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Press review: President Trump's ‘big beautiful bill'

Press review: President Trump's ‘big beautiful bill'

Al Arabiyaa day ago
In this episode of The Dailies, Rawia Alami takes a look at important news stories, reports, analysis, and articles published in newspapers and media outlets across the world. American newspapers focused on the Republicans Senators' vote on several proposed amendments to US President Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' in an attempt to gain the support undecided Republicans. The performance of the US dollar, the war in Gaza, and the aftermath of the Israel-Iran conflict continued to draw the attention of global news outlets.
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America risks upsetting the balance of powers at its peril
America risks upsetting the balance of powers at its peril

Arab News

time24 minutes ago

  • Arab News

America risks upsetting the balance of powers at its peril

Picture the scene: it is January 2029 and the 48th US president, a Democrat, is in the Oval Office, having achieved a comfortable win over Republican candidate J.D. Vance in the November 2028 election. As is the custom for newly elected presidents, the fiery former New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (for it is she) is ensconced behind the Resolute Desk signing a slew of executive orders. Her first one restricts the possession of firearms to police officers, the armed forces and the National Guard, and requires all armed American civilians to hand over their weapons or have them forcibly confiscated. Inevitably, there is uproar: it is a brave president who would deny every freeborn American their inalienable right to go shopping for a rotisserie chicken and a quart of milk in Walmart while strapped up with a Smith & Wesson M&P15 assault rifle. The National Rifle Association files a lawsuit in the state of New York, where it is incorporated, demanding that the order be overturned because it breaches the Second Amendment to the US Constitution, whereby 'the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.' It is an open and shut case, the order is overturned, but the plaintiffs' victory is limited. Previously, a ruling by a federal judge would have applied nationwide ('federal' is a clue). In this case, however, the judgment applies only in the state of New York and only to members of the NRA. The reason we know this would happen is that it just did. Executive orders are increasingly being used to avoid the tricky business of actually passing legislation Ross Anderson The first executive order signed by Donald Trump in his second term in office denied automatic citizenship to children born in the US to a parent or parents deemed to be in America illegally. Like our imaginary Ocasio-Cortez weapons ban, on the face of it the order breaches the constitution — in this case, the 14th Amendment, which explicitly confers citizenship on almost any US-born child, regardless of parentage. Lawsuits against Trump's executive order followed and federal judges in Maryland and New Hampshire issued nationwide injunctions preventing the birthright ban from taking effect. The administration appealed to the Supreme Court and deployed a masterstroke. Trump's lawyers were not born yesterday: their basis for appeal was not that the birthright ban was in accordance with the constitution — they knew perfectly well that it almost certainly was not. Instead, they argued that there was no constitutional imperative for a federal judge's ruling in one court to apply nationwide and that injunctions overturning the executive order should apply only in the jurisdictions where they were issued and only to the plaintiffs in each case. Last week, by six votes to three, the Supreme Court agreed. Now, to anyone other than a legal scholar, this may all seem like angels dancing on the head of a pin, but in fact it has profound implications for how the US is governed. Supporters of Trump's executive order welcomed the judgment as a triumph and opponents view it as a defeat. They are both wrong: it is neither. The court was not asked to, and did not, make any determination on the constitutionality of the executive order. This case was not about birthright, it was about the law. There are striking parallels with another controversial Supreme Court ruling: the decision in 2022 to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 judgment that women had a constitutional right to abortion. As with the 'birthright case,' anti-abortion activists viewed the 2022 ruling as a victory and supporters of women's right to choose viewed it as a defeat. They were both wrong: it was neither. The case was not about abortion, it was about the law. The Supreme Court ruled, correctly, that the Roe vs. Wade judgment was flawed because, in 1973, the court had given itself a power to which it was not entitled — to make the law. It ruled, correctly, that the justification for the 1973 verdict — the 14th Amendment 'right to privacy' — was wholly spurious. And it ruled, correctly, that in the absence of a federal law regulating the provision of abortion, such regulation was a matter for individual states and not the Supreme Court. No such law exists, nor is it ever likely to. Any US president who even contemplated one would look at the experience of Barack Obama and shudder. Obama, you may recall, tried to repair a US healthcare system that, by common consent, is terminally dysfunctional, ruinously expensive, delivers medical outcomes that are among the worst in the developed world, and is ripe for reform. Obama spent eight tortuous and combative years wrangling with Congress, herding cats in the House and Senate, expending political capital he could barely afford, dividing the country — and ended up with a truncated Affordable Care Act that delivered a level of universal healthcare viewed in Europe and elsewhere as not even close to what they take for granted. Opponents complain that executive orders are in fact 'royal decrees' — an emotive phrase for a US audience Ross Anderson And this was healthcare, which you would think most people might agree on: can you imagine the mayhem that would ensue if a president tried to legislate on abortion? It would be irrelevant whether the proposed legislation expanded or restricted access to pregnancy termination services — an already polarized country would explode. No president will even try, the political risks are too great. Which brings us back to executive orders, a device increasingly used by US presidents of all political stripes to avoid the tricky and inconvenient business of actually passing legislation. Until recently, you could count on your fingers the number issued by presidents in their early days in office and most averaged about 12 a year. That changed with Obama, who signed 19 in his first 100 days in 2009. Trump beat that in 2017 with 33, but Joe Biden smashed it out of the park in 2021 with 42. The incumbent president is, however, now a class apart: in the first 100 days of his second term in office, he issued a frankly astonishing 143. Supporters of executive orders advance two arguments. First, legal: Article II of the US Constitution vests executive power in the hands of the president. Second, moral: a president, especially a newly elected one, has obtained the support of a majority of Americans and should be permitted to give effect to campaign promises. Opponents complain that executive orders are in fact 'royal decrees' — an emotive phrase for a US audience. Here in the Gulf, we are accustomed to laws enacted by royal decree and no one bats an eyelid: but Americans fought an eight-year war of independence to rid themselves of a king as head of state and view aspirations toward royal privilege with deep suspicion. For this reason, the Constitution, although 250 years old, imposes a system of checks and balances that is sophisticated even by 21st-century standards. Presidential power is countered by the Congress, and vice versa, and the power of each is constrained by a Supreme Court independent of both. It is a balance that has stood the test of time, but it is a delicate one. With presidential executive orders, Americans risk upsetting that balance at their peril.

Children of war: The lost generation in Palestine
Children of war: The lost generation in Palestine

Arab News

time24 minutes ago

  • Arab News

Children of war: The lost generation in Palestine

For decades, the world has watched the Palestinian-Israeli conflict unfold via headlines, footage and diplomatic statements. But beneath the geopolitics and shifting battle lines lies a quieter, more devastating tragedy: a generation of Palestinian children growing up amid violence, trauma and deprivation. These are the children of war — a lost generation whose education, mental health and dreams for the future are being systematically shattered. In Gaza, where Israeli military operations have left entire neighborhoods in ruins, children have been disproportionately affected. According to UNICEF and Save the Children, more than half of Gaza's population is under the age of 18. That means every airstrike, every siege and every blockade hits them the hardest — physically, emotionally and mentally. Thousands of children have been killed, maimed or left orphaned by Israeli operations since Oct. 7, 2023. Many more have witnessed the death of siblings, parents or friends. These are not just statistics — they are young lives permanently scarred. Education, one of the most fundamental rights of every child, is among the first casualties in such a conflict. Schools in Gaza and the West Bank are often closed for long stretches due to bombardment or military operations. Some are turned into shelters. Others are directly targeted. Since October 2023, hundreds of schools have been damaged or destroyed, and thousands of children have been deprived of safe and consistent access to education. The result is a generation that is increasingly falling behind — not for lack of intelligence or will, but because their environment denies them the tools they need to grow. Even when the fighting stops — temporarily — the trauma continues. Mental health professionals working in Palestine report staggering levels of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and night terrors among children. These are not isolated cases. They are symptoms of a deeply broken context, where childhood has been replaced by fear and resilience is forced, not nurtured. Children draw pictures of tanks and funerals. They play games that mimic escape from drone attacks. Their worldview is shaped by checkpoints, rubble and the haunting sound of air raids. There are staggering levels of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression and night terrors among children Hani Hazaimeh The long-term consequences of such sustained trauma are difficult to fully comprehend, but early signs are already emerging. Studies have shown that war-affected children are more likely to suffer from behavioral and developmental issues, poor academic performance and emotional withdrawal. The trauma does not just vanish when the guns fall silent — it lingers, passed on silently from one generation to the next. Yet perhaps the most damning aspect of this tragedy is how invisible these children have become to the international community. The war in Gaza and the broader Palestinian territories is often discussed in terms of ceasefires, security and statehood — rarely in terms of its human toll, particularly on the young. The language of diplomacy too often sanitizes the brutal reality on the ground. In global forums, the deaths of children are described as 'collateral damage,' and the destruction of schools is brushed aside as 'unfortunate consequences.' But behind these euphemisms are real human stories — of 10-year-olds who no longer speak, of toddlers who flinch at the sound of thunder, of teenagers who have never known a single day without the threat of war. Perhaps the most damning aspect is how invisible these children have become to the international community Hani Hazaimeh There is, of course, no simple solution to the broader conflict. But there is a moral imperative — urgent and universal — to protect children. That means demanding accountability for attacks on schools and civilian infrastructure. It means providing funding for trauma counseling and mental health services in war zones. It means supporting organizations that rebuild classrooms, train teachers and offer safe spaces for learning. It means treating the right to a childhood not as a luxury, but as a cornerstone of any sustainable peace. We must stop thinking of Palestinian children merely as victims of a political conflict. They are not footnotes to be skimmed over. They are the heart of the story — and if we allow their suffering to continue, we are complicit in the creation of a generation that has known only violence and despair. In every war, there are casualties we can count and others we cannot. The lost innocence of children falls in the latter. Let us not wait for another headline, another outrage, another round of violence. The children of Palestine need more than sympathy. They need solidarity. They need protection. And, above all, they need hope — something far too many of them have been forced to live without.

Iran committed to Non-Proliferation Treaty, foreign minister says
Iran committed to Non-Proliferation Treaty, foreign minister says

Arab News

time26 minutes ago

  • Arab News

Iran committed to Non-Proliferation Treaty, foreign minister says

Iran remains committed to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and its safeguards agreement, Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Thursday, a day after Tehran enacted a law suspending cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog. 'Our cooperation with the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) will be channeled through Iran's Supreme National Security Council for obvious safety and security reasons,' Araqchi wrote in a post on X. President Masoud Pezeshkian on Wednesday enacted the legislation passed by parliament last week to suspend cooperation with the IAEA, a move the US called 'unacceptable.' Araqchi's comment on X was in response to a call from Germany's Foreign Ministry urging Tehran to reverse its decision to shelve cooperation with the IAEA. Araqchi accused Germany of 'explicit support for Israel's unlawful attack on Iran, including safeguarded nuclear sites.' Iran has accused the IAEA of siding with Western countries and providing a justification for Israel'sJune 13-24 airstrikes on Iranian nuclear installations, which began a day after the UN agency's board of governors voted to declare Tehran in violation of its obligations under the NPT. Western powers have long suspected that Iran has sought to develop the means to build atomic bombs through its declared civilian atomic energy program. Iran has repeatedly said it is enriching uranium only for peaceful nuclear ends. IAEA inspectors are mandated to ensure compliance with the NPT by seeking to verify that nuclear programs in treaty countries are not diverted for military purposes. The law that went into effect on Wednesday mandates that any future inspection of Iranian nuclear sites by the IAEA needs approval by Tehran's Supreme National Security Council. 'We are aware of these reports. The IAEA is awaiting further official information from Iran,' the Vienna-based global nuclear watchdog said in a statement. US State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce told a regular briefing on Wednesday that Iran needed to cooperate fully with the IAEA without further delay.

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