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Macron, Zelensky and the look of leadership

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Macron, Zelensky and the look of leadership

At first I dismissed it as a pretend, the picture was so preposterous: the French president Emmanuel Macron, gripping a file of paperwork, his face unshaven and sporting a hoodie with the emblem of CPA 10, a department of the nation’s particular forces. Flanked by the classical particulars and gold ornamentation of the state rooms within the Elysée Palace, his selection of outfit appeared completely out of kilter.

“Zelensky cosplay” screamed the web, as Macron’s sartorial debt to the Ukrainian president was made obvious. Though my first ideas on seeing this aberration, captured with an eyebrow cocked and smirking, had been of Jason Bourne meets The Pink Panther’s Inspector Clouseau.

Reasonably than a pretend, the photographs are a part of a rising archive of photos by Soazig de la Moissonnière, a former photojournalist who, since 2016, has been the chief photographer to Macron, and one in every of a rising variety of photographers employed to seize candid photographs of a politician’s profession. First utilized by JFK, who employed Cecil W Stoughton to seize him in workplace, the private photographer of the president is meant to offer a public service: Pete Souza, for instance, captured intimate moments with Barack Obama within the White Home, footage that helped seal his picture as a person of precept and compassion.

Extra just lately, nonetheless, these on-site portraitists have change into one aspect in what appear to be a monstrous vainness mission. The photographs by de la Moissonnière have already contributed a lot to the meme-building round Macron’s battle effort. One other equally cringeworthy set of photos, taken within the run-up to the Russian invasion, finds him with head clasped in anguish following anxious diplomacy exchanges, rebranded by Twitter customers as #sadMacron.

Six weeks earlier than a management election, positioned as one of many key gamers within the peace talks, Macron has acquired a extra unpolished picture. The informal sweats, the unkemptness, the matted virility: are all motifs that owe an enormous debt to Volodymyr Zelensky. And, presumably, Ukrainians should be touched that the president is such a fan-boy of their chief he’s taking part in dress-up whereas posing from the consolation of the palace.

However whereas Macron’s efforts to emulate Zelensky in his deportment are embarrassing, they do converse to the politics of a wartime chief’s wardrobe. That Macron, of the impeccably tapered trouser lengths and pristine white cuffs, has began rolling out the sweatshirts speaks to a brand new need amongst public servants to catch a few of that Zelensky “everyman” chutzpah.

And whereas it appears laughable for world leaders to decorate like somebody who is definitely sitting in a bomb shelter with the intention to bolster their credentials, the wartime hoodie has change into a helpful means for leaders on this disaster to semaphore their sympathies. In any case, Putin, who nonetheless insists that Russia is engaged in a “particular navy operation” in Ukraine, is simply sporting fits. Placing in your paratrooper hoodie no less than tells individuals there’s a battle on.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in tee and hoodie slightly than physique armour © Ukrainian Presidential Press Providers/AFP by way of Getty Pictures

Zelensky, in the meantime, in his dusty combats, has emerged as a contemporary icon. And whereas, clearly, his outfit has not been a primary precedence in his planning, one can solely think about the previous tv star has been a cautious scholar of his wardrobe decisions.

An actor whose presidency for years has coexisted between the worlds of reality and fiction, Zelensky has finessed his public picture at the side of an on-screen evolution: in simply two weeks, he can already be captured in a pen sketch, the unshaven man with a three-day goatee who all the time wears a khaki tee and typically a zippered hoodie. The pared-down look is a continuing reminder that he represents the strange Ukrainian: there isn’t any posturing or fancy extras.

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Extra considerably, he has defied accusations that he has left his capital by strolling round Kyiv with out sporting any apparent safety. In eschewing the traditional physique armour one would possibly count on to see on politicians in a battle zone, Zelensky’s selection has been an awfully courageous one. In insisting the world see how susceptible he’s, he has emerged because the world’s strongest and most charismatic chief.

Chechen chief Ramzan Kadyrov, centre, has pledged to assist Putin and has a predilection for Prada boots © Yelena Afonina/Tass by way of Reuters

It’s an astonishing distinction when one considers the guerrilla combats and grizzled uniform of Ramzan Kadyrov, the Chechen Putin loyalist who introduced final weekend he can be supporting the Russian effort. The impression of his hard-nut, wildman vigilantism is considerably dissipated, nonetheless, by the scrumptious discovery that the person wears AW19 season Prada fight boots that price $1,500. For the love of God, the vainness of some males is totally surprising. I do know little or no of fight, however I can inform you that to attempt to run in these gigantic lug soles can be an absolute catastrophe.

Electronic mail Jo at jo.ellison@ft.com

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Venezuelan opposition leader emerges from hiding at rally amid crackdown

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Venezuelan opposition leader emerges from hiding at rally amid crackdown

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Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado emerged from hiding on Saturday to appear at an anti-government rally in Caracas, despite a violent crackdown on dissent by the socialist government of Nicolás Maduro.

Machado, who had not been seen in public since Wednesday after Maduro and members of his inner circle publicly called for her jailing, waved a Venezuelan flag from atop a small lorry to the cheers of thousands of supporters.

“We have never been as strong as today, never,” Machado said. “The presence of every one of you here in the streets shows the world the magnitude of our strength and our determination to reach the end.”

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Protests broke out in the South American country on Monday after Maduro claimed victory in a presidential election by a seven point margin over opposition candidate Edmundo González. The National Electoral Council, which is controlled by Maduro’s allies, has refused to publish a detailed breakdown of the results.

The opposition declared González as the real winner with 7.1mn votes compared to Maduro’s 3.2mn, and posted thousands of polling station receipts as evidence. The US on Thursday recognised González as the winner, a move followed by Ecuador, Uruguay, Costa Rica, and Panama. Maduro’s victory was recognised by key allies China, Russia, Iran and Cuba, among others.

González, a retired diplomat, stood as a surrogate of the charismatic Machado, who was banned from running in January, months after she won a primary in a landslide. The Carter Center, a US non-profit organisation and the only independent body in Venezuela to evaluate the election, said the vote “did not meet international standards of electoral integrity at any of its stages”.

Maduro has referred the election dispute to the supreme court, which is controlled by the government. On Friday González did not show up to a hearing in which all 10 candidates in the election were summoned.

On Saturday, supporters from poorer neighbourhoods and the middle classes turned out in the well-to-do Las Mercedes neighbourhood to see Machado, apparently unbent by a crackdown on sporadic protests that began in downtrodden neighbourhoods of the capital on Monday. 

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Since Monday, at least 19 people have been killed according to rights group Provea, and Maduro has claimed that 2,000 people have been arrested. Machado wrote in US media on Thursday that she had gone into hiding amid fears of her imminent arrest. The opposition’s campaign offices were broken into and vandalised in the early hours of Friday morning.

“We are all scared, but what scares me more is continuing under this tyranny,” said Luis Guersi, a 43-year-old engineer at the rally on Saturday.

Colonia Pérez, 34, a street vendor and mother of three, said she had turned out “for the future of my children”.

Maduro, who has presided over an economic crisis, deepening repression, and the exodus of 7.7mn Venezuelans since succeeding the late populist Hugo Chávez in 2013, has framed the protests against his self-declared re-election as a Washington-backed “fascist” coup attempt.

“The extreme right means hatred, vengeance, foreign interventionism and war,” he told supporters and public sector workers at a rival rally in central Caracas on Saturday.

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Earlier on Saturday morning, US assistant secretary of state Brian Nichols said cases of arbitrary arrest, vandalism of opposition officers and violence towards peaceful protesters will be referred to the UN Human Rights agency.

“Having seen the will of the Venezuelan people at the ballot box, Maduro and his representatives have resorted to repression,” Nichols wrote on X. “These acts are unacceptable and demonstrate Maduro’s reliance on fear to cling to power.”

At Machado’s rally, supporters said they would continue to demonstrate in support of González’s victory.

“We want a free Venezuela,” said Deysi Barrios, a publicist whose family has fled the country. “If we don’t rid ourselves of this dictatorship now, we never will.”

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Shapiro faces antisemitism and criticism over support for Israel in VP pick

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Shapiro faces antisemitism and criticism over support for Israel in VP pick

With protests and encampments taking over universities around the state, Shapiro took a particular hardline with the activists. When video surfaced of members of the Philly Palestine Coalition protesting outside Israeli-owned businesses in Philly, Shapiro called it “blatant antisemitism.”

“This hate and bigotry is reminiscent of a dark time in history,” he later said. He also called for a student encampment at the University of Pennsylvania to be disbanded and, after it was, said it was “past time” for it to happen and made a reference to “people dressed up in KKK outfits or KKK regalia” on campus. He also came out in support of a bill that would punish colleges and universities that boycott Israel or make financial decisions to penalize that country.

These positions have caused concern among progressive Democrats who otherwise appear very supportive of a Harris candidacy. Alan Minsky, executive director of Progressive Democrats of America, calls Shapiro’s comments “irresponsible” and says they should disqualify him from the ticket.

“These are classical expressions of the peace movement in the United States,” he told WHYY News, adding that Jewish-Americans have also been active in the protests, such as those affiliated with Jewish Voice for Peace. “To just sweepingly condemn them as ‘antisemitic’ and endangering students on the university campus, I think was incredibly misguided and sharp contrast to the other governors who have been named as potential running mates.”

After being contacted for comment Wednesday, Jewish Voice for Peace responded Friday by pointing to a social media post the group wrote that morning that said “Josh Shapiro has a damning history of smearing and attacking Palestinian rights advocates and free speech.”

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“Opposition to choosing him as the VP candidate isn’t about his identity, it’s about his policies and rhetoric over the years,” the post on X, formerly known as Twitter, reads.

Minsky, who identifies as Jewish and said he strongly condemns Hamas and “all forms of antisemitism,” argues that the bigger issue is how Shapiro may affect Harris’ candidacy among progressives who previously threatened Biden’s prospects over his support for Israel but appear energized by Harris.

“I think he would damage the ticket,” he says. “There is this new enthusiasm among voters who will help Harris carry swing states and win the election and naming Governor Shapiro will jeopardize their support for her.”

Minsky was one of 45 progressives from around the country who signed a letter to Harris suggesting Governors Tim Walz and Andy Beshear as better alternatives given Shapiro’s stand on other issues including past support for school vouchers.

“Democrats need a credible and respected voice that has a track record of winning over and exciting an electorate, especially the ability to turn out young voters, immigrants, and independents in swing states,” they wrote.

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Iran blames Israel for ‘short range’ strike that killed Hamas leader

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Iran blames Israel for ‘short range’ strike that killed Hamas leader

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Iran said Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed by a “short-range projectile” that was fired into the official residence where he was staying in Tehran, and vowed to “punish” Israel.

The country’s Revolutionary Guards said on Saturday that the assassination was “orchestrated and executed” by Israel and accused the “criminal” US of complicity in the strike by providing support for the Jewish state.

Haniyeh and his bodyguard died early on Wednesday morning, hours after he participated in the inauguration of Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian. Haniyeh, who lived in exile in Qatar but travelled regularly to Tehran, also met Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Tuesday.

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Israel has neither confirmed nor denied carrying out the killing, and typically does not comment on its assassination attempts in the Islamic republic.

The attack on Haniyeh has stoked fears that the Middle East is at risk of sliding into a full-blown war.

It dealt a humiliating blow to the republic, which backs regional militants that have launched missiles and drones against Israel since Hamas’s October 7 attack triggered the war in Gaza.

The guards said an “appropriate” Iranian response to Haniyeh’s killing “will come at the time and place of our choosing”.

The day before Haniyeh’s death, Israel said it carried out an attack in Beirut that killed Fuad Shukr, the military commander of Hizbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese militant movement. Hizbollah has also promised retaliation for that assassination.

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The guards said the investigation into Haniyeh’s assassination revealed that a short-range projectile, with a warhead weighing about 7kg, was used. It said in Iran’s first official account of the attack that the projectile caused a powerful explosion “from outside the area where the guests’ residence was located”.

The republic was certain to “avenge the blood” of Haniyeh and deliver a “severe punishment” to the “adventurous and terrorist Zionist regime”, the statement said.

Khamenei had previously said “we consider it our duty to avenge the blood of a revered guest” killed “on the territory of the Islamic republic”.

The assassinations of Haniyeh and Shukr have increased the risk of a co-ordinated response from the so-called axis of resistance, which in addition to Hizbollah and Hamas includes the Houthis in Yemen and Shia militias in Iraq and Syria.

Israel and Hizbollah have exchanged fire regularly since Hamas’s October 7 attack. But tensions rose sharply after a rocket strike killed 12 youngsters on a football pitch in the occupied Golan Heights last week, which Israel blamed on Hizbollah.

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The US, which had pledged to defend Israel, has boosted its military presence by deploying warships and fighter jets to the Middle East in anticipation of an attack against its ally.

Haniyeh’s assassination on home territory is considered a security breach for Iran and has revived fears about enemy agents penetrating the country’s intelligence apparatus.

Hosseinali Haji Deligani, an Iranian lawmaker, said the possibility of “hired agents having played a role in Haniyeh’s assassination cannot be ruled out”.

The latest incident has raised the stakes in the stand-off between the Islamic republic and Israel. In April, after a decades-long shadow war, Iran launched hundreds of missiles and drones against Israel, in a widely telegraphed attack in response to a deadly Israeli strike on its consulate building in Syria. Israel responded with a raid on a military base near the Iranian city of Isfahan, but tensions had eased since then.

Ismail Kosari, a member of the Iranian parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, insisted Tehran would respond more forcefully this time.

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“Exacting revenge is a question of [defending] our honour and territory,” he said on Saturday. “Avenging Haniyeh’s blood will entail a heavier response.”

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