World
‘Politicians don’t help us’: The young French people who’re abstaining
Gaspard Hermann, a 24-year-old steeplejack presently operating in the French Alps, is just one of numerous youths in France that determined not to enact the governmental political election.
He informed Euronews that amongst the factors he isn’t electing is due to the fact that the French are usually compelled to elect versus a prospect as opposed to for a specific they sustain.
It’s a persisting worry amongst those that will certainly require to the surveys on Sunday 24 April to pick in between reactionary prospect Marine Le Pen as well as centre-right incumbent Emmanuel Macron.
Numerous of the governmental prospects that shed in the preliminary prompted their fans to choose Macron in an initiative to “obstruct the reactionary” from regulating the nation in spite of their arguments with the head of state.
Far-left prospect Jean-Luc Mélenchon, that came 3rd in the political election, informed his fans not to choose Marine Le Pen, without defining whether he would certainly choose Macron or abstain while Employees’ Battle prospect Nathalie Arthaud, that completed last of the prospects, claimed Macron as well as Le Pen were both “opponents” which she would certainly elect empty.
For some youths that have actually picked not to enact either round of the governmental political election, the trouble, they state, is that France’s system doesn’t represent them.
“I do not see myself in the present governmental system or in the method it functions, specifically, its failing to take into consideration abstention as well as empty ballots, or the selection of prospects,” claimed Louise, a 28-year-old that operates in growth for a team of communities beyond Lyon.
She favored that her surname not be utilized due to the fact that she operates in public management.
“I will not enact the 2nd round. I constantly ask myself the concern of the preliminary as there are much more prospects that might represent make my voice listened to. However in the 2nd round, I don’t want to choose between the plague and cholera.”
She’s one of many young people between the ages of 18 and 34 who did not vote in the presidential election.
While voter turnout is typically higher during France’s national elections than in local or regional elections, it was nearly at its lowest this year compared to previous presidential races with more than a quarter of registered voters not going to the polls in the first round.
“The abstention rate in France was higher than in 2017 (the last election),” said Tristan Haute, a senior lecturer in political science at the University of Lille. But, he said that it could have been worse given the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine which impacted the campaign.
Among young people ages 25-34, the abstention rate was 46%, according to an Ipsos poll following the first round, while among young people ages 18-24, the abstention rate was 42%. A further report about abstention is expected later with more data from the polls.
“For younger generations, the relationship to voting is different, it is more intermittent. Voting is seen as a less effective participation practice,” said Haute, who studies abstention, adding that there are always multiple factors to explain it.
“You have people who do not feel legitimate politically, who won’t vote because they don’t feel represented, or those who don’t feel competent politically to give their opinion,” he said. Abstention is also higher among the working class.
“The less qualified voters are, the more they face precarious work contracts or unemployment, the more they will abstain. There is a link in between social exclusion as well as political exclusion,” Haute says.
Hermann, the steeplejack working in the Alpine resort of Tignes, says that there aren’t politicians who do manual labour and that they thus don’t understand his situation and that of his friends.
He says that numerous politicians have done the same studies and don’t know what it’s like to need to work every day to make a living. He’s also angry that politicians don’t carry out their promises.
Maxime Bricaud, a 21-year-old carpenter, agrees that politicians aren’t helping people in the working classes.
“People are not interested in us, people in the working class and those who are underprivileged… They do a lot for people who have more money,” he said, adding that youths aren’t taken seriously even though “we’re the future of the country.”
“(Politicians) don’t do much to help make our lives easier,” he said. “They don’t prepare us for professional life as well as they just want us to work more.”
He says there haven’t been many changes in politics that could make him become interested in it.
“It’s often the same candidates for I don’t even know how many years,” Bricaud said.
Adrien Humbert, that works in marketing in Lyon, had a different take on his choice not to enact the French elections.
Humbert said he doesn’t “really believe in political action or at least in the benefits of political action.”
He says that for him the only important thing is the environment but that the Greens wouldn’t have had any chance in the governmental political election anyway.
The Green Party finished the preliminary on 10 April below the 5% threshold, meaning they have to reimburse their campaign fees.
Humbert said that Macron will likely win the political election so “my vote wouldn’t change much.”
Though he mentioned that he knew people who were trying to convince him still to vote for Macron in the second round against Marine le Pen.
However he added that the French population isn’t ready for the environmental changes that he thinks are needed.
“It is not a political question, it is a question of personal will…for me, the action is more individual as well as the individual (only) modifications if we enlighten them.”
World
Deshaun Watson’s Massive Contract Keeps Browns Hamstrung
The Cleveland Browns are sticking with Deshaun Watson. They have no other choice.
The NFL team is expected to keep the embattled star quarterback on the roster after restructuring his contract for a third time in three seasons. The Browns may have buyer’s remorse for doling out his historic $230 million fully guaranteed deal, but they continue to get creative in managing its financial impact.
This latest restructure which Watson agreed to still calls for him to receive his $46 million guaranteed for each of the next two seasons, but it reportedly allows the Browns to spread his dead money over multiple seasons if he stays with the team through the 2026 season. This allows the Browns (3-12) to avoid a massive cap charge in 2027 when Watson is no longer under contract while adding a third and fourth void year pushing dead salary cap into 2030 (he already had two void years from previous restructures), according to ESPN.
Despite the restructuring on Friday, Watson still carries a $72.9 million salary cap hit for the 2025 and 2026 season (the second highest ever in the NFL), ballooning from his current hit of $27.9 million this season. That’s because of the previous two contract restructures over the last two years which created more than $30 million in cap space but has increased the burden on the back end of the deal.
Watson, who suffered a season-ending right Achilles tendon injury in late October, didn’t do much to silence his naysayers this season. The 29-year-old had one of the league’s lowest total quarterback ratings through the seven games he played this season and has a record of 9-10 as the starter since joining the team. A league record $172 million dead cap hit would be triggered if Watson is released this offseason (pre June 1 designation).
The Browns are a storied franchise known for its failures and signing the three-time Pro Bowler was supposed to change the narrative. The five-year contract he signed in 2022, which included the most guaranteed money in league history, has become arguably the worst in sports history. It joins other NFL slipups including Albert Haynesworth’s $100 million bond in 2009 (one of several head-scratching moves by former Washington owner Dan Snyder) and Andre Rison’s $17 million deal in 1995 (another Browns misjudgment of signing a questionable player to an unprecedented deal).
But Watson’s deal is perhaps the worst given not just the massive contract but also that the Browns traded three first-round pick to Houston to acquire the quarterback who received an 11-game suspension in 2022 for violating the league conduct policy related to 23 sexual misconduct lawsuits filed against him by massage therapists. The most recent sexual assault allegation from earlier this year could’ve given the Browns an out for the remainder of the contract, but the league couldn’t find sufficient evidence in its investigation to nullify it.
The Browns are trying to make the most of the situation with little cash to acquire a veteran signal caller through free agency. General manager Andrew Berry and the front office haven’t committed to Watson as their long-term quarterback. But they’re not in position to ditch their investment, still believing that a turnaround is possible and hoping he can return to the Pro Bowl form he displayed in his first four seasons in Houston.
World
Plane veers off airport runway in South Korea and crashes, killing at least 23: report
A Jeju Air flight drove off the runway in South Korea and collided with a fence, leaving at least 23 passengers killed, the Yonhap news agency reported.
The agency attributed the devastating crash to malfunctioning landing gear.
Jeju Air, a low-cost airline in South Korea, was carrying 175 passengers and six crew members in the Boeing 737-800 when the incident occurred Sunday morning local time at Muan International Airport in Muan County, South Jeolla Province.
RUSSIA DOWNPLAYS SPECULATION OVER DEADLY AZERBAIJAN AIRLINES CRASH AS REPORT LAYS BLAME FOR DOWNED PLANE
The plane landed at 9:07 a.m. local time at the airport when the incident happened.
The plane was flying back to South Korea from Thailand, the report said.
Photos shared by local media showed smoke billowing out of the plane.
World
Plane veers off runway and crashes in S Korea, killing at least 29: Report
DEVELOPING STORYDEVELOPING STORY,
The crash occurred as the Jeju Air plane was landing at the Muan International Airport in South Korea.
A passenger plane has veered off the runway and crashed at an airport in the South Korean city of Muan, killing at least 29 people, according to the Yonhap news agency.
The accident took place on Sunday as the Jeju Air plane was landing at the Muan International Airport, Yonhap reported.
It was carrying 175 passengers and six flight attendants and was flying back from Thailand.
Photos shared by local media showed thick clouds of black smoke coming out of the plane.
South Korea’s Acting President Choi Sang-moo has ordered “all-out-efforts for rescue operations” at Muan, according to Yonhap.
Two people have been found alive as the rescue mission is continuing, the agency reported.
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