These days, where Indian elections are getting everyone’s attention, actress Kangana Ranaut’s political campaign and controversies are also grabbing everyone’s attention.
A social media post by the actress caught everyone’s attention when she broke her silence on beef.
Kangana Ranaut is generally seen as leaning towards the ideology of Indian extremists. This is the reason why he did not face any difficulty in getting BJP ticket.
The Indian actress, posting on Instagram, termed as shameful the claim made by the opposition political candidate, Congress leader Vijay Vaditwar, that Kangana Ranaut had eaten beef in the past.
THE NasDem PARTY opens up opportunities to speed up the congress ahead of the 2024 regional head elections (Pilkada) and other political agendas.
“It is also possible that we will speed up the congress, everything is scheduled for November, however, there are regional elections,” said Chairman of the NasDem Party DPP Willy Aditya at the NasDem Tower, Central Jakarta, Monday (15/4).
Willy explained that speeding up the big meeting might be done if there was a critical political agenda that had to be discussed immediately by party officials. According to him, the discourse on advancing the date of the NasDem congress is starting to roll out.
“There is talk for us that maybe the congress will be accelerated, so that the celebration will be more complete, that’s not it,” said Willy.
Furthermore, Willy explained that his party is now focused on election disputes at the Constitutional Court (MK) and regional elections. NasDem has not yet thought regarding changing coalitions following the meeting between General Chair Surya Paloh and President-elect Prabowo Subianto, some time ago.
“Pak Surya during an interview here (NasDem Tower) showed that this (moving coalition) is not a priority for the NasDem Party now. The NasDem Party’s priority now is to complete the MK trial. “Then, prepare yourself for the regional elections,” said Willy. (Z-3)
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United States (US) PRESIDENT Joe Biden made a fresh appeal to Congress to pass aid for Ukraine during a visit by the prime minister (PM) of the Czech Republic on Monday. Meanwhile debate is emerging regarding whether it should be linked to funding for Israel.
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said he aimed to advance wartime aid for Israel this week following Iran’s attack at the weekend, but the White House said it would block any bill that did not contain anything for Kyiv.
“Congress must pass sustainable funding” for Ukraine “and they must do it now,” Democrat Biden said as he hosted Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala at the White House.
“There’s tremendous support in the House and the Senate if people let the vote happen.”
Biden praised the Czech leader as a “great ally” for his strong support of Ukraine since Russia’s 2022 invasion, including securing nearly a million rounds of ammunition for Kyiv as US funding dried up.
“As the Czech Republic remembers, Russia will not stop in Ukraine and the impact on NATO will be significant. Putin will press on, putting Europe, the United States and the rest of the world at risk if we don’t stop him,” Biden said.
Also read: US Imposes Heavy Sanctions on Russia Due to Navalny’s Death and Ukraine War
After shaking hands with Biden in the Oval Office, Fiala thanked the US president for his leadership in rallying Western support for Kyiv.
“In 1968 I was a little boy, I saw Russian tanks on the streets of my city and I never wanted to see this once more,” he said.
US aid has languished in a divided Congress, with Johnson blocking earlier $95 billion in aid Biden sought for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan, which had already been approved by the Senate.
Also read: Biden condemns Trump’s comments regarding NATO as “horrible and dangerous”
The White House rejects every bill that contains only aid for Israel.
“We will not accept being independent. Independent will not help Israel and Ukraine,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a briefing.
Johnson is walking on a razor’s edge on aid to Ukraine, as Trump and far-right lawmakers in the House have become increasingly skeptical regarding pouring billions of dollars into Ukraine’s war once morest invading Russian forces.
Ukraine in recent months has grown increasingly frustrated with delays in Western aid, including air defenses it says are urgently needed to repel deadly Russian attacks. (AFP/Z-3)
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Japanese Prime Minister (PM) Fumio Kishida on Thursday called on Americans to overcome their “self-doubt” as he praised US global leadership before a divided Congress.
In warning of the risks from a rising China, Kishida said Japan was determined to do more to share responsibility with its ally, the United States.
“As we meet here today, I sense a sense of self-doubt among some Americans regarding what your role in the world should be,” Kishida said in a joint session of the House of Representatives and Senate during a state visit to Washington.
“The international order that the US spent generations working to build is facing new challenges, challenges from those whose values and principles are very different from ours,” Kishida said.
Kishida said he understood “the fatigue of being the country that almost single-handedly maintains the international order,” but added: “The leadership of the United States cannot be replaced.”
“Without US support, how long will it be before Ukraine’s hopes will crumble under attacks from Moscow?” he asked.
Also read: Joe Biden and Japanese PM Improve Defense Relations with Focus on China
“Without the presence of the United States, how long will it be before the Asia Pacific will face harsher realities?”
In an implicit reference to Chinese pressure on Taiwan and elsewhere, Kishida said, “Today’s Ukraine may be tomorrow’s East Asia.”
Although he was careful not to touch on domestic US politics, Kishida’s speech came amid a deadlock in Congress in approving billions of dollars in additional military aid for Ukraine, due to pressure from hardline Republicans aligned with presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Also read: Joe Biden will hold a three-way meeting with the leaders of the Philippines and Japan
China’s Biggest Challenge
Kishida met Wednesday with President Joe Biden where they pledged to increase cooperation, including with a new three-pronged air defense defense involving the United States, Japan and Australia.
Sending a clear signal to China, Kishida met once more with Biden on Thursday for a three-way meeting with President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, who has been the target of China’s increasingly assertive moves in the disputed waters.
Also read: America invites Japan and South Korea to visit Washington
Kishida said China’s military moves “create an unprecedented and greatest security challenge.”
“China’s actions pose a challenge not only to Japan’s peace and security but also to the peace and stability of the international community at large,” he said.
Kishida’s speech, from the table where Biden gave a raucous State of the Union address just one month ago, marked a rare moment of bipartisan unity in Congress.
Lawmakers across party lines applauded repeatedly as Kishida reiterated support for Ukraine, warned of Chinese influence and highlighted Japanese investments in the United States.
Kishida also welcomed to the gallery two astronauts — one of whom is Japanese and one of whom is Japanese-American — following Biden announced a Japanese citizen would be the first non-American to set foot on the Moon.
The prime minister, who spent part of his childhood in New York City, read his speech in fluent English, following speaking in Japanese at his press conference with Biden.
In a feat that would be overlooked by a foreign leader visiting Washington, he managed to tell several jokes, including mentioning how he watched the classic cartoon “The Flintstones” as a child in the Big Apple.
“I still miss that show, even though I can never translate, ‘Yabba Dabba Doo,'” he said, quoting Fred Flintstone’s signature phrase.
Raising a glass to Kishida followingwards at a State Department luncheon, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the speech was probably “the first time anyone speaking before a joint session managed to mention ‘The Flintstones’.” (AFP/Z-3)
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