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Wu welcomes mayor of Italian town to Boston, talks climate policy

Wu welcomes mayor of Italian town to Boston, talks climate policy

Boston Globe3 days ago
'The culture and the roots of the (Italian) community here is so important,' Wu said, addressing a small gathering of city officers, leaders from the North End, the city's Italian neighborhood, and her family members. 'We thank you for the exchange between our citizens.'
Wu and Costanzo
exchanged gifts. From a navy bag stamped with a golden seal, Wu pulled out a blue pitcher, which she handed to Costanzo. In return, Wu received a commemorative plaque , cap, and framed picture. The gathering was filled with with hugs, kisses, and handshakes, while Wu's young children darted around the office.
Mayor Michelle Wu receives a commemorative plaque from Mayor Simone Costanzo of Coreno Ausonia, Italy.
Erin Clark/Globe Staff
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Also in attendance was Anthony D. Biasiotta, the mayor of
Biasiotta welcomed Costanzo to Seven Hills last week before heading with him to Boston.
Pewarski's extended family hails from Coreno Ausonio. His mother showed the Italian mayor pictures from a yellow envelope, pointing out in one picture, 'That was my grandmother.'
In May 2024, Wu visited Coreno Ausonio for a day. She met her husband's relatives, and researched a family tree at the city hall, according to Lidia Di Bello, a delegate who accompanied Costanzo on the trip to the U.S.
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Beyond family ties, Wu's
climate crisis. She was the only American mayor at the conference hosted by the Vatican and Pontifical Academy of Sciences.
More than a year after later, the city has completed a
When Wu ran for mayor, she promised to reduce the city's carbon emissions and increase the city's resilience against climate change. As the
'We don't have time to plan for decades into the future. We need to see action and results now,' she said in an interview.
Wu said Wednesday's meeting is a testament to community-building that 'can transcend geography.' It's especially true in the current political climate — when 'there is so much in the world driving people away from each other,' she noted.
'The ties between Boston and so many of our global partners reflect a shared commitment to do what we can to take care of our communities,' Wu said. 'That is an important source of hope.'
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Biasiotta said mayoral exchanges symbolize unity between people from different cities and continents — a way 'to make those distances even smaller,' he said.
Costanzo and Biasiotta explored the North End during their trip to Boston.
What's next on the docket for the visiting mayors?
Biasiotta said he's trying to 'knock out' the rest of the Freedom Trail. He said he felt instantly welcomed by the city.
'Even though our cities are all different sizes — small, medium, large, there's a thing that binds all three cities,' Biasiotta said. 'It's the hospitality of the people.'
Jessica Ma can be reached at
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California's redistricting reality
California's redistricting reality

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

California's redistricting reality

Presented by With help from Eli Okun, Bethany Irvine and Ali Bianco Good Saturday morning. This is Emily Schultheis, guest authoring from the West Coast. Get in touch. DRIVING THE DAY DEMS' GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY: If California Gov. Gavin Newsom succeeds in putting mid-decade redistricting to a statewide vote this November, it will become the most consequential decision on any American ballot in 2025 — and the clearest opportunity for voters to opine about President Donald Trump's agenda ahead of the 2026 midterms. In an off year mostly devoid of big-ticket contests — the races for New Jersey governor, Virginia governor and New York City mayor are the only other elections this fall garnering any sort of national attention — a vote in the state of 40 million people at the heart of Trump resistance stands to become a major draw for money and national attention. Asking Californians to hand Democrats as many as five additional seats — Newsom's response to Texas Republicans' plan to boost GOP seats in the state — gives a starring role not just to California, but also to its distinctive brand of direct democracy. The state's century-old ballot measure system, the most developed in the nation, has morphed into a multimillion-dollar industry with a set of campaign challenges and dynamics that's distinct from your typical candidate race. (Your Saturday Playbook guest author, a reporter with POLITICO's California-based ballot measures team, will fully admit she expected a much quieter summer.) While most Golden State voters also didn't expect to head to the polls this fall, they are used to weighing in on a bevy of complicated and often arcane issue questions every two years — while also voting on marquee matters with national implications like legalizing recreational cannabis in 2016, banning same-sex marriage in 2008 or fundamentally reshaping the state's tax landscape back in 1978. Newsom has to take redistricting back to voters in the first place, versus just getting the state legislature's stamp of approval, thanks to the quirks of the California system. Policy made via ballot measure can only be amended by ballot measure, meaning the independent redistricting commission established by a pair of constitutional amendments in 2008 and 2010 needs signoff from the electorate. (The governor is quick to note that this proposal wouldn't permanently replace the existing independent commission: It would put in place temporary maps until the 2030 Census, and would only be triggered if Texas moves forward with its plan.) California ballot measure nerds know that what appears to be a standard partisan fight — Newsom and national Democrats on the 'Yes' side against Trump and national Republicans on the 'No' side — will be a more complex effort to wrangle coalitions that, on redistricting issues, haven't always fallen along party lines. Unlike candidate races, where voters are casting ballots for a personality and a party label as much as anything else, veteran Sacramento-based ballot measure consultant Brandon Castillo says issue questions are 'abstractions' without obvious personalities attached. So it will be up to Newsom and whoever leads the 'No' side (also an open question) to define the stakes in ways that appeal to the state's solidly Democratic electorate. For instance, former GOP California Gov. Arnold Schwarzeneggercould play a starring role in the 'No' campaign alongside good government groups like California Common Cause that are often more aligned with Democrats. Then again, this isn't your average ballot measure. Partisan politics will likely be 'heavily in play here' in a way that 'normally doesn't factor into ballot measures,' Castillo told Playbook. There are also no limits on political spending in ballot-measure races, meaning the redistricting fight could reach eight figures — or more. A 2020 ballot contest over classifications for rideshare workers drew a record $200 million in spending from Uber, Lyft and DoorDash — a sum that even surpasses many highly competitive Senate campaigns around the country. Newsom is betting that California voters' distaste for Trump will be enough to get them to back his plan and show up at the polls in an off year. From Medicaid cuts to frozen funding for universities like UCLA to the ICE raids keeping residents on edge in Los Angeles, there's no shortage of fodder to fuel progressive Californians' desire to push back against the Trump administration. 'I think the voters will approve it,' Newsom told reporters yesterday. 'I think the voters understand what's at stake ... with Donald Trump.' That's why Newsom is billing his effort as a necessity for protecting American democracy from opportunistic Republicans seeking to tilt the scales in their favor — a point he underscored Friday afternoon in Sacramento when he hosted Texas Democrats who left the state to avoid voting on Republicans' redistricting plan there. 'It wasn't our decision to be here, it's a reaction,' Newsom said. 'We are trying to defend democracy as opposed to see it destroyed district by district.' Timing will be tight. To get the measure before voters in November, California's Legislature would have to put it on the ballot by Aug. 22, only five days after members return from summer recess. We'll know within the next two weeks whether this is really going to happen, although Democratic legislative leaders have indicated they're on board. If it does, California will have a chance to 'reshape the national political landscape,' Castillo said. 'We in California like to say that we're different, that we're national trendsetters. Certainly in this instance, we are.' 9 THINGS THAT STUCK WITH US 1. RUSSIA-UKRAINE LATEST: Trump plans to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska next Friday as the U.S. hopes to broker a ceasefire agreement that would end the war in Ukraine, per Bloomberg. The stakes are high for the face-to-face summit — which will be Putin's first invitation onto U.S. soil in nearly a decade. Still, 'Trump didn't reveal additional sanctions on Russia or tariffs on its energy purchasers as he announced the summit, despite having declared a Friday deadline for the Kremlin to agree to a ceasefire.' The announcement comes after Putin presented the Trump administration this week with his own proposal for a ceasefire 'demanding major territorial concessions by Kyiv — and a push for global recognition of its claims — in exchange for a halt to the fighting,' per WSJ. 'European officials expressed serious reservations about Putin's proposal, which would require that Ukraine hand over eastern Ukraine, a region known as the Donbas, without Russia's committing to much other than to stop fighting.' And Ukraine's willingness to compromise could complicate things Trump suggested on Truth Social that a peace deal could include some 'swapping' of territories with Russia, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that Ukraine 'will not give their land to occupiers,' NBC's Freddie Clayton reports. 'The answer to Ukraine's territorial question is already in the constitution of Ukraine,' Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram. 'No one will and no one can deviate from it. Ukrainians will not give their land to the occupier.' 2. REDISTRICTING ROUNDUP: As the Lone Star State's redistricting fight continues, Texas House Democrats are pushing back against Gov. Greg Abbott's bid to oust them from office, with state Rep. Gene Wu, arguing in court papers filed yesterday 'that Abbott's plan would violate the Texas Constitution, which leaves it to the legislature to discipline its own members,' POLITICO's Kyle Cheney reports. Wu argued the lawmakers who exited the state in an effort to thwart the GOP-led redistricting plan are not abandoning office, as Abbott has claimed. Instead, the quorum break 'is not an abdication of their duty but an affirmation of it.' The Granite State steps back: New Hampshire GOP Gov. Kelly Ayotte has ruled out joining the procession of states redrawing their districts ahead of next year's midterms, per POLITICO's Aaron Pellish. ''The timing is off for this, because we are literally in the middle of the census period,' she said in an interview with WMUR. 'And when I talk to people in New Hampshire … it's not on the top of their priority list.'' 3. TRADING SPACES: Trump's wielding of tariffs may have been broader than previously understood, 'encompassing an array of national security goals as well as the interests of individual companies,' WaPo's David Lynch and Hannah Natanson report. An internal document shows that State Department officials had discussed insisting that U.S trading partners vote against an international attempt to cut down greenhouse gas emissions. Meanwhile, in a separate 'eight-page list of 'supplemental negotiating objectives,' U.S. officials acknowledged that potential accords would cover issues, including military basing, 'not traditionally found in a trade agreement.'' The view from K Street: Over two dozen nations dropped big money on lobbyists with ties to Trump as they scrambled to avert heavy tariffs this year, but 'in most cases, the spending has gotten them nowhere,' POLITICO's Caitlin Oprysko and colleagues report. 'The new model is punishing India. After bringing longtime Trump adviser Jason Miller on board in April, the nation has nonetheless been walloped by Trump over the past two weeks.' And while 'Canada's provinces stocked up on lobbyists and the country has still been hammered by Trump,' Mexico 'relied instead on President Claudia Sheinbaum's personal relationship with Trump — a direct approach that worked better.' 4. NOT LONG FOR IT: Billy Long is out as Trump's IRS commissioner after less than two months on the job. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will now serve as the embattled agency's acting commissioner. Long is set to be named as the U.S. ambassador to Iceland, POLITICO's Nicole Markus and Brian Faler report. Long was the 'sixth leader this year of an agency that has been wracked by budget cuts and other controversies, with tens of thousands of employees heading for the exits. … He had little previous experience in tax or running large organizations, and had been heavily involved in promoting a scandal-plagued tax credit for businesses that had been subject to a sweeping crackdown by the IRS.' 5. HIGH TIME?: 'Trump Weighs Reclassifying Marijuana as Less Dangerous Drug,' by WSJ's Josh Dawsey: 'At a $1 million-a-plate fundraiser at his New Jersey golf club earlier this month, Trump told attendees that he was interested in change … Such a shift, which the Biden administration started pursuing but didn't enact before leaving office, would make it much easier to buy and sell pot and make the multibillion-dollar industry more profitable. The guests at Trump's fundraiser included Kim Rivers, the chief executive of one of the largest marijuana companies, Trulieve, who encouraged Trump to pursue the change and expand medical marijuana research … Trump listened and said he was interested.' 6. MIDDLE EAST LATEST: Despite decades of failed attempts to find enough oil in Pakistan to boost the nation's economy, Trump announced on Truth Social yesterday that the U.S. and Pakistan will work together to 'develop their massive oil reserves,' WaPo's Rick Noack and Shaiq Hussain report from Islamabad. The cold water: 'After a long history of setbacks and failures, few here believe Pakistan will ever become an oil exporter.' While Pakistani officials are embracing the announcement, 'among commentators here, disbelief and in some cases mockery have prevailed. Some suspect Trump is sending a message to neighboring India, Pakistan's more populous and more economically influential archrival.' 7. HITTING THE ROAD: Senate Majority Leader John Thune is planning to take a delegation of Senate GOP freshmen to Europe later this month to visit NATO countries, The Washington Examiner's David Sivak scoops. 'The senators will be making stops in Denmark, Norway, and Finland … [and] a stop in Estonia … The trip is significant, in part, for the countries where senators will be visiting. The travel coincides with increasingly strained relations between Washington and the Kremlin, and each is a member nation of NATO.' 8. THE OREGON TRAIL: 'Some Democrats want new leadership. Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden says he has what it takes to resist Trump,' by AP's Claire Rush: 'Wyden is in his fifth decade in Congress and showing no inclination to step aside even as pressure builds on aging Democratic officeholders to give way to a new generation. He says he plans to seek another term in 2028, when he will be 79 years old. … After a recent town hall in Wasco in conservative Sherman County, Wyden said questions about age are 'fair game for debate' but that he is still up to the job and the fight against Republican President Donald Trump's policies.' 9. DISTRICT DISSENT: ''Disproportionate' and 'extreme': DC officials protest Trump's policing incursion,' by POLITICO's Ben Johansen, Irie Sentner and Nicole Markus: '[D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton] called the use of federal agencies 'a disproportionate overreaction that's offensive to D.C.,' and At-Large Councilmember Christina Henderson called it an 'extreme' move. … Still, the silence from most members comes as District officials contend with competing interests: defending the city's right to rule itself and not angering the president.' CLICKER — 'The nation's cartoonists on the week in politics,' edited by Matt Wuerker — 18 funnies GREAT WEEKEND READS: — 'The Most Nihilistic Conflict on Earth,' by The Atlantic's Anne Applebaum: 'Sudan's devastating civil war shows what will replace the liberal order: anarchy and greed.' — 'Donald Trump, Master Builder of Castles in the Air,' by The New Yorker's Susan Glasser: 'The Mar-a-Lago-fication of the White House may be the least bad part of the President's legacy.' — 'It Was a Promising Addiction Treatment. Many Patients Never Got It,' by Shoshana Walter for NYT Magazine: 'How political red tape and a drug company's thirst for profits limited the reach of a drug that experts believe could have reduced the opioid epidemic's toll.' — 'The Cult of Kill Tony,' by Slate's Luke Winkie: 'Tony Hinchcliffe's fame skyrocketed after he made a joke that spooked even Donald Trump. In Texas, I watched how he became the most powerful comic in America.' — 'He could have been the GOP's voice on crime, but his faith intervened,' by WaPo's Emily Davies: 'Phillip Todd, a staffer for Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), was nearly killed in a random attack in D.C. He took two years to figure out what he wanted to say.' — 'Twenty Years After the Storm,' by The Atlantic's Clint Smith: 'What home meant before, and after, Hurricane Katrina.' — 'Could the U.S. Have Saved Navalny?' by WSJ's Drew Hinshaw and Joe Parkinson: 'As the Biden administration deliberated, friends of the famous Russian opposition leader rallied behind an audacious plan to spring him from Putin's gulag.' — 'American Nazis: The Aryan Freedom Network is riding high in Trump era,' by Reuters' Aram Roston and Jim Urquhart: 'With Donald Trump's return to power, a neo-Nazi group buoyed by his rhetoric is expanding its reach and changing the face of white extremism in America. Its leaders: a Texas couple, both born to Ku Klux Klan leaders.' — 'How Trump's War on Higher Education Is Hitting Community Colleges,' by Ben Austen for NYT Magazine: 'Measures intended to punish elite universities are inflicting collateral damage on the nation's two-year colleges, which educate 40 percent of all undergraduates.' TALK OF THE TOWN IN MEMORIAM — 'William H. Webster, Who Ran Both the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., Dies at 101,' by NYT's Tim Weiner: 'President Jimmy Carter chose Mr. Webster — a federal judge, a moderate Republican and a Christian Scientist — in large part because he projected probity and integrity, qualities that matched the president's self-image. … Mr. Webster later said that it took several years before he could control 'the Hoover hard hats,' as he called the old guard, and wrestle the bureau into the realm of the rule of law.' — 'Apollo 13 moon mission leader James Lovell dies at 97,' by AP's Don Babwin: 'One of NASA's most traveled astronauts in the agency's first decade, Lovell flew four times — Gemini 7, Gemini 12, Apollo 8 and Apollo 13 — with the two Apollo flights riveting the folks back on Earth.' FROM THE ARCHIVES — 'Rarely seen photos of JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy's secret wedding,' by CNN's Jacqui Palumbo, with photos by Carole Radziwill: 'Though additional images and anecdotes have trickled out over the years, a trove of snapshots has been shared exclusively with CNN ahead of the network's premiere of its three-part CNN Original Series 'American Prince: JFK Jr.,' airing on August 9.' TRANSITIONS — Jake Jordan is now research director for the AFL-CIO. He previously was deputy research director for the Biden White House and is a Gretchen Whitmer alum. … Sam Chan is now deputy comms director for Mikie Sherrill's New Jersey gubernatorial campaign. She is a Michigan Dems and Roy Cooper alum. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) … Rep. 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Kathy Hochul … Texas Gov. Greg Abbott … Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ark.) … Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.). Panel: Francesca Chambers, Horace Cooper, Matt Gorman and Marie Harf. NBC 'Meet the Press': Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker … Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) … Eric Holder. Panel: Lanhee Chen, Neera Tanden, Carol Lee and Tony Plohetski. CBS 'Face the Nation': Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) … Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) … Ukrainian Ambassador Oksana Markarova … Jerome Adams. MSNBC 'The Weekend': Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) … Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) … Texas state Rep. Jolanda Jones … Texas state. Rep. James Talarico … Beto O'Rourke. CNN 'State of the Union': Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) … Matthew Whitaker. Panel: Kristen Soltis Anderson, Ashley Allison, Scott Walker and Mo Elleithee. NewsNation 'The Hill Sunday': Rep. Dave Min (D-Calif.) … Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.) … Kurt Volker. Panel: Tyler Pager, Margaret Talev, Charles Lane and Sabrina Siddiqui. Did someone forward this email to you? 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Whitmer told Trump in private that Michigan auto jobs depend on a tariff change of course
Whitmer told Trump in private that Michigan auto jobs depend on a tariff change of course

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Whitmer told Trump in private that Michigan auto jobs depend on a tariff change of course

WASHINGTON (AP) — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer met privately in the Oval Office with President Donald Trump to make a case he did not want to hear: the automotive industry he said he wants to save were being hurt by his tariffs. The Democrat came with a slide deck to make her points in a visual presentation. Just getting the meeting last Tuesday with the Republican president was an achievement for someone viewed as a contender for her party's White House nomination in 2028. Whitmer's strategy for dealing with Trump highlights the conundrum for her and other Democratic leaders as they try to protect the interests of their states while voicing their opposition to his agenda. It's a dynamic that Whitmer has navigated much differently from many other Democratic governors. The fact that Whitmer had 'an opening to make direct appeals' in private to Trump was unique in this political moment, said Matt Grossman, a Michigan State University politics professor. It was her third meeting with Trump at the White House since he took office in January. This one, however, was far less public than the time in April when Whitmer was unwittingly part of an impromptu news conference that embarrassed her so much she covered her face with a folder. On Tuesday, she told the president that the economic damage from the tariffs could be severe in Michigan, a state that helped deliver him the White House in 2024. Whitmer also brought up federal support for recovery efforts after an ice storm and sought to delay changes to Medicaid. Trump offered no specific commitments, according to people familiar with the private conversation who were not authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity to describe it. Whitmer is hardly the only one sounding the warning of the potentially damaging consequences, including factory job losses, lower profits and coming price increases, of the import taxes that Trump has said will be the economic salvation for American manufacturing. White House spokesman Kush Desai that no other president 'has taken a greater interest in restoring American auto industry dominance than President Trump." Trade frameworks negotiated by the administration would open up the Japanese, Korean and European markets for vehicles made on assembly lines in Michigan, Desai said. But the outreach Trump has preferred tends to be splashy presentations by tech CEOs. In the Oval Office on Wednesday, Apple CEO Tim Cook gave the president a customized glass plaque with a gold base as Cook promised $600 billion in investments. Trump claims to have brought in $17 trillion in investment commitments, although none of those numbers has surfaced yet in economic data. Under his series of executive orders and trade frameworks, U.S. automakers face import taxes of 50% on steel and aluminum, 30% on parts from China and a top rate of 25% on goods from Canada and Mexico not covered under an existing 2020 trade agreement. That puts America's automakers and parts suppliers at a disadvantage against German, Japanese and South Korean vehicles that only face a 15% import tax negotiated by Trump last month. On top of that, Trump this past week threatened a 100% tariff on computer chips, which are an integral part of cars and trucks, though he would exclude companies that produce chips domestically from the tax. Whitmer's two earlier meetings with Trump resulted in gains for Michigan. But the tariffs represent a significantly broader request of a president who has imposed them even more aggressively in the face of criticism. Materials in the presentation brought Whitmer to the meeting and obtained by The Associated Press noted how trade with Canada and Mexico has driven $23.2 billion in investment to Michigan since 2020. General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis operate 50 factories across the state, while more than 4,000 facilities support the auto parts supply chain. Altogether, the sector supports nearly 600,000 manufacturing jobs, forming the backbone of Michigan's economy. Whitmer outlined the main points of the materials to Trump and left copies with his team. To Grossman, the Michigan State professor, a key question is whether voters who expected to be helped by tariffs would react if Trump's import taxes failed to deliver the promised economic growth. 'Everyone's aware that Michigan is a critical swing state and the auto industry has outsized influence, not just directly, but symbolically,' Grossman said. AP VoteCast found that Trump won Michigan in 2024 largely because two-thirds of its voters described the economic conditions as being poor or 'not so good.' Roughly 70% of the voters in the state who felt negatively about the economy backed the Republican. The state was essentially split over whether tariffs were a positive, with Trump getting 76% of those voters who viewed them favorably. The heads of General Motors, Ford and Stellantis have repeatedly warned the administration that the tariffs would cut company profits and undermine their global competitiveness. Their efforts have resulted in little more than a temporary, monthlong pause intended to give companies time to adjust. The reprieve did little to blunt the financial fallout. In the second quarter alone, Ford reported $800 million in tariff-related costs, while GM said the import taxes cost it $1.1 billion. Those expenses could make it harder to reinvest in new domestic factories, a goal Trump has championed. 'We expect tariffs to be a net headwind of about $2 billion this year, and we'll continue to monitor the developments closely and engage with policymakers to ensure U.S. autoworkers and customers are not disadvantaged by policy change,' Ford CEO Jim Farley said on his company's earning call. Smaller suppliers have felt the strain, too. Detroit Axle, a family-run auto parts distributor, has been one of the more vocal companies in Michigan about the impact of the tariffs. The company initially announced it might have to shut down a warehouse and lay off more than 100 workers, but later said it would be able to keep the facility open, at least for now. 'Right now it's a market of who is able to survive, it's not a matter of who can thrive,' said Mike Musheinesh, owner of Detroit Axle.

The Muscle of Brussels
The Muscle of Brussels

Epoch Times

time3 hours ago

  • Epoch Times

The Muscle of Brussels

Opinion Opinion How the European Union became the world's regulatory superpower. In a world where global power is measured by military strength, technological innovation, or cultural influence, it is striking that the European Union, without housing major tech giants or centers of disruptive innovation, has turned bureaucracy into a tool of global power. It shapes the behavior of global companies, including American big tech firms, which adapt their products to comply with European norms. This phenomenon is known as the 'Brussels Effect' and has positioned the EU as the world's regulatory superpower, fueling growing tensions, particularly with the United States following the re-election of Donald Trump.

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