Thursday Morning Briefing: Fears of voter suppression ahead of U.S. elections
Share
November 1, 2018
Reuters News Now
ocean shock
Roughly 20 percentof the world’s wild-caught fish never go near a plate. Instead, they’re ground up to make fishmeal. Special Reports goes inside the $160 billion aquaculture industry, the latest installment in the ‘Ocean Shock’ series that explores how climate change is disrupting the world’s marine life.
midterms
Democratsand advocacy groups are scrambling in courtrooms and on the ground to resist efforts they say will stack the deck against minority voters likely to back Democrats in next Tuesday’s elections
If Democrats win control, nearly every aspect of Republican Donald Trump’s presidency could face swift examination – from his long-elusive tax returns to possible business ties with Russia.
Oprah Winfreyis lending her star power to Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams, who is vying to become the first female black governor in the United States. The media mogul has long championed Democratic Party causes, and some fans earlier this year tried to encourage her to run against Trump in 2020.
World
Cocaine productionis beginning to creep into Central America, a development that could bring the supply of the drug closer to the United States and create a new security risk for an already troubled region.
The economic impactof the intensifying trade war between Washington and Beijing appeared to deepen last month with factory activity and export orders weakening across Asia, but analysts warned the worst was yet to come.
Commentary:There are at least five reasons why the next round of U.S. sanctions against Iran - due to start going into effect in November - will fail, writes Seyed Hossein Mousavian, a former spokesman for Iran’s nuclear negotiators.
Alawatanews.com is part of a network of at least 53 websites which, posing as authentic Arabic news outlets, have spread false information about the #Saudi gov & Khashoggi’s murder, a Reuters analysis shows https://reut.rs/2QaxCKw
Silicon Valley technology giants such as Facebook and Google have grown so dominant they may need to be broken up, unless challengers or changes in taste reduce their clout, the inventor of the World Wide Web told Reuters.
Volvo Cars has teamed up with Chinese search engine operator Baidu to develop a self-driving taxi for China, opening another frontier to secure its place in the robotaxi market while its Uber supply deal remains in limbo.
Amazon.com is struggling to ramp up its operations in Brazil, a promising market that so far has proven difficult for the world’s largest online retailer to crack.
没有评论:
发表评论