tv Made in Germany Deutsche Welle November 7, 2024 8:02pm-8:31pm CET
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so those will likely trigger a new parliamentary elections by the end of march. it's a political or quick that's being threatening for months. now, all of schultz has had enough of the fighting to of headphones to many times the finance minister leading a block clause because they live in key to off topic so many times to be added to surface line data and body 2 of the top so many times if you break by trust with thought, germany's 3 way correlation government is over unable to compromise with ideological differences. schultz will call a vote of confidence in himself in january. so couldn't even do that as this will allow the members of the buddhist dog to decide whether they want to be able to waive or the elections these of on these elections could then take this by the end of march at the latest that's for the subject of the deadlines stipulated in the basic law. this is the mon schultz sacked christian letter from the free democrats accused shouts of recklessness in the face of economic crisis. so i'm good now is
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all carefully prepared statement from tonight proved that charlotte was no longer aiming for an agreement sustainable for everyone. see, but rather a calculated rake of this coalition. i'm kind of with the, with this he is needing germany into a phase of uncertainty outdoors funding on the falls and that one is the chart. when the knights of high drama, it was the 3rd wheel and this complicated relationship, the greens cosign did a regretful tool and one of the collateral damage going on. so we also want to say that there was no need for the night to end this week. again, didn't house, it was not possible to disclose the budget code even though there was a nuisance on the table, is often 2 different solutions were on the table. and the biggest probably would have been to get for the symposium crane and that wouldn't be the right answer at the beginning of the day in response to the election of donors from getting this tiger soft evolved from donald trump. to give you, as needless to say,
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the mood among the opposition. central, right? christian democrats, this morning. jovial on the prospect. divine minority government, unacceptable. they want you elections as soon as possible is give you. i'll kind there's absolutely no reason for wait until january of next year is the hold of the vote of confidence. the coalition no longer has the majority in the german 3 just i'm it via and so the cd you a csc on harlem injury group on it on an excuse me. unanimously. demand sucks for august. the chancellor call for a vote of confidence. if at home, you don't need to stay in status by the beginning of next week at the latest the aftershocks are not over more talk. so plan the we ahead and clear, but in the end it will be schultz. the decision of the german chancellor has held a closed door meeting with the opposition leader friedrich merits and the 2 politicians disagree about the timing of likely snap elections. merits is the
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leader of germany center, white christian democrats. he has rejected sholtes his plan and he's called for an immediate no competence vote in parliament. and new elections, shields stressed again on thursday that he does not want to call for a vote of confidence before mid january of next year. earlier dw is head of news max hoffman until this more about the meeting and how it went. well, we know that it was short 25 minutes. so that gives you usually 2 possibilities. either they were on the same page right away and not much to discuss or they couldn't find a path forward. and it seems it was the latter. no path forward just for it because of the reasons that you just mentioned in that report. because of the date of the vote of confidence, very important to the opposition leaders here to have it as soon as possible. he said next week, hold it next week or maybe even earlier, as you said earlier, uh get hot there, but it seems very important to or that shows to not have it earlier,
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but to maintain the dates you mentioned yesterday. and that is the 15th of january . so its not looking good for this party, the cd, the social democrats in the polls there hovering around 1516 percent. that's not good. and in order to turn that around, it's the possibility exists. he would need some time and that's maybe what he's trying to buy. and the 2nd possibility is there's a number of laws that they still want to pass. what's left of this coalition? important to them, for example, the reform of the pension system, or of the asylum system in germany to name just to as always, of course, they would need the christian democrats to do that. so there is something to negotiate. there may be some kind of solution saying, okay, we'll have a vote of confidence earlier. if you help us pass those laws and religion apps, the opposition leader has said he was willing to talk about that. but only when it left shorts would concede to have that mode of confidence earlier. it was dw next
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hoffman there. so what exactly led to this crisis in governments here in germany? earlier, we put that question to marty a tour. who is a political scientist who focuses on coalition government thinks this all started when uh the uh, with a washer and vision of ukraine actually when the college of a song, they were really focus on focusing on cultural issues on modernizing society. and all these points parties are very similar, like there was a new little modem that jordans ation law. and you will live will names are often marriage and so on. however, the parties are very fundamental understandings when it comes to fiscal policies, financial policies, economic policies, and with their crisis in europe and skyrocketing um, oil prices and inflation. these differences kimberly design and they have been cost of publications from different parties all the time basically. and the correlations . um,
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but i think right now it was really about the budget. how to deal with the crisis where social democrats and greens we wanted to have like, yeah, that was different approach. then the liberal party, which i thought it was really important to stay with a fellow spouse shift and they have been that we have like pro vocations. i'm also done mainly by the f t p lately. and i guess at one point this conflict just have to escalate. this is maria truck. they're speaking with his earlier. here's a quick look now, some of the other stories that are making headlines around the world for you in peace keepers from malaysia have been wounded in an air strike on a check point in southern 11. not the lebanese army blamed israel and said 3 civilians were also killed and 3 of its own soldiers wounded. it comes a day after hezbollah targeted a military base near israel's main international airport. a new study says carbon emissions from private jets have risen by 46 percent in the past 5 years says a 2 hour flight in a private jet. as
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a bigger carbon footprint than the average person and a whole year. flying is responsible for some 4 percent of human calls. global warming, hair is, is no true. dom cathedral has received a new set of bells ahead of its reopening next month. they replaced those that were silenced after 2019 devastating fire. one of them was used in this year's paras olympics. the bills will be installed above the altar and run during mass. in the united states, president joe biden spoke to the nation and thursday for the 1st time since donald trump was declared the winner of the presidential election by the thing to election workers across the country for ensuring that the vote was fair and transparent. and he heaved praise on vice president campbell, a harris for her campaign, and he promised a peaceful transfer of power to the next administration. in january. yesterday i
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spoke of present electronic raspberry the amount as victory, and i assure to direct my entire administration worker his team to ensure a peaceful and orderly transition that's with the american people deserve. yesterday i also spoke of vice president harris. she's been a partner. and the public service a shredded aspiring campaign and everyone got to see something that i learned early on the respect so much for character. she's a backbone, like a ramrod. she is great character, true character. she gave her heart effort and she and her entire team should be proud of the campaign they ran. all right, let's pull in our washington bureau chief in his poll. she's been following today's events for us as we heard. there are rather conciliatory tone from the president of what would you say were the biggest take away from bite and speech. very
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presidential speech and branded was probably one of the shortest address to the nation in the history of this country. and the relative in the middle, it was really for me of what you already said. it's like the t and show the american people that it will be a peaceful and orderly transition. and that, of course, is a huge contrast to what the experience of, and donald trump one. no, that's wrong when joe biden wrong, the presidency and don't the phone, had to leave the white house. i think we are all very much aware of what's happened on january 6th, 2021. when donald trump tried to interfere to stop this peaceful transfer of power and then, but was also really important for joe biden, brenda's that she really wanted to underline that the american voting system, that the democracy, the democratic whole system, if it was here in the united states is intrigue, or it's a, it's not the rigs to or ross,
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and what donald donald trump said over the last week. so that's also one major outcome or one major point a job. i didn't want to make this, this speech. yeah, so it's, it's joe biden is, you know, reaching out to the trump administration. i'm do you think we're going to see a de escalation in president elect donald trump's read or no, i don't think so. i mean, here's the president and of course he won this election. usually there is no question the vast majority of those americans who went to the to who, who went vote elected him. but he is already talking about what the ones wants to do, and he's talking about the mazda for taishan. he's aiming for. he's also talking about how it, for example, it wants to change the city of washington. i think when it comes to his plans and the idea is he will not dial back quite the opposite. do we know is when
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i'm president elect to trump, me begin the process of, of choosing a cabinet and selecting other high ranking administration officials. they're already names floating around one our international audience might know of is the former a german invested or a former american to investigate through germany. this is richard grinnell and he could become the secretary of state's other names not so well known. probably too broad audience or floating around, but when, once we have kind of a little bit more of a knowledge, we definitely will to talk about a tier on our d. w and use program. and we expect these names to come out beginning midst of next week. ok, our washington bureau chief municipal with the lead us tonight is. thank you. we're gonna stay with us. um one of the closely watched races in the us selection was the
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city of deer born in the swing state of michigan. after supporting nearby and in 2020 this era, but majority city helped donald trump return to the white house this week. voters there say that anger over the binding administration support of israel was key to their vote and anger that president elect trump capitalized on of the city of dearborn and michigan and its largest share of arab and muslim voters has traditionally lean toward the democratic party and 2020 joe biden, 170 percent of the vote here, the growing anger it is administrating over the wars in the middle east, and the 10s of thousands of civilian deaths helped donald trump claim victory at the ballot box in the crucial battle ground state. as a policy and i could not get myself to bubble. and pamela harris, who has repeatedly sent over the last 7 or 8 months that she believes in israel's right to defend itself. at the end of the day when i think people recognize that
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people explicitly side of the understand that from could be worked with a scale of injustice that people have witness. hills in comparison to anything else is they done is co founder of the uncommitted movement started in february. the goal was to pressure the bite and administration to change its stance on israel. the wars and gaza and 11 on ahead of the election. its leaders called on voters not to endorse harris, but they also warned against voting for trump in the end. they say they're not surprised. so many did cast a ballot for the republican leader. donald trump is playing our communities is playing american voters is playing the arab and muslim community. and it is failed democratic leadership that is allowing him to do that. they say harris's inability or unwillingness to make a clear break with her administration's political and military support for israel
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hurt her chances in michigan and her bid to be president. this was a more i'm joined now by uses mooney. yeah. who is a senior fellow, as the airbag center in washington dc. it's good to have you with this. i just want to ask you our error of americans and their anger about the board and guys that did it lead in part 2, comma la harris, losing the election this week. yeah, thank you for having me on look. i think this is a very simplistic uh, narrative that kind of misses a bigger and more important thing going on in this election as it relates to us support for israel. there were tens of millions of votes cast air of americans, of course, played their part. and have an outside impact in certain places like dearborn where there is a higher concentration of arab americans. but everything we know from polling
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suggest that it is far from just our of americans, our air than most of them. americans who have been outraged over the buying inheritors administrations support for israel despite the ongoing criminality that we have seen as military carry out in gauze. in fact, earlier this year, a poll found that the majority of democratic respondents saw what was happening in gaza as genocide. again, this is not just arrow than most of them americans. most americans have been wanting to see and, and to arms sales to israel. after all of their ethics, things that they've been seeing going on, the buying harris administration's policy, of course, has been to do the opposite. and this has led well let me it's affection. yeah, let me, let me ask you, let me ask you, then moving forward a 2nd. so now you have president elect donald trump. he, he received endorsements from some business leaders in the u. s, which is
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a stark contrast to the donald trump. and the muslim travel band that we saw 8 years ago, these endorsements, do you think they helped trump when the election? or i think if you look at actually what happened in dearborn and the areas where you do have a higher concentration of arab americans and you look at how they've voted this year compared to how they bought it in 2020. what becomes clear is that donald trump didn't so much when in those areas as couple of harris mos, tens of thousands of people who voted for buying in 2020 simply did not come out to vote for harris or try. and so it was an alienation from both candidates that led to these outcomes. certainly you have some people among arab americans who supported donald trump as you had people from all different kinds of backgrounds in the united states who supported donald trump. but, but,
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but the, the, the operative dynamic here was a rejection of the fine hairs administration before the support of israel. and a rejection of donald trump at the same time, you know, have trump and you know, and, you know, have his promise. he's made a promise to the air, the american community that he will in the more in gaza. do you believe him? you know, i don't, i've learned to not believe that anything that donald trump says, i think we hear in the united states and seen donald trump make a whole range of statements and promises that are very far from reality. and the truth. what i know is donald trump is likely to allow benjamin netanyahu to be in the driver's seat of policy in the region, which is not very different than what joe biden has done. and it is because of those decisions by the bind harris administration. that many,
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many voters could not bring themselves to supporting the democratic candidate and likely cost them the election and may ultimately of cost americans their democracy . so that a for nation can continue further retraining a genocide thousands of miles away. well, if, if, if trump does not keep his word on gauze to what, what has been achieved that by not voting for come over here? you know, a lot of people vote for all different kinds of reasons. people forward and in this country against their immediate interest all the time and, and voting is a very complicated act. it's not always as simple, straightforward calculation of what is best and the next 4 years. for a lot of people, it's about principal, it's about dignity. and for people who have been watching children being
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slaughtered by the weapons that their tax dollars have paid for for the past year. and the idea of casting a vote in support of administration. i cannot say that that is wrong. ok, i was simply unconscionable misdemeanor here. unfortunately we're out of time, but we appreciate you taking the time to talk with us on this thursday. thank you. thank you. all right, to mozambique where and thousands of protests and the results of last month presidential elections, demonstrators clash with police in the capital. my photo accusing the ruling for lima. party of reading the election. at least 20 people have been killed reportedly since the approaches began. last month the www is diane hawker reports fury on the streets of my put so young lives in beacon say they'll continue to purchase until the government responds to the concerns about the last months election. they
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believe the results were reeked to give the for lima party another 5 years in office. the party has already been in government for 50 years. that's decades longer than most of these. protesters have been alive. they say the voices have not been heard. and that the constitution has been violated. oh, milton demanded for they made o allison demands of my feeling is one of revolt done as the youngest on beacon was a part of a generation that is exceptionally marginalized and by the system. what else? the stand today represents revolution to the made a present thought of one of the phone presenting, representative a new beginning from the point of view of the youth. so one of the visa number of it as a ring to the but the authorities have made the protein with significant food. in some cases,
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security forces have shot at coaches to live and munition international rights groups, including amnesty international have called for police to show restraint or so that will get to the police. this conflict scenario was created by the police. so do the people came out to demand their rights for use. so we had to demonstrate for electoral truth. so i'm just all just out of the hall with the police and making things worse. it's not a police officer that don't what am i? but you prefer just part of this is you doctors and this is also demonstrated this tuesday to the violence. before we started, people are free to accept or reject the election results with that some. and we're not here to demonstrate the electoral results. we're here to demonstrate against violence against them of them the can people because the protests on now in the 2nd week, parts of my put to a deserted as businesses and government offices,
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close the doors, opposition, politicians say the governing party for lima has suggested totes, protested several reading kicked at such a compromise, saying the only onset is political change that reaches mozambique highest f as well correspond to diane walker has more to have on the tensions in mozambique it's . it's been 2 weeks solid of protests in mozambique and protest as they say they won't be leading up until the consent heard by the government. the main issue they is the results that came out from the october election, the opposition parties and protested, believe that that election was read in favor of the ruling. for nemo potty, they argue that the votes that should have gone to opposition parties. wayne state given to for level, and that's late to people taking to the streets in large numbers across mozambique
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. and other major issue that has emerged is that cell phone signal has been interrupted since the protest began leaving many people without access to the outside world. even dw colleagues who are based in my put to have struggled to send out information on stories and information about what is happening in that country . rights groups across mozambique have complained not only about the cellphone interruptions, but also about the number of killings that have taken place since the protest started. arguing that the government has been too heavy handed in its response. at the end of the day, protest this one, some kind of response from the mos in beacon government, and they say they won't stop protesting until they've seen some kind of accountability and change on the seat of these diane hawkers reported. finally, a baby rhino has taken his 1st steps outdoors at the u. k. t. z, where he was born,
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the one month old, southern white. why no, you can see right there frolics of round. as patrick, under the watchful eye of his mother is keepers and say that he's getting more and more confident and serious every day, but he still needs a name. so zoom is inviting the british public to vote on one. what do you think the capital form part of the european reading program to create a genetically diverse population of southern white rhinos? the zoo says there are only 17 and a half 1000 left in the war of the somebody's suggestions on social media. what should the name be? or it is a reminder now of our top stories. jeremy chance are all up sholtes until they closed door meeting with the opposition leader friedrich merits following the collapse of germany's coalition government. the chancellor is promising elections next year. but the head of the opposition is calling for an immediate and no
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to the point. strong opinion, clear position. international perspective. donald trump has promised to put america 1st so of his election as the next president of the united states means for germany . and does he now have free reign to leave europe behind? join us this week for the view from berlin onto the points to the point next on dw up. so the land of more like streams, chile,
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huge copper lines, power it's economy, wreaking, environmental damage. to thousands of people are sort of water, mostly farm or it's privileged elite is most down, jake, for a repressive cost resulting in social $10.00 in 2 hours on the w, the dream was within reach. she'd become a star in turkey overnight. then a man took everything from her with the help of his family and music. she rebuilt her life. and then her sister also became a family scout by hatred and mother and the daughters. i am willing to work for
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change. i will sing my song. maybe my voice will be heard seeking justice for the victims of genocide starts november 21st on the w, the it wasn't election watched around the world and an outcome that most of europe has been reading for years. former us president donald trump is headed back to the white house with a little bit ending in his way this time is promising. his next administration will deliver a radical agenda at ports america 1st. so what does a new trump presidency holding store for germany? it's facing its own fresh elections after the governing coalition collapse on the same day as b u. s. race cars calls this week on through the points we're looking at from trials. what does it mean for germany?
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