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Why the timing of Pelosi’s trip to Kyiv matters

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Why the timing of Pelosi’s trip to Kyiv matters
Artists performing the ballet “Giselle.” Through the struggle, a full-scale efficiency shall be proven on the opera for the primary time. (Serhii Korovayny for CNN)

With the viewers ready eagerly in its seats, a well-recognized message echoes via the corridor, reminding patrons to show off telephones and immerse themselves within the expertise.

It is instantly adopted by a extra irregular announcement. “Pricey visitor, our occasion shall be suspended in case of air raid alert. Dancers and spectators should go to the bomb shelter located within the theater,” it tells the group — a poignant reminder that this isn’t a daily night time on the theater.

Then the lights dim, the orchestra begins to play, and a dancer seems on stage from the wings.

On Friday, Lviv Nationwide Opera staged its first full manufacturing because the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24.

“A method or one other, the struggle impacts us all … We perceive that mild should defeat darkness, that life should defeat dying, and the mission of the theater is to claim this,” the opera’s creative director, Vasyl Vovkun, instructed CNN.

The Western Ukrainian metropolis of Lviv has emerged nearly fully unscathed, regardless of devastating battle elsewhere within the nation.

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With Lviv residents slowly studying to dwell with the struggle, Vovkun stated offering a spot of solace amid the raging battle is the driving drive behind resuming reveals.

Vovkun opened with “Giselle,” a well-performed ballet basic that tells the story of an attractive peasant woman who dies prematurely after being betrayed by the person she loves.

“Giselle additionally has all shades of pleasure and disappointment, there’s additionally dying and there’s additionally the victory of affection. And actually, this matter is constant at present. Even after we hear quite a bit about dying, we nonetheless hope, each on this work and in life, that love will win, life will win,” Vovkun defined.

Regardless of the present’s sell-out recognition, many seats stay empty because the theater’s bomb shelter can solely maintain 300 individuals.

Daryna Kirik, the 21-year-old who performs the lead function of “Giselle,” has seen her life upended by the struggle and the horrors of Bucha, the place mass graves have been lately discovered.

“Dancing helps to distract from what’s taking place … Most of my family members are in Kyiv and Kyiv area now. My mother and my grandmother and her sister survived occupation in Bucha. My mom managed to evacuate herself and the pets. Now she is in security in Poland restoring her nerves,” Kirik stated.

The gang is obsessed with each leap, carry and arabesque. It is just a two-hour present, but for a time the viewers is transported away from the chaos of actuality.

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“After you go to this place, you perceive that life cannot be defeated. Our life cannot be bombed, or destroyed by missiles or chemical or nuclear weapons,” says Victoria Palamarchuk, a 50-year-old journalist, at the moment staying with prolonged household in Lviv after leaving her house within the central Zhytomyr area.

With a heat smile, she provides: “Life cannot be defeated whereas such locations exist — theaters, opera, and ballet theaters — whereas individuals are coming right here and really feel pleasure with these sounds.”

Learn the total story right here:

As war rages in Ukraine, ballet dancers return to the stage
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Slinging mud at King Felipe leaves no stain

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Slinging mud at King Felipe leaves no stain

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Exquisite tailoring takes you only so far. Felipe VI, king of Spain, is known to the internet for the perfect hug of his suits — the right-length jackets, the gently rolled lapels.

A monarch could scarcely look more the part. Felipe is nearly two metres tall. He has the posture for which a desk-bound worker would sacrifice a year’s salary, and a visage you’d expect to see chiselled into a medieval cathedral. No sausage fingers in the House of Bourbon.

But last weekend, the king’s new clothes were about as much use as the emperor’s. Walking the streets of Paiporta, a suburb of Valencia, hours after deadly floods, Felipe and his wife Queen Letizia found themselves pelted with mud and subjected to cries of “Murderers!”

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Inevitable, perhaps, that mass death should strip away the aura of monarchy. Inevitable, too, that the king’s decision to face angry crowds, while prime minister Pedro Sánchez retreated to his car, should be seen as both too much and too little. That’s constitutional monarchy: you can’t send out emergency alerts but you can take the blame for other people’s failure to do so.

No one can deny victims’ right to express their anger. But is it too much to hope that the anger might only be a temporary stage of the grieving process? Logically, disasters should define us. Sheep learn from electric fences. Yet we humans, collectively, cannot make the same course correction.

Crises leave only an inconsistent mark on society. The financial crisis spawned various political impulses, most of which (shrink state spending, cut trade ties) worsened the malaise. Westminster’s expenses scandal — and subsequent sleaze — simply deepened public hostility, further deterring talented people from choosing politics as a career. A plague on all their houses quickly becomes a plague on your own.

In 2020, it looked inconceivable that we wouldn’t learn lessons from Covid: surely we would do whatever it took to avoid this happening again. But our medium-term response has been denial. No one is a libertarian in a crisis, but quite a few are libertarians shortly after. Americans just re-elected a man who suggested they drink bleach.

Even in saner Britain, the Conservative party has elected a leader who says that Covid restrictions were too strict. Kemi Badenoch also wrongly said that the furore around Boris Johnson’s parties at Downing Street was overblown. But her critics should ask themselves if the anger at Partygate would now be better channelled into calls for a pandemic warning system and a move away from factory farming. Or is the only way that we can process disasters to focus on humiliating the powerful?

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In his novel The Ministry for the Future, Kim Stanley Robinson imagines a catastrophic heatwave in India catalysing climate action. The country’s ruling party is thrown from office, the political elite is discredited. A new consensus takes hold, with investments in renewable energy, battery storage and geo-engineering.

Satisfying fiction, but not reality. If it were, then every car destroyed by the Spanish floods would be replaced by an electric vehicle, every regional housing plan would stop building on flood plains, and no politician would be elected without committing to climate action. Don’t bet on it. Valencia’s government has included the climate-denying party Vox. Floridians are happily electing climate-denying Republicans, even as extreme weather makes parts of their state uninsurable.

The humbling of Felipe will lead nowhere. Anti-monarchists should check their delight. We assume one day that the Spanish and British monarchies will go the way of the French, but the date does not appear imminent.

The king will come out of this fine, if his advisers have any sense. He will espouse a special bond to the victims of the flood. He will meet some of them again when anger has subsided. And he will be perfectly tailored, and politely received, in Wimbledon’s royal box next summer.

But if an individual becomes the story, the opportunity for society to learn from disaster will be lost. For a better model, look to sport. After England narrowly lost at rugby to New Zealand on Saturday, their fly-half Marcus Smith excused a teammate who missed a match-winning kick. Defeat was a team responsibility, and the team would emerge stronger, he promised.

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In politics, slinging mud often becomes an end in itself. But if you want success, it must be a means to an end — or it is as pointless as Felipe’s lapels.

Henry Mance is the FT’s chief feature writer

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Judge cancels court deadlines in Trump's 2020 election case after presidential win

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Judge cancels court deadlines in Trump's 2020 election case after presidential win

Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump, joined by Melania Trump, left, and Barron Trump, arrives to speak at an election night watch party on Nov. 6, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Fla.

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Alex Brandon/AP

WASHINGTON — The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case canceled any remaining court deadlines Friday while prosecutors assess the “the appropriate course going forward” in light of the Republican’s presidential victory.

Special Counsel Jack Smith charged Trump last year with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and illegally hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate. But Smith’s team has been evaluating how to wind down the two federal cases before the president-elect takes office because of longstanding Justice Department policy that says sitting presidents cannot be prosecuted, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.

Trump’s victory over Vice President Kamala Harris means that the Justice Department believes he can no longer face prosecution in accordance with department legal opinions meant to shield presidents from criminal charges while in office.

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Trump has criticized both cases as politically motivated, and has said he would fire Smith “within two seconds” of taking office.

In a court filing Friday in the 2020 election case, Smith’s team asked to cancel any upcoming court deadlines, saying it needs “time to assess this unprecedented circumstance and determine the appropriate course going forward consistent with Department of Justice policy.”

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan quickly granted the request, and ordered prosecutors to file court papers with their “proposed course for this case” by Dec. 2.

Trump had been scheduled to stand trial in March in Washington, where more than 1,000 of his supporters have been convicted of charges for their roles in the Capitol riot. But his case was halted as Trump pursued his sweeping claims of immunity from prosecution that ultimately landed before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court in July ruled that former presidents have broad immunity from prosecution, and sent the case back to Chutkan to determine which of the the allegations in the indictment can move forward.

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The classified documents case has been stalled since July when a Trump-appointed judge, Aileen Cannon, dismissed it on grounds that Smith was illegally appointed. Smith has appealed to the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where the request to revive the case is pending. Even as Smith looks to withdraw the documents case against Trump, he would seem likely to continue to challenge Cannon’s ruling on the legality of his appointment given the precedent such a ruling would create.

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Video: Walz Offers Hope to Minnesota in Concession Speech

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Video: Walz Offers Hope to Minnesota in Concession Speech

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Walz Offers Hope to Minnesota in Concession Speech

Gov. Tim Walz, the former vice presidential candidate, gave a concession speech in his home state on Friday, in which he vowed to “stand ready to stand up and fight.”

Let me just start out by saying it’s great to be home. You came home. Great to be home. But look, folks, I just want to acknowledge the moment. It’s hard. It’s hard to lose. So if you’re feeling deflated, discouraged today, I get it. The other side spent a lot of time campaigning and talking about and promising that they would leave things up to the states. Well, I’m willing to take them at their word for that. But the moment they try and bring a hateful agenda in this state, I’m going to stand ready to stand up and fight for the way we do things here.

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