logo
Cameroon's constitutional council bars main opposition candidate from presidential race

Cameroon's constitutional council bars main opposition candidate from presidential race

Associated Press3 hours ago
YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AP) — Cameroon's constitutional council on Tuesday rejected opposition candidate Maurice Kamto's appeal to be reinstated on the ballot for the upcoming presidential election.
Kamto, a former government minister, is seen as the main challenger to long-serving President Paul Biya. Kamto had filed an appeal last month after the electoral commission did not include him in the list of approved candidates.
The decision Tuesday fueled fears of unrest and increases the likelihood of another Biya victory.
Security forces were deployed around the conference center in the capital Yaounde, where the Constitutional Council announced the verdict, and along the city's major roads.
The previous day, police had fired tear gas and arrested dozens of people who were protesting in support of Kamto ahead of verdict.
Kamto was considered Biya's strongest rival in past elections. He came second during the last presidential election in 2018 with 14% of the vote, while Biya cruised to victory with over 70% in an election marred by irregularities and a low turnout.
Biya, 92, the world's oldest serving head of state, said last month he would seek reelection on Oct. 12 despite rumors that his health is failing. He has been in power since 1982, nearly half his lifetime.
Biya's rule has left a lasting impact on Cameroon. His government has faced various challenges, including allegations of corruption and a deadly secessionist conflict in the nation's English-speaking provinces that has forced thousands out of school.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

On The Matter Of So-Called ‘Debanking,' Follow The Regulators
On The Matter Of So-Called ‘Debanking,' Follow The Regulators

Forbes

time27 minutes ago

  • Forbes

On The Matter Of So-Called ‘Debanking,' Follow The Regulators

It turns out Republicans buy beer, which is something basketball and brand great Michael Jordan could have told the executives at AB InBev ahead of any influencer agreement with Dylan Mulvaney. In a politically divided country, it's best to keep business out of politics. Banks arguably know this more intimately than any other business sector. Precisely because they're asking individuals to entrust their savings to them, politics and talk of same is the path to losing some of the most hard-won business of all. It's important to think about in consideration of President Trump's assertion on CNBC that 'The banks discriminated against me very badly.' Trump was talking about J.P. Morgan Chase and Bank of America, but to focus on specific banks is to miss the point. And that's not because Chase has banking relationships with Trump and family going back decades, Trump campaign accounts, and looking ahead, the eventual Trump presidential library. The crucial truth is that banks are in the business of carefully matching the wealth of savers with credible individuals, businesses and governments in need of savings. Which means they're not in the business of turning their noses up to half of the U.S. population of savers, or closing the accounts of savers with wealth to put to work. Some call account refusal or closure 'debanking,' which realistically wasn't even a word until 2023-2024. With good reason. Banks exist to open accounts, not close them. Which requires a pivot. To focus on banks allegedly turning away business for political reasons, or closing accounts similarly for reasons of politics, is for pundits, politicians and even presidents to avert their gaze from the real problem: regulators. On the matter of closed or refused accounts, criticism of banks is a non sequitur. Banks are overseen by regulators that can make life miserable for them via the imposition of 'asset caps,' excessive capital requirements, or worst of all, closure. With the latter and much more well in mind, banks are studious about not finding themselves on the wrong side of regulators. Which is a long or short way of saying that depending on the Party in control in Washington, and by extension the Party that is appointing regulators, banks must at times choose their customers wisely. Regulators will say the choosing is rooted in banks protecting their reputations, but as evidenced by the business that banks are in, no such regulation is needed. More realistically, regulators have too often substituted their politics for sound oversight. Cryptocurrency and crypto adjacent businesses were unpopular during the Biden years, gun and gun manufacturers when Barack Obama occupied the White House, while in Republican leaning U.S. locales like Texas, banks have experienced trouble if viewed as unfriendly to oil & gas interests. The main thing is that debanking has nothing to do with business, and everything to do with the politics that banks studiously try to avoid. See above. Which is why President Trump's broad focus on regulation as the source of so-called 'debanking' is so important. Banks open accounts, regulators force their refusal, closure, or both. With his executive order meant to end the practice of debanking, Trump is correctly making this about overly politicized regulators, not banks attempting to mix politics and business. Which means banks can get back to doing what they do best, all free of the politics that they've long avoided based on a clear-eyed grasp of what Michael Jordan intuited decades ago.

Marjorie Taylor Greene calls for George Santos' 7-year sentence to be commuted
Marjorie Taylor Greene calls for George Santos' 7-year sentence to be commuted

Washington Post

time28 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Marjorie Taylor Greene calls for George Santos' 7-year sentence to be commuted

It might be hard to find someone to have your back in politics if you get caught lying about your life story, become one of a handful of people ever expelled from Congress and then are thrown into federal prison. But George Santos is no ordinary former politician. In a letter Monday, U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene formally came to the aid of the disgraced ex-congressman with a request that his seven-year prison sentence be commuted, arguing that the length of the term represented 'a grave injustice.'

NJ governor election: What summer 2025 polls say about the Sherrill-Ciattarelli race.
NJ governor election: What summer 2025 polls say about the Sherrill-Ciattarelli race.

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

NJ governor election: What summer 2025 polls say about the Sherrill-Ciattarelli race.

Two polls done since mid-July suggest that the edge in the 2025 New Jersey gubernatorial campaign still belongs to U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-New Jersey. But her Republican opponent, Jack Ciattarelli, isn't too far out based on the number of undecided voters. And in the background, the more recent of the two polls found that a majority of New Jersey residents think the state is moving in the wrong direction. That finding, coupled with another showing that a majority of residents disapprove of outgoing Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy's performance, create some interesting dynamics in the race for governor. More: 'Fill a transit gap': Glassboro-Camden Line pitched at Rowan University event NJ governor election poll by Fairleigh Dickinson Success in this race may depend on whether Democrats can make it about national politics or whether Republicans can focus voters on what's going on close to home, according to a Fairleigh Dickinson University poll. The poll tested the electoral waters in mid-July with a sampling of 806 'likely voters.' Those basically are people who voted in at least one of the two most recent gubernatorial races, mixed with people who registered since the 2021 race. Farleigh Dickinson released this breakdown of the results last week: Sherrill with support from 45% of the group, Ciattarelli, who also ran in 2021, with 37% and an additional 16% undecided. On Aug. 4, Dan Cassino, executive director of the poll, said independents make up the vast bulk of the undecided vote. Selling a party platform to voters who have chosen to avoid party affiliation is complicated, Cassino said, especially with the way politics has changed to reflect sharper divides on issues with more attention on national debates. 'If you're an Independent, it's `homework,'' Cassino said. 'Right? You have to Google these people. You have to really figure out who you want to vote for. And I've been teaching college for 20 years. I can tell you. People don't like doing their homework. 'The other side of this is, let's say, you're an independent voter who really does pay a lot of attention to politics,' he said. 'And they exist. ... If you're paying any attention to politics at all right now, you're paying attention to the tsunami of news we've got coming out of Washington. You're not paying attention to what's going on in New Jersey because we don't have a lot of homegrown media that people are consuming.' More: Atlantic City International Airport soon landing direct flights to Miami. What to know. New Jersey, national issues compete for voters The Fairleigh Dickinson poll last month worked in a twist to the interview script. The idea was to see what might happen to voter views about Sherrill and Ciattarelli if certain local or national issues were mentioned. This involved asking about issues after a subject already had stated who they preferred as governor or who they were leaning toward, then seeing if anything changed. The follow-up questions on 'local' issues would address energy, flooding and New Jersey Transit. On a national level, questions would solicit opinions of U.S. President Donald Trump and immigration. When local issues were raised, the effects were not significant among Democrats and Republicans. But they generated a 7-point move toward Ciattarelli among independents, the poll found. When national issues were raised, however, independent support for Ciattarelli dropped 4 points. Mostly, those voters shifted to a 'not sure' position. 'It is telling that, really, the ones moving around are Independents,' Cassino said. 'Which is what you expect, you know? Devoted partisans are not going to change their minds based on two minutes of questions.' For the candidates, Cassino said, the lesson is message 'framing' is critical with independents. 'I felt very validated that this is very much what we're seeing on the campaign trail,' Cassino said. 'With Jack Ciattarelli doing everything he can to say, 'This is not about Donald Trump. This race is nothing to do with national policy. It's all local. Just local issues.' And Mikie Sherrill taking every opportunity to bash Donald Trump. "And those are the best strategies for both those candidates.' The poll found that 81% of likely voters who approve of the job that Trump is doing will support Ciattarelli. An additional 13% of these voters said that they aren't sure who they'll vote for, and 4% said that they intend to support Sherrill. More New Jersey voters disapprove of Trump's performance in office than not. But Sherrill has the support of just 77% of them, and 5% of those who disapprove suggest that they'll support Ciattarelli. Poll: NJ going in the wrong direction under Murphy A slightly more recent poll is from A2 Insights, which went online from July 29 to Aug. 2 to survey 629 "likely" voters. The poll did not have a sponsor. A2 Insights describes itself as a nonpartisan public opinion polling firm based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Its results have Sherrill up 50.9% to 45% for Ciattarelli. It found just 4.1% of respondents were still undecided on who they want as the governor. Other findings in the A2 Insights poll include the following. Sherrill has a 55-40% lead in the 18- to 22-year-old age group. Ciattarelli leads among men 52-45%, with Sherrill leading 56-39% among woman. Voters without a college degree favor Ciattarelli 49-46%, but those with a bachelor's or more favor Sherrill 56-41%. A majority of respondents, 50.7%, said they feel New Jersey is moving in the wrong direction versus 35.8% who see the state on the right track. Approximately 61% of undecided voters believe the state is on the right track. Turning to Murphy, 44.7% in the survey "strongly disapprove" of the two-term governor and 6.6% "somewhat disapprove." The poll found the two issues most important to respondents were the economy and taxes, at 32.6% and 30.7%, respectively. Joe Smith is a N.E. Philly native transplanted to South Jersey 36 years ago, keeping an eye now on government in South Jersey. He is a former editor and current senior staff writer for The Daily Journal in Vineland, Courier-Post in Cherry Hill, and the Burlington County Times. Have a tip? Support local journalism with a subscription. This article originally appeared on Cherry Hill Courier-Post: Fairleigh Dickinson University polling shows Sherrill with lead

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store