Two Political Profiles Not to Miss
Caught between its strongest ally, the United States, and its biggest trading partner, China, can Australia escape what has been called the “slipstream of the superpowers”? Penny Wong, Australia’s new foreign minister, wants to try. Wong’s ambitious agenda is outlined in a profile by Margaret Simons: “She hopes to find common interests with proximate small and middle powers” to create a peaceful, prosperous region and, in so doing, shape the way the world’s superpowers behave.
In another fascinating political profile, FP’s Amy Mackinnon tracks the career of one of the U.S. Republican Party’s rising stars, Elise Stefanik. The representative from New York was the youngest-ever woman elected to Congress back in 2014; now, she’s a Trump acolyte, election denier, and, Mackinnon writes, “bellwether for the Republican Party.” What does Stefanik’s transformation tell us about the future of the United States’ two-party system? Mackinnon investigates.
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FP Live: Wally Adeyemo Confronts a Challenging Economic Moment
Are U.S. sanctions working, and what other measures has the White House taken to hurt Russia? Ahead of the annual IMF and World Bank meetings, the U.S. Treasury’s Wally Adeyemo joins FP Live to discuss the dizzying state of the world economy, the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war, and more. Oct. 7 | 1 p.m. EDT
Best of Briefings: Latin America Brief
The highlights last week: Bolsonaro and Lula courted Brazil’s evangelicals ahead of Sunday’s vote, Cuba legalized same-sex marriage, and Argentina’s government intervened in the market for World Cup stickers (yes, really). Read an excerpt from the most recent edition of Latin America Brief below:
Jair Bolsonaro’s 2018 election to the Brazilian presidency was the apex of political efforts to cultivate a U.S.-style Christian evangelical right in the country. In a campaign drenched in socially conservative religious imagery, Bolsonaro earned more than twice as many evangelical votes as did his leftist opponent in the presidential runoff. Evangelicals are on track to become Brazil’s largest religious group within the next decade and currently make up some 30 percent of the population.
Bolsonaro has struggled to maintain the same level of evangelical support ahead of Sunday’s presidential election, however. A Sept. 20-22 poll by Datafolha said that only 50 percent of evangelical voters planned to back him, while 32 percent planned to support his leading opponent, former leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
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2 年Thanks for the update on Two Political Profiles not to Miss.