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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  June 10, 2024 9:00am-9:29am CEST

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the, the, this is the w news coming to live from berlin. all right, part is make huge games and you elections the results trigger a political earthquake and friends with present amount of will they call calling risky staff legislative elections. his party was delta heavy blood by marine depends. all right, national riley, this fight for rights gains, the conservative iep alliance is set to remain the biggest group in parliament. its leader, european commission, present worship on the line, says her party will take a stand against explains on the left and the right. and here in germany, the par i, a f, d climbs to 2nd place. while conservatives,
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when the largest share of the boat, german transport full of shots is social democrats grappling with a historically bad result, the hello, i'm terry martin. thanks for joining us. we begin to impress where present demand, while the call has roll the dice on his political future after being trounced by the far right in the european elections. he's called a snap national poll for later this month, following a major victory in the you vote for marine la pens, national rally party. it's projected to take over 30 percent of the nationwide ballots. that's more than double that of mccullin's liberal renaissance party. this was a political shock. the nobody had been expecting the french president, addressing the nation announcing us that parliamentary election. you'll have
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somebody more or less than that. i have lots of political gambling that came off the exit. polls had revealed his pockets, he was on calls for hammering at the hands of the far right national riley because he don't see it. so this is your, this is a serious and way to decision. but above all, it isn't active. trust. trust in you mission. my data competitor, you that ship in the ability of the french people to make the justice choice for themselves and for future generations. and also that's announcement follows an election challenge from this man show dan bond to the president of the national rally policy to describe macro and as it weakens precedence as he cooled for him to take the country to the poles in front of jubilant pox. a simpleton. p in poverty lead a movie, la pen had been benting on growing public frustration with the french president and his policies to deliver results at the fall of books. and then now focused on
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securing the even big victory on this. um, sir, i agree already to exercise paula. if the french draws to talk to you in this future legislative selection. so we are ready to rebuild the country, ready to put an end to must immigration, ready to make the purchase impossible, the friendship priority. read it to begin the contrast rate industrialization. yeah, i'm just curious, just to underpaid. and the bottom line. so what comes next old read the being drawing these on the far right protestors in paris is plus to the republic. giving the 1st indication of the fight to heads, the flights of the french precedents as cast as a struggle for the soul of the country. of more than i'm joined from paris by yucca bloss from the german towns one for relations. what do you make of manual my calls decision to call snap parliamentary
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elections? by comes as a huge surprise. i am not only to external off servers and the media all analysts, but also for the people in a prison. my calls on talk to you, apparently a prime minister. i got, we had a title, didn't know about this, a plan that had been dropped to department the since the end of may approximately until yesterday evening. so now everybody, including a once again in my cost on campus is struggling to prepare for snap elections that we come very rapidly on june 30th for many health siders. this looks like a huge political gamble for a man. well may call on what's he that hang on? what's he hoping will happen in this election? yes, i mean it's, it is a huge again, but if you look at the, are in the next room that's from yesterday, the fall,
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right. the some of them on us and i, one approximately, every region in front, in terms of the direct votes and the european elections yesterday. i'm present my call 1st of all does not want to end up as a named duck. and within the 3 years remaining until the next national elections, presidential elections. and what would have been the legislative and elections? and he owns 2, a one small and one final, a time a to, to mobilize friends, a voters at 2 to unite against the fall rights to boot and national a front or republican friends as he concepts and to unites and with a potties on the center right data, if you recall with the socialist on the center left to avoid having the fire rights and with my the pen. and so it's all done by the law coming into what, what could be the, the prime minister's office and nothing you all have done in 2027 winning the
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presidential elections. so mccall seems to be counting on the central left and the central ride to come together in this snap election later this month to keep the far right out of power in france. do you think that my call is really reading the political mood in france correctly as well? that's certainly a lot of doubt about this since he didn't read the mood correctly in the past election. the european elections right now. his lead kennedy date of already? yes. drago is and then a present mclean, south, his prime minister, got to be outside of both intervened at the later on a late stages of this electro process. it didn't turn to types. and as you said before, the, some of them on us and now does a crossing the seats to the presidential can so many people and many people in france are really at shocked at to certain degree. and i'm thinking that this is
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a too big of a risk to call these elections in, in the current situation on the corner is likely to stay in power, as you mentioned, until 2027. that's when his current term ends. uh, what if the far right does when the parliamentary election later this month and their candidate becomes prime minister, who would have the upper hand they're politically as well. that's the big question . i mean, there's only so many precedents for them. shift locked in the 1980s nights and ninety's co govern group the socialist. then there was one other instance of what the french called quad because he also president from one party last the majority in parliament and discuss a forest to, to make a connection with another caught the policy present. my call would certainly guard the upland insurance of a foreign policy decisions, a security policy, which is probably a big,
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important thing for europe right now for ukrainians. watching these developments with the wall, i'm going um, but the interior politics. it would certainly be mfc. those are, some of them want us to know with which of a candidate then in the prime minister's office, it is expected that this would be all done by the law the lead time today. probably european elections would certainly try to impose that topics and that tone interior politics and the debates on migration for example. that's the 1st policy see if that might be in the pen talked about yesterday evening. you all can thank you very much for taking time to talk with us today. that was dr boss from the german council on foreign relations in parts. now despite considerable games for the fall, right in the netherlands, austria and germany, the central right, you're paying people's part of his points to remain the biggest party in the european parliament. that's the party of european commission president posted up on
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the line who's seeking a 2nd term on the line promise. the p would build a bastion against extremes. but on the campaign trail, she refused to rule out, cooperating with members of the hard, right? like it least georgia maloney who got done with others. we will build a bus, should i go stick streams from the ad from the right way? well, so a few of the votes are still being counted, but we're getting a clear idea of the future makeup of the european parliament. the iep remains the biggest group in the projected new parliament. the central right block includes parties like germany's christian democrats and spans people's party. but the biggest swings are the ends of the political spectrum with voters turning their backs on europe's green parties and looking towards the identity and democracy group that includes paul, right,
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nationalist and populous parties. many of the euro skeptics, the right brain group expelled germany, spar right, a up the party earlier this year following various scandals as well. here to help us make sense of this european parliamentary election with join now in the studio by the w as chief international editor, richard walker. what's your, what do you mean take away from this european parliamentary election? oh, well i think terry and we, we, we've obviously been talking a lot about friends, we saw the shots that with, with the look at the policies, i think the big picture is that you sent you do have games on the far right, but it's not a completely uniform picture, for instance, here in germany that would gains for the f d. the alternative for germany in neighboring poland to the lord justice policy, a made losses, and so not a complete uniform picture. what's on the progressive side of politics? this certainly has been a kind of a shift away from progressive some more towards the center. right. but you do see variation there as well. so you see green parties suffering. most of them. you see
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social democrats suffering for instance. i think broadly, what you can see in a lot of countries is this, this kind of mid term phenomena like european elections are treated in a country where, um, if it falls in the middle of the time of the national government, then of course it will be it will be treated like a mid term election often is in united states, for example, what the, the governing possible get, punish, right. i think that's going back to what you do see though, and i think this is going to be really important going forward. and we've talked about funds quite a bit, it's empower shift happening within the you. we see that manual. and my call is we couldn't coming out of this selection. but he's now called another election which could run the risk of we can to him even further. we see left schultz, we could already eating a we coalition, we can still fund that, not a single policy in all of schultz is governing coalition here in germany. was as strong as the a f d on the far right. so you have these 2 extremely important figures in the, in europe weekend who is going to get stronger on the other side of the coin. well,
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georgia, maloney and italy is looking strength and at this point and also in poland, donald to ask the rest of the recently i arrived prime minister in poland who's, who's a centrist central right? well, so looking strong, so you may have a shifting influence within europe in long and in the coming years away from france and germany and potentially towards country such a interest in public. what about policy research? i mean, but in, in practical terms, when the other countries are looking to the european union as a blog, can we expect any policy policy changes to result from this election? do you think, i mean, it's a bit at least to say, because a lot is going to depend on the makeup of the, of the, the way the pass structures of the european union respond to this result of this selection. who was the commission for instance, but i think there are 2 areas that are really going to be interesting to, to watch. and one would be climate action. so that in recent years there's been
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a lot of effort by the european union really speak level lead to on climate. there's a lot of pushback from that, particularly from the far right. and this is trickling through into essential right, politics as well. so what happens at and also migrations is similar phenomena that these 2 issues of migration and climate change becoming really kind of cultural issues, but also kind of the hot button policy issues too. and of course they have a major consequences for people around the continent. the european commission will be choosing will in europe, will be choosing as new commissioners, including the present of the european commission, soon was left on the line wants another term as presidents, a very powerful post, obviously. uh do you think she has a good chance? so after the selection of, of getting a 2nd. sure. yeah. so it's not like and bad for her at the moment, but there was couple of titles to clear that she needs support national leaders. she needs the majority in european parliament. a lot of focus will be about how she
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goes about getting that majority and, and there was a lot of speculation about this already through the course of the campaign. and it focused on whether she would focus her support on the century's parties of husband to write blogs of the liberals of the social democratic kind of groupings, the center left with it. that's the roots of her majority, the roots in federal authority, or whether she opens up a little bit to some on the, to the right. and the, the real focus is on the georgia maloney again who we just mentioned earlier. whether it was a lot funded line is going to be really opening to take well pricing with a multi city. so that's gonna be something to watch and the days ahead from the lines being quite a big us about it. she was ambiguous about it last night so we just don't know the answer to that yet. but i think that on the lines again to georgia and maloney is going to be a very important figure to watch. and the is the right has been strengthened,
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but still many question marks remain richard walker or chief international have sure, thank you very much. well, here in germany, the far right. the alternative for germany is we've heard, has swept past all 3 parties in the governing coalition. to take 2nd place behind the conservatives, the european election is being seen as a referendum all the national government. widespread dissatisfaction with germany's current political leadership has put the christian democrats in pole position a jeremy needs, a sd, celebrates it, showing in european parliamentary elections. the found right party is projected to take 2nd place ahead of the governing coalition. the a f d campaign during an e. u skeptic, anti immigration platform. despite a series of scandals in the run up to the pilot support for the policies up from the last elections. we have from the start to the election campaign and then really
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caught up in the final spurt after all the prophecies of do after the beverage of the last few weeks. we're the 2nd strongest force and i'm telling you the only way is off tonight. the biggest win is look sent to be the send to roy christian democrats. currently in germany's opposition, the cd you sent, voters have sent the chancellor clear message. you said keep this. most of this result must really give the federal government imposed, consult. it must now correct its policy and the political changes needed in germany . and i call on the federal transfer, the social democrats, the greens and the ftp things kinda continue as they have been in the past 2 and a half years. the biggest losers at the night, germany's ruling social democrats,
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the chancellor's party is facing it's west results in decades. but it's not giving up the fight. this is an outlook, so i don't do much. it's a mission for all democrat, all of them, especially if you know the history of social democracy and then you know that for all of us and for us at the top of the s p d. such a frustrating result is not a reason to bury our heads in the sand, but to say now more than ever and as i can yet yes, the rest few. now the greens who are in a 3 way coalition with the s b d, but also facing a major drop in support. the stages now being set for key regional elections later this year in several german states where the far right is also expected to make gains. let's get some more now from our chief political correspondent, nina has a nina here in germany the far right a if the emerged as the 2nd strongest party in the election overall,
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despite recent scandals and in the eastern parts of germany, they came out on tall can you explain to us what's driving their success, or it is the best result in a nation wide poll, yet as and say as they were founded. so the a, if the have lead to contain focusing on what the vast majority of them and say is a pull performance of the government and balance across the board. only one and for a $1.00 and $5.00 demons are satisfied with left. so it says government inflation, germany's reaction to the rest of the war in ukraine migration. all those. what among the top issues for german voters this time around. and you have to say that the a d had the most radically a post standpoint and compact to the government that consists of the social democratic readings and the if the piece or there is an element of protest vote that explains the success. but it does go further than that. it's also true that the verses really don't seem to be bothered about the fact that there are right
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wing extremist among high ranking members of the of the or the court has ruled that you can cool one of the leaders of fascist and the 2 top candidates for the year elections were implicated in all sorts of scandals and in this campaign, riley and the voters, the if the voters were then aust, i'm with as they were, but bothered about the fact that they're all right. we need stream is an 82 percent said no. so there are people who choose to vote a steve full that radical positions to and the divide between east west is extremely striking. and of course the dc side as taylor. and so those important regional elections later this year, the f t also made steep games among young voters in germany. that's the demographic that many parties are trying to reach. what makes the f d so appealing for the younger generation? well, i do believe that there are 2 factors here. one young voters are also unhappy with
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the government in berlin. they also don't have the loyalty to those established political parties like the parents generation. so they're much more likely to vote radically or smaller parties. and to hear it in germany, the ac has been very active on social media from day one, including on platforms like take talk. and that is something where the old policies are lagging behind and not trying to catch up in the thank you very much. that was our chief political correspondent need of us take a look at a few other stories making headlines around the world today. authorities and brazil declared and environmental emergency after raging wildfires threaten to trigger a drought and tropical wetlands the pen. so no region has been gripped by its worst blazes since 2020 week range have disrupted seasonal flooding, contributing to the fires l g b t q plus demonstrators and venezuela have sage protest against the ledge
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discrimination at a caracas mall just came after it a couple of were originally told by security personnel was still holding hands in public. the protest ended in minor scuffles with police in india's prime minister in our end, remote, he has been sworn in for a 3rd term at a ceremony in delhi. for the 1st time, he'll have to rely on coalition partners to govern after his hindu nationalist. b. j. p. failed to secure an upright majority. at least 9 people been killed after suspected militants fired at a bus in indian controlled cash mirrors. joe moved province. the bus carrying pilgrims to hindu temple with whom do temple temple tumbled into a ravine? no one immediately claim responsibility for the attack, which left at least $33.00 others in the same decision. there's more of what do you have to say that sorry, unfortunately, connected, yahoo is preventing us from progressing to the real victory,
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which is the justification for the painful and ongoing cost. that's why we are leaving the war time copying it today. we live with a heavy heart, but with a whole heart, we present ourselves today to the bottle for the fates of the state of israel, for generations to come to the door, cut the last spring and dw as rebecca rivers from jerusalem. rebecca, what does guns as resignation mean for netanyahu's government as well? it's unlikely to have any immediate domestic political effect. terry, he's still a bit benjamin that now he's still hold a full st majority, but it will hand move. how to the file, right. members of his coalition, particularly, it's my been v, one of the ministers who often been against may this announcement last night and cold for him to be on out into the will cabinet now remains to be seen whether benjamin netanyahu will allow that to happen. we're hearing room is that he's more
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likely to dissolve the will cabinet at this stage. so it's unlikely to have a real domestic pressure. unlike what some people may have been expecting or not. following the story closely is that it would tell the government of pop and that that he would no longer hold the majority. but that isn't the case. it may well dense for the day and i should say israel's international standing because the big guns most interest administer in this arrangement was seen to whole views that were more of what the us, what key ally us one more aligned with. and therefore, keeping the as rated government, you know, holding some, some international standing and some negotiating have with us being able to, to talk with these members. now what we're seeing is we'll see if of the move to the right. it's not been me, is notoriously pro resettling is riley settlements in gaza. he's absolutely vehemently coal for no sci fi that would lead to a permanent,
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into this conflict without a mustang and tiny illuminated he's pro annexation of westbank. and he's looking towards living on an beginning, a conflict, an all out war on that from the so we could well see the benjamin netanyahu forced to, to listen more to these phone rights actions of his government. the us secretary state anthony blinking his travelling to israel today this will be his 8th visit in recent months. the us has been pushing for a ceasefire and gaza. what can we expect from lincoln's visit? i think precisely that terry, he's going to be speaking to all parties involved on negotiating sides. and of course coming to israel to speak with members of these randy government and also we, he still be speaking to benny guns despite the resignation of yesterday. and he'll be speaking to the opposition later on the president if that cuts out. so it definitely top of his agenda, the really,
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the key issue that he's bringing here is some attempt to try to get this, these peace negotiations. or i should say 5 to you back on the table and towards a towards, you know, completion towards getting it across the line. we've been hearing from reuters news agency reporting that her mouse has been putting pressure on the us to try to israel to agree to a deal that would lead to a permanent stays fine, indicating that perhaps they would be willing to get on board. but as we've seen with numerous iterations of these a piece agreements, all of these 5 deals, i shouldn't go to pace agreement. is that that difference between the 2 sides of what israel saying that it wants to, it will not agree to anything that leads to a permanency site. and we've got from us on the other side saying it want to agree to anything that doesn't. rebecca, thank you very much. the w is rebecca rivers there. injuries to your watching dw news, just a reminder of our top story. french president demanded while mccaul has called snap legislative elections after a heavy defeat in
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e u. elections. his centrist alliance was crowned just by marine la pens, fluoride national, riley par on. terry morrison, thanks for watching the
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. have you ever heard the term job? ha. just basically describes how masses of young people are leaving the country to search for better opportunities elsewhere. when skilled work is leave africa, they leave pro level brand rate. it's hard to appreciate the real impact of this problem. we sent out our team of correspondence to find some answers, the 77 percent. next,
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on the w. the goal is x test, one of 79 focuses everything is simply designed so i can do this which gives me extreme freedom. how does this time, jim and champion to his commitment. holly, i'm the sound of football dogs, june 13th. oh d w the
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this week on the 77 percent street debate, almost 90 percent of the people i went to school. we'd have left the country ppo doctor. there's no reason for you to be a major. that is what everybody say close to the fact that people are running away because of money. it's a problem to me. you took it out to save lights. this is a sense of belonging, never be unfair. if nobody listening to your house to venture complimentary, i get to know that you, my dear come back on creates for 2 minutes and i do i do i agree. i agree because opie's nice try.

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