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Obama warns Trump’s climate rollback leaves America less safe

Obama says Trump climate move leaves US 'less safe'
The transportation and power sectors are each responsible for around a quarter of US greenhouse gas output, according to EPA figures

When a Rulebook Is Erased: America, Climate Science, and a Moment of Reckoning

On a sun-slashed morning in Washington, a small crew of officials and cameras gathered outside a federal building while the air in much of the country felt anything but ordinary. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced what many climate scientists and regulatory lawyers call the linchpin of American climate policy would be torn from the rulebook: the legal finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare.

This was not a dry bureaucratic tweak. It was a symbolic and practical unmooring. For more than a decade, that finding — a brief but powerful legal determination first adopted in 2009 — undergirded the federal government’s ability to limit carbon dioxide, methane and other heat-trapping pollutants from cars, power plants and industry. Remove it, and you remove the anchor for a raft of national protections.

What the Change Actually Does

Put simply: the repeal strips the federal government of a clear statutory basis to require industry-wide reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. The announcement also came with a declaration that existing vehicle emissions standards stretching across model years would be scrapped — a move that regulators said will save taxpayers vast sums on paper, even as opponents warn it will cost communities far more in the long run.

According to the EPA’s own summary, transportation and power generation each account for roughly a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Those are sectors that touch almost every American’s daily life: the commute, the refrigerator, the hospital lights, the summer air conditioner that kicks in on sweltering days.

Voices from the Ground: People Who Will Feel It

Drive through Detroit and you’ll see both the pride of auto-industry tradition and the unease of workers watching policy change like a weather front. “We build cars here,” said Rosa Alvarez, a 42-year-old assembly-line worker who’s spent two decades at a plant making sedans and trucks. “Folks worry about jobs, sure. But we also want cars that sell. Buyers are choosing cleaner models now. This feels like a bet against where the market is going.”

Out in the Midwest, farmers watching the calendar shift with more intense rain and longer droughts see this as more than a policy dispute. “We aren’t arguing science in the feedlot,” said Tom Harlan, who farms corn and soybeans in Iowa. “When spring storms wash soil into the river and the insurance premiums climb, that’s a fact. Policy that makes extremes harder is policy that makes life costlier for people like me.”

And then there’s the 28-year-old who recently purchased an electric vehicle in California. “I bought the car because incentives and better standards made it affordable,” she said. “If those incentives vanish, it’s not just prices — it’s trust.”

What Legal Experts See: A Door Left Ajar for Litigation

Beyond politics and pocketbooks, lawyers are busy reading ink. The endangerment finding did more than enable rulemaking; it re-routed lawsuits away from the courts and toward the EPA by making clear Congress’ tool — the Clean Air Act — could be used to regulate greenhouse gases.

“Take that foundation away, and you create a patchwork of uncertainty,” said Professor Alan Whitmore, an environmental law specialist. “We could see an uptick in nuisance suits, or state-by-state battles that are costly and slow. That invites years of litigation while emissions continue rising.”

Some in industry cheer the rollback, arguing regulatory relief will lower costs for manufacturers and consumers. Yet a number of trade groups have been publicly cautious — supportive of easing strict vehicle rules but wary of erasing the endangerment finding itself because of the legal chaos it could unleash.

Costs vs. Claims: Counting the Toll

The EPA framed the repeal as a windfall, estimating savings on the order of trillions of dollars by removing both the finding and the federal vehicle standards. Environmental groups and independent economists counter that the math is incomplete. They point to increased storm damage, rising health care costs from air pollution, and growing insurance premiums tied to climate-driven disasters.

“When you break down the ledger, the societal costs of more pollution almost always outweigh the regulatory savings,” said Dr. Miriam Okoye, a public health researcher. “We’re going to see more asthma, more heat-related illness, more flooding. Those are bills someone has to pay.”

Global Ripples: How This Plays on the World Stage

In Istanbul, where diplomats and climate specialists were preparing for the next UN climate conference, global voices described the move as a setback for international cooperation. UN climate officials have warned that international collaboration—already strained by geopolitical tensions—relies on major emitters showing up to the table with commitments and domestic tools to meet them.

“When big emitters unpick their own rules, it undermines trust and makes global progress harder,” observed Leyla Hakan, an organizer working with the COP planning team in Turkey. “Cooperation isn’t an ideal; it’s a pragmatic pathway to cheaper, cleaner energy and more stable economies.”

Indeed, the world is already shifting. Investment flows tell a story: global investment in renewables in recent years has outpaced fossil fuel investment, and renewable electricity generation overtook coal in the global mix—signals that markets, not just policy, are tilting toward cleaner sources.

So What Now? Choices, Consequences, and a Question for Citizens

Policy reversals like this are rarely permanent. Future administrations can re-establish findings and standards, but doing so requires political capital and legal steps that take time. The result could be policy whiplash: waves of regulation and deregulatory churn that complicate business planning and public expectations alike.

So, here’s the question for readers around the world: do we want climate policy to be treated as a pendulum, tugged by every new administration, or as a stable scaffold that businesses, communities, and nations can build around?

Some will say the market will solve it—customers will keep buying electric vehicles, investors will pour into renewables because they’re cheaper over the lifetime of a project. Others argue that without clear rules, progress slows, inequality widens, and the most vulnerable pay first and worst.

What You Can Watch For

  • State-level actions: Many states may step in with their own standards and regulations.
  • Legal challenges: Expect lawsuits that test whether removing the finding is lawful and what it means for greenhouse gas regulation.
  • Market signals: Auto manufacturers and energy investors will reveal whether they pivot away from or press toward clean technologies.

Parting Thought

Policy is not just slabs of text on paper. It is the scaffolding that shapes economies, the quiet architecture behind the cars we drive and the air our children breathe. Erasing a finding changes that architecture. It is a choice about the distribution of risk—who bears the costs of storms, who benefits from short-term profits, who decides how quickly we move to cleaner energy systems.

There are no simple answers. But there is a choice to be made, and like every choice, it will be judged in the ledger of lives and livelihoods to come. How will you hold your leaders to account for it?

Police Identify Suspect in Canada Shooting; Motive Still Unknown

Suspect identified in Canada shooting, motive unknown
People in Tumbler Ridge gathered for a vigil in the town

When a Quiet Town’s Night Sky Went Dark: A Vigil, a Community, and Questions That Won’t Go Away

It was the kind of place where people left their doors unlocked and the sound of a pickup truck was more likely to be the evening news than a headline. Tumbler Ridge, a small town hemmed by dark fir and limestone ridges in northeastern British Columbia, is the sort of community that measures time by school bells and shift changes at the mine. On a night that should have been ordinary, a pall settled over that rhythm: eight members of the town were killed, and the name of the person police say responsible — 18‑year‑old Jesse Van Rootselaar — threaded through conversations like a sour aftertaste.

By the time the embers of the candlelight vigil cooled, the facts were both sharp and incomplete. Police later confirmed nine people died in the attack, including Van Rootselaar, after revising an earlier toll. Two dozen people were injured; two remained in critical condition in hospital. The victim list reads like a small town’s census: a 39‑year‑old teacher, children as young as 12, a mother and an 11‑year‑old stepbrother. The shooter had also been a student once — someone who walked the same hallways as the children whose lives were cut short.

Minutes that Changed Everything

What unfolded reads like a sequence from which there can be no rewind. Authorities say the first bullets were fired inside a home, where a mother and her 11‑year‑old son were killed. The attacker then moved to a school, where multiple students and a teacher were shot. Police, who say they arrived at the scene within two minutes of the initial call, encountered active gunfire and later found the suspect dead of a self‑inflicted wound.

“Our officers were met with gunfire upon arrival,” Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald told reporters. “This was chaotic and terrifying, and we have a lot of work still to do to understand what happened.” McDonald also said the suspect had been detained on more than one occasion under mental health legislation for assessment, adding an uncomfortable layer to a conversation many in Tumbler Ridge were already having: what happens when warning signs appear but the system can’t — or doesn’t — stop the slide into violence?

Faces, Names, and the Public Grief

Grief in small towns does not stay behind closed doors. It floods the square, the grocery store, the diner. Within hours of the attack, hundreds gathered under an enormous tree in the town centre. They lit candles, placed photos and stuffed animals at its base, and sang softly because silence alone felt inadequate.

“We will get through this. We must learn from this,” the prime minister said in a sombre statement, asking a nation to grieve from coast to coast. Flags at government buildings were lowered to half‑mast for seven days, a formal gesture that felt both necessary and insufficient to many who had lost someone.

Tumbler Ridge’s mayor, Darryl Krakowka, spoke not as a politician but as one neighbour to another. “We are one big family,” he said, voice breaking at times. “Give somebody a hug. Lend an ear. That is how we will carry each other.”

A local resident, Gigi Rejano, wiped her cheeks and urged action. “Schools should be safe,” she said. “If it means locking the front door or having someone at the entrance, then that’s what we should do.” Her words echoed a larger debate that has rippled across the country: how do you keep children safe in places that were designed to be open and welcoming?

Small Town, Big Questions

There are practical questions, and there are harder, moral ones. How did weapons enter this space? Were the prior mental health interventions enough? Could deeper community support have diverted this course?

Police disclosed that firearms had been seized from the family residence roughly two years earlier but were returned after an appeal. Van Rootselaar’s firearms licence had expired in 2024. Canada’s system allows licensed firearm ownership — and, notably, allows youth between 12 and 17 to hold a minor’s licence after completing safety courses — but the balance between civic freedoms and public safety is under intense scrutiny.

“We need to examine every point along that chain,” said Dr. Lena Hoffman, a psychiatrist who has worked in rural British Columbia. “From access to mental health care, to the speed of interventions, to the way firearms are stored and regulated. Rare events like this are devastating precisely because they feel so preventable in hindsight. The work is to learn without scapegoating.”

Echoes of the Past, Urgency for the Future

School shootings remain rare in Canada compared to the United States, but their rarity has not made them any less wrenching when they happen. Canadians carry the memory of other dark days: the 2020 Nova Scotia rampage that killed 22 people, and the 1989 École Polytechnique massacre in Montreal that claimed 14 lives. Each incident reshaped policy debates, public health responses, and the national conversation about violence.

“These events are inflection points,” said Kiran Patel, a policy analyst who studies rural safety. “They force us to confront uncomfortable trade‑offs: between civil liberties and security measures, between emergency response and long‑term mental health investments. But what we can’t do is pretend there’s a simple policy lever that will stop every tragic act.”

Local Stories of Bravery

Amid the sorrow, there are stories of courage that have become a balm for a grieving town. One account — verified by family members — tells of a 12‑year‑old named Maya who tried to lock the library door to protect others before she was shot. Maya remains in critical condition. An aunt described how the girl put others ahead of herself: “She tried to save the other kids. That is who Maya is.”

These acts of selflessness are not unusual in communities where neighbours know one another’s children by name. In times of calamity, the familiar acts of kindness — someone bringing soup, someone staying with a family, people offering to pick up groceries — become the skeleton on which recovery is built.

What Comes Next?

There is official work underway: investigators piecing together a timeline, public health officials reviewing prior interactions with the health system, and elected leaders promising to “do everything we can” to prevent a recurrence. But healing will be slow, uneven and intensely personal.

And there are broader questions here for every reader, whether you live in a sleepy mountain town or a teeming city: How do you build safety without turning schools into fortresses? How do you ensure mental health support is accessible and trusted in places where anonymity is limited and stigma can be crushing? How do you balance rights to own guns with the collective duty to protect children?

  • Do we invest more in early intervention and mental health services in rural communities?
  • Do we reconsider licensing and storage requirements for firearms?
  • How do communities ensure rapid response while preserving warmth and openness?

These are not questions that yield to simple answers. They require hard, sustained conversation — grounded in data, informed by compassion, and guided by the voices of those most affected.

Tonight, in Tumbler Ridge, the tree in the square still holds photographs and melted wax. People will gather again; they will talk about the victims by name. They will list the small, human details that statistics cannot contain — a laugh shared at recess, a favourite cookie at a bake sale, the way the school bell sounds in autumn.

For the rest of us, the moment offers a stark invitation: to listen closely, to hold our communities accountable, and to act with urgency where we can. Because when a town’s quiet life is ruptured in an instant, the work of repair is not just local — it is a national duty and a human one. What will you do in your corner of the world to make sure the next vigil is unnecessary?

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Feb 12(Jowhar)-Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Xukuumadda JFS Xamsa Cabdi Barre ayaa hoygiisa ku booqday Madaxweyne hore Shariif Sh Axmed xilli caawa dib looga celiyay Shariif Sheekh Axmed garoonka diyaaradaha Aden Cadde.

UN urges Russia to halt attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure

UN calls on Russia to stop attacking Ukraine energy sites
A man surveys the damage caused to an outdoor market after a Russian drone strike on Odesa

When the Lights Go Out: Ukraine’s Winter Under Siege

They wiped frost from the inside of a bus this morning and called it a warming station. Across Kyiv, improvised tents glow with borrowed heat, the hush of the city yearned for the whirr of a refrigerator or the hiss of a radiator. Instead, there are queues for hot tea and strangers sharing power banks like currency.

“You learn to be small and grateful for small things,” said Olena, a retired teacher who wrapped a wool scarf around her face as she juggled a thermos and her grandson’s mitten. “A kettle that boils is a small miracle now.”

This week’s mass outages were not an accident of weather or chance. They followed a large-scale wave of strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure — missiles, drones, and debris that plunged neighborhoods into darkness as temperatures plunged toward minus 20C. The United Nations’ human rights chief, Volker Türk, called the attacks “relentless,” stressing that such strikes deprive civilians of “adequate warmth, water and electricity in an unbearably bitter and dark winter.”

Numbers That Tell a Brutal Story

The figures are stark and clinical, but they map onto aching lives. Ukraine’s air force reported that Russia launched 24 missiles and 219 drones in the most recent assault; air defenses intercepted most of them, downing 16 missiles and 197 drones.

Yet interception is rarely perfect. In Kyiv, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said nearly 2,600 more buildings lost heating after infrastructure damage — adding to more than 1,000 of the city’s roughly 12,000 apartment blocks already without warmth in recent weeks.

Elsewhere, in the southern Odesa region, around 300,000 people were left without water after systems were hit. In Lozova, in eastern Ukraine, an attack killed two people and cut power; Dnipro reported wounded residents and 10,000 customers without heating. Restoration Minister Oleksiy Kuleba framed the strikes bluntly: “This is yet another attempt to deprive Ukrainians of basic services in the middle of winter. But restoration efforts continue nonstop.”

Quick facts

  • Reported attack: 24 missiles and 219 drones
  • Air defenses claimed to have shot down: 16 missiles and 197 drones
  • Temperatures reported in affected areas: down to -20C
  • Approximately 300,000 people left without water after the Odesa attack
  • Thousands of apartment blocks in Kyiv affected by heating outages

The Human Geography of Cold

When infrastructure falters, routine life fragments. Schools, expected to be warm and humming with children’s voices, close. Hospitals scramble to run on limited generators; operating rooms become time-boxed, schedules compressed. Urban apartment blocks, where often multiple generations live under one roof, grow dangerously cold after one radiator stops working.

“I took off my boots when I came into the tent,” said Mykola, a father of two who now sleeps in a municipal warming center. “My daughter keeps asking if winter will ever end. For her, it’s not about politics — she wants to go to school and have hot soup.”

Locals have turned city squares into communal hubs: volunteers hand out bread and batteries, NGOs coordinate generators and blankets, and churches open their halls. Yet these are stopgaps. The relentless nature of the strikes — repeated, targeted, calculated — means relief is often temporary.

Isolated Attacks, Global Consequences

What happens when an adversary weaponizes the grid? It is not merely the immediate cold that matters. Water treatment plants go offline; sanitation falters. Electronic records become inaccessible. Economic activity slows to a trickle when factories and small businesses cannot operate. In short: civilian life becomes a logistical nightmare.

International law is clear: intentionally targeting civilian infrastructure is prohibited. “The targeting of civilian infrastructure is prohibited under international humanitarian law,” Volker Türk said, urging the Russian Federation to cease the attacks immediately. Humanitarian agencies have echoed that sentiment, warning of cascading effects on health, nutrition, and displacement.

Allies Step Up — But Is It Enough?

As Kyiv reels, allies have mobilized new aid. The UK announced a package of support that includes about £150 million (€172m) to a NATO-backed scheme for purchasing American weaponry and 1,000 British-made lightweight missiles worth over £390 million (€447m). British Defence Minister John Healey said the move underlines that “allies are more committed than ever to supporting Ukraine” as the conflict edges into its fifth year.

Germany’s Defence Minister Boris Pistorius did not mince words: “It’s just terrorism against the civilian population of Ukraine,” he said, arguing for stepped-up support in terms of defensive capabilities.

Yet military aid is only one part of a broader solution. Building back power stations, securing water systems, and ensuring supply chains for fuel and parts are long, expensive undertakings that outlast the headlines. And while Western Europe debates the scale and timing of aid, thousands in Ukrainian cities face immediate suffering.

On the Ground: Repair, Resilience, Resistance

Electricians and engineers in gas-stained jackets become frontline workers. Their daily briefing is a map of broken substations and frozen valves. “We have teams working round-the-clock,” said Kateryna, a power plant mechanic in Dnipro. “Sometimes we get a few hours to fix a transformer, sometimes we work in -15C. We are exhausted, but we cannot stop.”

The community response is inventive. Cafés plug into mobile generators and become communal kitchens. A volunteer group called “Warm Hands” dispatched vans of blankets and charging stations across neighborhoods. Schools that can’t open pivoted to block-based micro-shelters where children can stay warm for a few hours.

Still, resilience shouldn’t be romanticized. Reliance on goodwill and improvisation is a fragile buffer against a campaign meant to sap morale and survival itself.

What Does This Mean for the Rest of the World?

When infrastructure becomes a weapon, every city with an aging grid, every coastal town with a single water plant, every hospital dependent on a fragile supply chain should sit up and take note. These are not isolated consequences — they are a reminder that in modern conflict, civilians and civilian systems are perilously exposed.

How do democracies protect their people and their infrastructure? How do humanitarian law and political will translate into practical defense and recovery? The Ukrainian winter is a brutal case study with lessons for every capital that depends on interconnected networks of power and water.

As you read this, where do you live warm and well-lit, perhaps indifferent to a kettle that never sits cold? Imagine living without that small luxury at -20C. What would you miss most? A hot meal? A warm bedtime story? A phone call that reaches through?

Closing: Light, Again

For now, people will keep sharing blankets and batteries. Engineers will keep climbing into substations. Volunteers will keep the tea flowing. And diplomats will keep talking in Brussels and New York.

But the scene in Kyiv — flickering tents, cordoned-off power stations, whole neighborhoods waiting for the return of heat — is not just a local tragedy. It is a test of international resolve, of how the world values civilian life when war becomes a battle for the lights themselves.

“We are cold, but we are not defeated,” Olena said, tucking her grandson closer. “We just want the world to remember we are human.”

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Feb 12(Jowhar)-Dawladda Federaalka ayaa caawa xiratay jidadka gala garoonka Aden Cadde, halkaas oo ah meesha ay degan yihiin madaxda Jubbaland iyo Puntland, xogo ayaa sheegaya in xiritaanka jidadka ay farsamo cusub u muuqato.

French appeals court to rule on Marine Le Pen appeal July 7

Court to rule on 7 July in Marine Le Pen appeal trial
Marine Le Pen said she will decide whether to run for president after the ruling in the appeal trial

A courtroom, a calendar date, and the future of French politics

On a rain-slick afternoon in Paris, the marble steps of the appeals court hummed with more than the usual legal gravity. Television vans angled their satellite dishes like mechanical sunflowers. Journalists tucked damp umbrellas beneath their arms. People who months ago might have been strangers—senior citizens wrapped in tricolour scarves, young activists with folding bikes, a few men in well-worn RN caps—clustered and argued in small, urgent groups.

All of them came for the same reason: a date circled in the national consciousness. On 7 July, an appeals court will decide whether Marine Le Pen, the polarizing leader of France’s far-right who twice pushed the country to the final round of presidential voting, should be blocked from holding public office for five years. For a nation still digesting seismic electoral shifts, the verdict promises to be a hinge point: legal judgment on one hand, political fate on the other.

What’s at stake

The charge is deceptively simple on paper and knotty in practice. Prosecutors say that, while a member of the European Parliament, Le Pen and associates employed people on the EU payroll who in reality worked for her party—the National Rally—back in France. The result, according to the courts, was a misuse of public funds and a betrayal of public trust.

Last year a lower court concluded she should be banned for five years from holding public office and handed down a prison sentence in connection with the scheme. Prosecutors in the appeal have urged the same or harsher penalties: they asked for the five-year ban to be maintained and for a four-year prison term with three years suspended. The first trial had returned a four-year prison sentence with two years suspended.

Legal minutiae can feel arid, but the political consequences are vivid. If the appeals court upholds the ban, Le Pen—57, a veteran of three presidential campaigns—would be prevented from standing in 2027, widely seen as the clearest window for her to finally take the presidency. If the court overturns the judgment, she could as easily walk toward another run, or delay a decision to play the strategic long game.

Faces and voices outside the courtroom

“You can’t reduce this to a legal quibble,” said Amélie Rousseau, a schoolteacher who stood beneath a coffee shop awning watching the scrum. “It’s about standards. If politicians use public money like a personal slush fund, where does that leave the rest of us?” Her palms were warm around a paper cup; the rain had made conversation intimate.

A counterpoint came from Marc Lefebvre, a small-business owner from the northeastern suburbs. “I voted RN once,” he told me. “Not because I liked everything, but because I felt ignored. This is politics as usual—investigations, chases. We need hope, not endless scandals.” He glanced at a passing group singing snippets of campaign chants. “If she can’t run, there’s a new face ready—maybe that’s better, maybe not.”

Those new faces include Jordan Bardella, 30, the charismatic head of National Rally who has been floated as a possible successor if Le Pen is forced to step aside. A poll in November indicated that if he were the RN candidate, he could reach the second round and, according to that survey, win the final ballot against a range of opponents. Whether polls will hold up in three years—and whether that November snapshot still tells the story—is a matter only time will settle.

Why this matters beyond France

France occupies a special place in Europe’s democratic imagination. It is a nation whose presidents and policies often send ripples through Brussels and into capitals from Berlin to Rome. The rise of new right-wing movements across the continent has been one of the defining political trends of the last decade—waves that have reshaped debates on immigration, sovereignty, the economy, and the European Union itself.

So when a widely known national figure is entangled with questions of public funds and legal accountability, the implications travel farther than the Seine. The case raises deep questions about how democracies police their own leaders: Are courts an instrument of impartial justice or a political battleground? When should law intersect with politics, and when should it be kept at arm’s length?

Global echoes

Look around the world and you’ll see similar dynamics: charismatic outsiders driven to the brink of power only to be checked by institutions that are sometimes robust, sometimes fragile. From corruption probes in Latin America to constitution disputes in Eastern Europe, the same duet of accountability and political mobilization keeps replaying. In this light, the Le Pen case is both intimately French and broadly illustrative.

The woman behind the headlines

Marine Le Pen’s portrait is a study in persistence. She first shocked political insiders by breaking through to the second round in 2017, drawing roughly 34% of the vote against Emmanuel Macron. Five years later she did it again—stronger, more formidable—claiming about 41.5% in the 2022 runoff. She has recast the National Rally from a fringe party associated with her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, into a party capable of commanding millions of votes. To her supporters she is a fighter who speaks plainly about security, identity, and the economic anxieties of the forgotten. To her critics she represents a vision of France at odds with liberal norms.

“She’s a complicated figure,” said Dr. Lucien Moreau, a political sociologist at a Paris university. “On one hand, she normalised a strain of politics that used to be taboo. On the other, these legal proceedings show the limits of that normalisation. Democracies must balance between giving voice to disaffected citizens and protecting the rule of law.”

Possible outcomes and what they could mean

  • If the appeals court upholds the ban: Le Pen would be sidelined from running in 2027, but the National Rally would not necessarily collapse—leaders like Bardella could step forward, and the wider movement’s energies might intensify. Some supporters could see the ban as proof of elite obstruction, fuelling recruitment.
  • If the ban is overturned: Le Pen’s path to a potential 2027 candidature would reopen, thrusting France back into the same polarised theatre of 2017 and 2022 and forcing other parties to recalibrate strategies in a Macron-less field (he’s barred by term limits from running again).
  • If the court delivers a mixed decision: partial exoneration or reduced penalties could muddy the political waters, leading to protracted legal and electoral manoeuvring.

What will you be watching on 7 July?

The ruling could read like legal closure—or like kindling. Will it settle a decade-long debate about accountability, or will it fan the flames of grievance and political realignment? That is the question Parisian cafés, provincial town squares, and international commentators will be parsing in the days that follow.

As you read these lines, consider the broader currents in your own country. Are institutions resilient enough to handle uncomfortable reckonings? Do voters feel seen by the parties that claim to represent them? How should democracies hold leaders to account while ensuring the political arena remains open and fair?

On 7 July, France will turn a page—one that will be read domestically and abroad. Whether it becomes a paragraph of legal finality or the beginning of a new chapter of contestation, the outcome will remind us that in democracies, law and politics are never strangers. They’re roommates, quarrelling and negotiating the same space at the same time.

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