk Boys, Adin Ross, Theo Von, Bussin' With The Boys och sist men inte minst, den mäktige och inflytelserike Joe Rogan”, ropade Dana White till anhängarna på Trumps valvaka. Och det var inte för inte. Ovan nämnda har i sina olika kanaler en enorm räckvidd, ofta betydligt större än traditionella medier. Särskilt väl når de unga väljare som sällan läser tidningar eller följer den politiska bevakningen i CNN eller Fox News. Det de har gemensamt är att samtliga hade besök av Donald Trump under valrörelsen. Bara hans medverkan i Joe Rogans podcast har i skrivande stund över 48 miljoner visningar på Youtube. – Joe Rogan har världens största podcast och när han pratar så lyssnar du, säger 22-årige Aleko Perekupka, till TV4 Nyheterna. Trump tipsades av sonen Donald Trumps intervju med Joe Rogan är tre timmar lång – standardtiden för en intervju med Rogan. Kamala Harris däremot gick bara med på en timme – och krävde att Rogan kom till henne. Något han i sin tur inte gick med på. Att Harris inte åkte till studion i Austin för en tretimmarssittning med Joe Rogan kan ha kostat henne valsegern, tror Aleko Perekupka, student på Arizona State University. – Podcaster är enormt. Och jag tror verkligen att det var det som fällde avgörandet. Trumps beslut att vara med i poddar och Youtubeshower ska, enligt flera kampanjkällor till amerikanska medier, ha skett på inrådan från hans artonårige son Barron. Men det räcker inte med att vara på plats i poddstudion, tror studenten Mark Escoto. Det du försöker sälja, måste också vara tilltalande. – Framförallt hans fokus på ekonomin, tror jag var viktigt, säger han. Gick framåt med nästan 30 procentenheter Enligt Cody Miller, vice ordförande för National Federation of College Republicans, kan Trumps förmåga att erbjuda ett attraktivt alternativ ha varit en avgörande faktor. Istället för att, likt Demokraterna, säga att de unga männen har en massa privilegier de i sitt vardagsliv inte upplever att de har, erbjuder Trump en varm famn och en lösning. – Människor känner att systemet aktivt motarbetar dem när de liberala eliterna har makten, säger han till Wall Street Journal. “Inte förvånad” Donald Trump gick starkt i de flesta väljargrupper. Men ett av de starkaste utropstecknen fanns bland unga män, där han gick framåt med nästan 30 procentenheter, jämfört med valet för fyra år sedan. Bland unga kvinnor gick han, enligt AP:s vallokalsundersökning, fram 14 procentenheter. Bland de andra, de som inte röstade på Donald Trump, saknades glädje, tror 29-åriga Layla Gabir som motvilligt röstade på Kamala Harris. Detta trots att hon, likt många unga, var besviken på Harris och Bidens hantering av kriget i Gaza. – Men jag är inte alls förvånad över att det gick som det gjorde. Många av mina vänner var antingen tveksamma som jag, eller struntade helt i att rösta. Samtidigt är det många som gillar Trump från början och de gick med glädje och röstade, medan vi andra inte kände stöd från någon av kandidaterna.

Joe Biden på YouTube

Biden ‘screams and points his finger’ following 'awkward' gaffe

Sky News host Gabriella Power pokes fun at President Joe Biden for “screaming and pointing his finger” after his teleprompter ...

Sky News Australia på YouTube

The serious ramifications of Hunter Biden’s pardon | If You're Listening

Hunter Biden has been a main character in far-right conspiracy theories for years, and Donald Trump's associates spent a lot of ...

ABC News In-depth på YouTube

JUST IN: PA Gov. Josh Shapiro Decries Biden's Shock Pardon Of 'Cash For Kids' Judge

During a press conference on Friday, Gov. Josh Shapiro (D-PA) spoke against President Biden commuting the sentence of ...

Forbes Breaking News på YouTube

Who did President Joe Biden pardon? | USA TODAY

In one of his final acts as president, Joe Biden commuted the sentences of nearly 1500 people and pardoned 39. Read more: ...

USA TODAY på YouTube

‘Pure sabotage’: Joe Biden’s Administration slammed for auctioning off border wall parts

US President Joe Biden's Administration has been slammed after it was found auctioning off parts of the border wall. An exclusive ...

Sky News Australia på YouTube

Joe Biden i poddar

Why is Joe Biden haemorrhaging support from young voters?

We're on the ground in California to understand why young voters are turning their backs on Joe Biden - and how this could well consolidate Donald Trump's path back to the White House next year. We also talk to the Editor-in-Chief of the Cook Report, Amy Walter.And - is Thanksgiving a waste of time? Jon and Emily discuss (well, disagree).Editor: Gabriel RadusSocial Media Editor: Georgia FoxwellVideo Production: Rory SymonNewsgathering by Nick Charles Currie in Los Angeles, CA.You can listen to this episode on Alexa - just say "Alexa, ask Global Player to play The News Agents USA".

Christian Smalls - on Jeff Bezos, Joe Biden’s Corruption & The Power of the People

Joining me today is the leader of the Amazon Labor Union Christian Smalls. We will be talking about bringing cultures together to fight Amazon, Joe Biden's hypocrisy on labour unions, populist uprisings & the establishment pushing division. You can follow Christian on X @Shut_DownAmazon.   -- 💙 Support this channel directly here: https://bit.ly/RussellBrand-Support Visit the new merch store: https://bit.ly/Stay-Free-Store Follow on social media: X: @rustyrockets INSTAGRAM: @russellbrand FACEBOOK: @russellbrand

Can Dean Phillips Pull Off the Impossible: Defeat Joe Biden?

We're less than two weeks out from the first Democratic Primary in New Hampshire, and the mood among Democrats is grim. Joe Biden is polling behind Trump in almost every national poll. And the feeling among Democrats is well, there’s just nothing we can do about it. Enter Dean Phillips: the one lone soldier Democrat trying to make a last ditch effort to stop the 2020 rematch from hell. Dean is a moderate Democratic Congressman from Minnesota. He has political experience, but not the baggage of a long career in DC. He’s known as an incredibly bipartisan politician. He’s a philanthropist, a business magnate (who makes gelato of all things), a husband, and a father. But maybe, most importantly, he's a spry 54. By many metrics, he has what everyone claims to want in a Democratic presidential nominee. He also offers an alternative for the American voter who feels alienated by both parties. As Peter Savodnik reported this week in the FP, “nearly half of Americans today identify as independents—not necessarily because they’re centrists, or moderates, but because neither party reflects their views.” Dean believes he can win over those voters. He’s already proven he will buck the Democratic party establishment, at great personal and professional cost. (As James Carville said, Dean’s bound to be treated like a heretic in Democratic circles from here on out.) So, why is he doing this? And, can he actually pull it off? On today’s episode, a conversation with Dean Phillips about his uphill battle to knock his own party’s nominee out of the way, his motivations for running in the first place, and how the Democratic Party has gotten to this pass. We also cover his positions on issues like the border crisis, education, policing, healthcare, Israel, China, his Jewish identity and his improbable friendship with Rashida Tlaib.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

"President Joe Biden"

Welcome to SmartLess… with The 46th President of the United States, Joe Biden. Need we say more?Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

News Meeting: The Joe Biden problem and should the Post Office scandal be leading the news?

What should lead the news? Three people pitch the story they think matters most to Tortoise’s editor-in-chief James Harding.In this episode he’s joined by deputy editor Giles Whittell, reporter Chloe Hadjimatheou and Katy Searle, former executive editor of BBC Westminster.They discuss whether the Post Office scandal should be leading the news after an ITV drama put it back in the headlines, whether Joe Biden should be the Democratic presidential candidate and a senior police leader who says policing is ‘institutionally racist’.What do you think should lead the news? Email your stories to newsmeeting@tortoisemedia.com.The producer was Imy Harper and the executive producer was Lewis Vickers.To find out more about Tortoise:- Download the Tortoise app - for a listening experience curated by our journalists- Subscribe to Tortoise+ on Apple Podcasts for early access and exclusive content- Become a member and get access to all of Tortoise's premium audio offerings and moreIf you want to get in touch with us directly about a story, or tell us more about the stories you want to hear about contact hello@tortoisemedia.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Record-Breaking Illegal Immigration Numbers, and What Joe Biden Knew About Hunter, with Ben Shapiro and the IRS Whistleblowers | Ep. 693

Megyn Kelly is joined by Ben Shapiro, host of The Daily Wire's Ben Shapiro Show, to talk about the current state of the illegal immigration border crisis, December 2023 being the worst month of border encounters ever, illegal immigration rates under Trump versus Biden, the American public's opposition to Biden's immigration policies, Dave Chappelle's new special taking aim at radical trans ideology, video of actor Tommy Dorfman claiming misgendering by a Delta airline worker and the Delta worker's pushback garnering support, the obsession over sexual identity, the intra-conservative fighting happening among the GOP right now when it comes to foreign policy, Tucker Carlson’s recent negative comments about Shapiro, the state of the GOP 2024 primary, Trump's dominance and whether Haley or DeSantis still have a shot, and more. Then Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler, IRS whistleblowers, join to discuss how they've been vindicated after Hunter Biden was charged in California on new tax charges, the story behind Hunter Biden’s plea deal falling apart, all the ways the IRS whistleblowers have been proven right, the attacks on the whistleblowers from top Democrats and Hunter Biden's lawyers, David Weiss now bringing the charges Democrats claimed were invalid, potential evidence Joe Biden was involved in Hunter’s crimes, Hunter Biden now suing the IRS and the whistleblowers, Shapiro: https://www.dailywire.com/Shapley: https://empowr.us/Ziegler: https://secure.anedot.com/empower-oversight/law-enforcement-whistleblower-defense-fund Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow

Ep. 3: Joe Biden in Belfast & Dalai Lama Kissin' Weans

This week on The Bomb Squad Pod: Joe Biden's in Belfast, Dalai Lama Kissin' Weans, Snot Stuff & Much More. Support the squad and get an extra episode every Thursday: https://www.patreon.com/TheBombSquadPod Follow The Bomb Squad Pod on: Youtube Instagram TikTok Update Description

Joe Biden Supporter Says The Unthinkable!

Joe Biden Supporter Says The Unthinkable! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hodgetwins/support

Brené with Joe Biden on Empathy, Unity and Courage

My thoughts on power and leadership and a conversation on empathy, unity, and courage with Vice President Joe Biden, the 2020 Democratic presidential nominee. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Why President Joe Biden Has Wrecked His Chances At Re-Election in 2024 | What Is The Russian Perspective On Ukraine And Gaza?

On this Moats, George Galloway gives his take on why President Joe Biden has wrecked his chances at re-election with his reckless support for Israel. Will Republican states attempt to remove Biden from the ballot as Colorado has attempted to do with Donald Trump? The only way Biden can win is if the runs against an empty ballot, says Garland Nixon, and that seems to be the plan by using an ancient Civil War law! Tony Blair has travelled to the Middle East to negotiate with Netanyahu over a peace deal, but on whose behalf? First Deputy Permanent Representative of Russia to the UN, Dmitry Polyanskiy joins Moats to discuss the attempted Gaza Ceasefire deal being pursued by Russia and its allies and the perspective of Russia as the USA begins to withdraw its support for Ukraine. Gonzalo Lira Sr, Father of Chilean Author and filmmaker Gonzalo Lira Jr, updates the show on his sons current situation after he went missing attempting to leave Ukraine and the maltreatment he was subjected to while under arrest. Garland Nixon: Radio Talk Show Host and Political Analyst- X: https://x.com/garlandnixon-YouTube: https://youtube.com/@garlandn-Rumble: @garlandnixonDmitry Polyanskiy: First Deputy Permanent Representative of Russia to the UN- X: https://x.com/Dpol_unGonzalo Lira Sr: Father of Chilean Author and filmmaker, Political Commentator and blogger missing in Ukraine.  Get bonus content on Patreon Become a MOATS Graduate at https://plus.acast.com/s/moatswithgorgegalloway. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Former Vice President Joe Biden: Hardship, Hope and Purpose

Former Vice President Joe Biden reflects on his political career and his personal tragedies. The vice president shares how his faith informed his toughest moments, including his decision not to run for president and the death of his beloved son Beau. He also discusses a time in his life when he lost his faith and describes the journey to get it back. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Joe Biden Should Retire

In this episode of the Rob and Ruairi dive into Joe Biden's recent op-ed and they are not amused. Biden attempts to make some kind of unified narrative out of US foreign policy in Gaza and Ukraine and it does not work. It won't save Ukraine or bring peace between Israelis and Palestinians. We give the piece a close reading, and ask the bigger questions it raises about Biden's leadership. Does this call for a reevaluation of the President's role in shaping international relations? As we have pointed out in other recent pieces of MFF content, it's now hard to deny that Joe Biden should retire. The article can be found here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/11/18/joe-biden-gaza-hamas-putin/ ⁠⁠⁠⁠Patreon⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Website⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Books⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Twitter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠TikTok

Could Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak face defeat at the ballot box next year for the same reasons?

Polls suggest both US president Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak face an uphill battle to win votes in upcoming national elections. John Curtice and Rachel Wolf are joined by US polling expert, Professor Christopher Carman to discuss whether Biden and Sunak could be defeated for the same reasons?  For the premium Tortoise listening experience, curated by our journalists, download the free Tortoise audio app.For early and ad-free access, subscribe to Tortoise+ on Apple Podcasts.If you’d like to further support slow journalism and help us build a different kind of newsroom, do consider donating to Tortoise at tortoisemedia.com/support-us. Your contributions allow us to investigate, campaign and explore, and to build a newsroom that is responsible and sustainable. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Joe Biden

Joe Biden has been involved in US politics for more than fifty years, becoming one of America’s youngest senators in 1972, when Richard Nixon was in the White House. Now, aged eighty, Biden is the oldest US president in history and is seeking re-election in 2024.He’s experienced terrible tragedies in his life, when his first wife and baby daughter were killed in a car accident in 1972, and the death from cancer of his elder son, Beau, in 2015. Yet he bounced back, serving two terms as vice president under Barack Obama, and finally making it to President in 2021. As he makes another run at the White House, Mark Coles charts his life from the blue-collar town of Scranton, Philadelphia to Washington DC and hears how family plays a very important role in his life.Presenter: Mark Coles Production team: Diane Richardson, Alix Pickles, Sally Abrahams Production Coordinator: Maria Ogundele Sound: Rod Farquhar Editor: Richard Vadon