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Meloni. Trump brutally clash with Macron over recognition of Palestinian state

Meloni. Trump brutally clash with Macron over recognition of Palestinian state

Sky News AU5 days ago
European leaders are divided over Palestine.
Yes, Italy's Giorgia Meloni and France's Emmanuel Macron have clashed over their opinions on Palestine's statehood.
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Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack
Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack

Sydney Morning Herald

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Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack

London: Swiss companies are reeling from a shock move by US President Donald Trump to slap a 39 per cent tariff on their exports, stunning brand-name suppliers of luxury watches, jewellery, cheese and chocolate. Swiss chocolate makers have declared the move 'incomprehensible' and are warning it will hit them hard, as the changes flow through to higher prices for American customers. The biggest names in luxury watches, already suffering a slowdown in America after Trump's previous trade decisions, now confront extraordinary price hikes that could lead them to expand sales in other markets. Trump spared Australia from higher penalties in his sweeping trade decision on Thursday, leaving tariffs at 10 per cent for most Australian exports, but he singled out Switzerland with the biggest blow to any European country. At 39 per cent, the new rate is higher than the 31 per cent tariff the president proposed in April – and much worse than Swiss leaders expected. The decision puts the Swiss exporters at a grave disadvantage to competitors in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy and other countries that will incur the 15 per cent tariff applied to the European Union. While Americans may have to pay steeper prices for Bally fashion made in Switzerland, they would incur a more modest price hike for a Dior item made in France or Armani product made in Italy. 'It is incomprehensible why Switzerland is affected by these tariffs, as reciprocity is out of the question,' industry group Chocosuisse said, repeating concerns it aired in April.

Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack
Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

Cheesed off: Swiss meltdown over Trump's ‘incomprehensible' tariff whack

London: Swiss companies are reeling from a shock move by US President Donald Trump to slap a 39 per cent tariff on their exports, stunning brand-name suppliers of luxury watches, jewellery, cheese and chocolate. Swiss chocolate makers have declared the move 'incomprehensible' and are warning it will hit them hard, as the changes flow through to higher prices for American customers. The biggest names in luxury watches, already suffering a slowdown in America after Trump's previous trade decisions, now confront extraordinary price hikes that could lead them to expand sales in other markets. Trump spared Australia from higher penalties in his sweeping trade decision on Thursday, leaving tariffs at 10 per cent for most Australian exports, but he singled out Switzerland with the biggest blow to any European country. At 39 per cent, the new rate is higher than the 31 per cent tariff the president proposed in April – and much worse than Swiss leaders expected. The decision puts the Swiss exporters at a grave disadvantage to competitors in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy and other countries that will incur the 15 per cent tariff applied to the European Union. While Americans may have to pay steeper prices for Bally fashion made in Switzerland, they would incur a more modest price hike for a Dior item made in France or Armani product made in Italy. 'It is incomprehensible why Switzerland is affected by these tariffs, as reciprocity is out of the question,' industry group Chocosuisse said, repeating concerns it aired in April.

The fractured football club behind Melbourne's eight seconds of madness
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Sydney Morning Herald

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  • Sydney Morning Herald

The fractured football club behind Melbourne's eight seconds of madness

My colleague Michael Gleeson reported this week that the prospect of a million-dollar payout to premiership coach Goodwin would not faze the Melbourne board which has – in effect – been running the club all year in the absence of a permanent chief executive. Off-field morale at Melbourne has been low as a result. Not only did acting CEO David Chippindall move deep into the process to replace Pert with few ever believing he would be appointed, but Chippindall has been left to run the club all season as interim CEO. As the season has continued staff have become increasingly dismayed at the lengthy handover period. Incredibly, with Pert departing last November, his replacement Paul Guerra – also overseas in New York in recent weeks – will not take over until September despite being appointed in April. 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One of the options for a Demons base is a parcel of land between Caulfield Racecourse and a planned campus for Jewish school Mt Scopus. Despite denials at the time, the board did not rule out the prospect of approaching the then-uncontracted Luke Beveridge by season's end in the early months of a year that has lurched from bad to worse. This would indicate the Smith-Brad Green led operation remains open to change. But the pressing problem for Melbourne remains the lack of leadership and by consequence the opportunity to correctly review the running of a football operation. Monday's scheduled board meeting saw incoming president Smith zoom in as his long-planned European sojourn nears an end. Green has bristled this season at suggestions he is the interim president but given the pressure placed upon Smith, the former MCC president and Demons 200-gamer, to step into the role despite his travel plans, the strong impression all season is that the club had been treading water on and off the field. Darren Shand, the former All Blacks manager and motivational speaker whom Goodwin and Pert encountered in New Zealand shortly after Pert's controversial defence of the club's culture in late 2023, was also at the board meeting. Shand conducted the post-season review last year which led to little meaningful change. The football department has been marked in recent years by some strange and at times eyebrow-raising job-sharing decisions. This was underlined again in June when the club's chief communications executive Clare Pettyfor was appointed head of the club's AFLW program with a role in list management after the departure of Marcus Wagner. 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