PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP AND THE MEDIA

  1. Media “Don’t Write” About Positive Poll Numbers. “A new Rasmussen poll, in fact -- because the people get it, much of the media doesn't get it, they actually get it, but they don't write it, let's put it that way -- a new Rasmussen poll just came out just a very short while ago, and it has our approval rating at 55 percent and going up."

THE ROLE AND IMPORTANCE OF THE U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR

After the resignation of Michael Flynn's resignation, it might be useful to consider the Role and Importance of the U.S. National Security Advisor.

Author: Stephen J. Hadley Former National Security Adviser under President George W. Bush,  A Significant Address Presented at the Scowcroft Legacy Conference Sponsored by the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs at Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas on April 26, 2016

Text has been edited

TOP U.S. CORPORATE LOBBYISTS AND LOBBYING FIRMS

EUROZONE COUNTRIES DEBT/GDP

Ranking

  1. Greece: 176.9%
  2. Italy: 132.7%
  3. Portugal: 128.9%
  4. Cyprus: 109.1%
  5. Ireland: 106.5%
  6. Belgium: 106.0%
  7. Spain: 103.0%
  8. France: 96.0%
  9. Austria: 86.2%
  10. Slovenia: 83.2%
  11. Germany: 71.2%
  12. Netherlands: 65.2%
  13. Malta: 63.9%
  14. Finland: 63.7%
  15. Slovakia: 52.9%
  16. Lithuania: 42.7%
  17. Latvia: 36.4%
  18. Luxembourg: 22.8%
  19. Estonia: 10.0%

EUROPEAN BANKS AND CAPITAL SHORTFALL

European banks lack sufficient capital to offset the losses expected in the case of another financial crisis. Quite how big losses are depends, however, on the stress level to which banks are subject. The European Banking Authority (EBA) stress test provides transparency in regard to bank capital adequacy in stress scenarios, but  does not to reveal capital shortfalls that need to be taken care of immediately. 

NORDIC EUROPE AND BREXIT

The governments of the EU’s three Nordic members – Denmark, Finland and Sweden as well as Norway and Iceland, both members of the European Economic Area (EEA) face the prospect of losing a powerful ally in future. They all have close political and economic links to the UK, based on common interests. They all count the United Kingdom among their five most important trading partners, and, with the exception of Finland, they – like the UK – are outside the euro area.

POSSIBLE UK BREXIT STRATEGIES

The U.K.’s success at undermining the bloc’s united front will dictate whether the UK can extract concessions from the EU, such as retaining preferred trading relationships and favorable access for London’s financial firms. The remaining 27 governments have managed to a hold a common line so far but the two-year negotiation will test competing priorities from Paris to Budapest and Lisbon to Warsaw. The UK might play a game of 'divide and rule’ because Member States are not as united as they appear and it might try and slice them apart on certain issues.

GERMAN FOREIGN TRADE 2015 WITH EU MEMBER STATES

Source: Statistiches Bundesamt Wiesbaden 2016

Foreign Trade Balance (Exports-Imports) in 1 000 Euro

NEW DIVISIONS, GROUPS AND FAULT LINES IN THE EU

New divisions, groups and fault lines in the EU reveal differences not just between countries but within countries and between ideologies, too. Europe has never simultaneously faced so many challenges. Brexit, the eurozone crises, sluggish economic growth, high unemployment and immigration along with social inequality weigh heavy on Europe’s future. Terror attacks have spotlighted the dangers of violent radicalisation. These developments come against a background of technological innovation that, from a competition viewpoint, is too slow, but in social terms others see as too fast.

NIGHTMARE VISION: FRONT NATIONAL (FN) PRESIDENTIAL PROPOSAL

External Relations

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