It’s a sign of just how quickly US politics moves these days that the major story concerning the White House wasn’t the continued ramifications of last week’s historic US–North Korea summit. Instead, it was the treatment of illegal immigrant families at the US border. As usual, we’ll cover this latest row alongside all the week’s other major stories, including weed in Canada, elections in Colombia, and a rather grisly report into hospital deaths in England.
10 Canada Legalized Recreational Pot
It looks like the dominoes are beginning to fall. After Uruguay and a number of US states recently legalized recreational weed, another nation joined their number this week. On Tuesday, senators in Canada voted overwhelmingly to legalize marijuana nationwide. From October 17 this year, all Canadians over 18 will be allowed to buy commercial pot as legally as they do alcohol. The move is historic in a number of ways. Canada is only the second country to completely legalize weed for recreational use (many others have decriminalized it) and the first in the G-20.[1] As a country with historic ties to big European players like the UK and France and an extremely close cultural connection with the US, it seems likely the move will spark a wave of legalization. In London this week, former Conservative Party leader William Hague called for the UK to follow in Canada’s footsteps. (Theresa May rejected his idea.) In short, big changes are afoot in drug legislation worldwide. It may not be too long before we’re looking back at the War on Drugs through a cloud of green smoke and wondering what the heck we were thinking.
9 France Sent Company Execs To Trial Over Employee Suicides
In 2006, France Telecom (now Orange) instituted harsh new workplace regulations following privatization. Then-boss Didier Lombard aimed to cut 22,000 jobs, including by pushing people into leaving through intense psychological pressure. The result was a culture of workplace harassment, bullying, and stress that badly affected workers. People were split from their families by being repeatedly moved around the country without warning. Others were belittled and humiliated. Between 2008 and 2010, at least 19 France Telecom employees committed suicide because of the stress, with some sources placing the total at 30. They include a man who stabbed himself in the stomach during a meeting. At one point, five workers killed themselves in 10 days.[2] This week, France ordered Lombard and six others to stand trial for “moral harassment” over the suicides. If convicted, they could face two years in jail. The case has the potential to shake up the working culture of France and possibly the EU. With modern companies frequently accused of making their employees sick with stress, the trial may finally convince CEOs to treat their workers like people.
8 Colombia’s New President Pledged To Renegotiate The Landmark Peace Deal
In the end, he put up a good fight but he wasn’t even close. Gustavo Petro, former left-wing guerrilla for M-19 and one-time mayor of Bogota, pulled down only 42 percent in Colombia’s presidential election this week. Meanwhile, conservative Ivan Duque trounced Petro with 54 percent. (The rest were blank ballots.) In many ways, this wasn’t a surprise. Almost uniquely among Latin American nations, modern Colombia has never had a left-wing president. Incumbent Juan Manuel Santos is one of the most moderate in recent history, and he’s best described as a right-leaning centrist. But that doesn’t mean the result wasn’t still dramatic. Duque ran on a pledge to renegotiate the landmark peace deal with FARC. Many in Colombia have been critical of the peace process, especially FARC’s guaranteed five Senate seats. Duque will now try to renegotiate the terms, including, most controversially, the powers of the Colombia war crimes tribunal, the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP).[3] It’s worth noting that Duque’s mentor is former President Alvaro Uribe, who was widely expected to be indicted by the JEP until Duque’s win.
7 Charleston Officially Apologized For Its Role In The Slave Trade
At one point, the city of Charleston, South Carolina, was one of the major focal points of the transatlantic slave trade. Around 40 percent of slaves entering the US passed through the port, and fights over history vs. heritage continue in Charleston to this day. It was in Charleston, after all, that Dylann Roof shot dead nine black church members in 2015. This week, that bitter fight over heritage reached a turning point of sorts. On Tuesday, the city council of Charleston voted by a knife-edge 7–5 to formally apologize for their hometown’s role in the slave trade. It was both a historic about-face and a vote that met with some stiff local opposition.[4] That opposition came from all sides. While many didn’t want Charleston to apologize for something that happened in the distant past, others opposed the apology for not going far enough to address racial tensions today.
6 President Trump Authorized The Creation Of A New Space Force
So, having gone and hit a historic first with his Kim Jong Un summit, President Trump appeared to try topping even that this week. On Monday, he announced that the US military would be expanded to include a whole new sixth branch, spun off from the Air Force. Known as the Space Force, it would aim to project US might beyond the boundaries of the atmosphere.[5] The idea was ridiculed in some quarters for sounding like a sci-fi movie. But, as this article in Ars Technica points out, it’s a fairly sound plan. The Air Force already has a department focused on space, and protecting US satellites against potential threats from China’s new space program is something Congress has been taking seriously for years. Unlike in many areas, though, changing the structure of the military isn’t something the president can do by executive decree. Congress would need to authorize the creation of the Space Force, and it’s not clear if there’s any appetite to do so at the moment.
5 A Refugee Row Threatened To Topple Merkel’s Government
You’ve probably never heard of Bavarian politician Horst Seehofer, but he very nearly became world-famous this week. That’s because Seehofer is interior minister in Angela Merkel’s fragile coalition government, and the two cannot agree on what German refugee policy should be. This week, their public row on the subject came remarkably close to collapsing the German government. Seehofer is the head of the CSU, the sister party to Merkel’s CDU, one part of the coalition between the CSU/CDU and the Social Democrats (SPD). If Seehofer pulled the plug on working with Merkel, that would be it for the government.[6] Seehofer wants police on German borders to turn migrants back to the first EU country in which they arrived. Merkel flatly refuses, saying there needs to be an EU-wide agreement. Seehofer has told her she has two weeks to get that agreement or risk new elections. It was high political drama, helped along by the longstanding personal rivalry between Merkel and Seehofer. Now comes the next stage. Merkel has called an emergency “mini-summit” with EU leaders on Sunday in an attempt to save her bacon. If she can’t find agreement, will Seehofer really have the guts to force his own party from government?
4 A Mysterious Annulled Election Sparked Protests In Moldova
A tiny stretch of land sandwiched between Ukraine and Romania, Moldova is one of the poorest, most obscure nations in Europe. This week, though, a strange decision by the government briefly brought it into the news. On June 3, pro-EU, anti-oligarch, and Russia-skeptic candidate Andrei Nastase won the election to become mayor of the Moldovan capital, Chisinau, by 52.5 percent. The candidate he beat was the pro-Russia socialist Ion Ceban. This Tuesday, a city court unexpectedly ruled that Nastase was not the legal winner of the vote. Their reason? Err . . . they didn’t give one.[7] Even in a country as used to political shenanigans as Moldova, this raised some serious eyebrows. Nastase is famous for having led mass protests against the government in 2015, suggesting his win was invalidated purely because he’d angered the higher-ups. In response, Chisinau saw thousands take to the streets to demand that the court reinstate Nastase as mayor.
3 A Shocking Report Revealed Mass Deaths At An English Hospital
Dr. Jane Barton may soon be infamous. This week, a shocking report into patient care at Gosport War Memorial Hospital placed her firmly at the heart of a scandal that unfolded between 1988 and 2000. Set up in 2014 by the UK government, the official Gosport inquiry claimed this week that Dr. Barton routinely prescribed dangerously powerful opioids that led to the deaths of between 456 and 650 people. There is no suggestion that Barton was a serial killer. However, there is plenty of suggestion that she ran a horrifically incompetent regime on her ward. She pressured patients to take unnecessary drugs to knock them out and lighten her workload and forced nurses to routinely give patients potentially lethal doses of painkillers without medical justification. Perhaps even worse is the evidence the inquiry found of a cover-up, suggesting the NHS and local police closed ranks to protect Dr. Barton. The families of the dead are now demanding that she be prosecuted. For her part, Dr. Barton has blamed the deaths on her being overworked.[8]
2 Israel Charged An Ex-Cabinet Minister With Spying For Iran
Back in the 1990s, Gonen Segev was energy minister in Israel’s government and a former medical doctor who had moved on to even greater responsibilities. Since then, though, his career has been all downhill. In 2005, he was busted for smuggling drugs and stripped of his medical license. In 2007, he left prison and went into self-imposed exile in Nigeria. Last Friday, he hit rock bottom. Extradited to Israel during a visit to Equatorial Guinea in May, he was finally charged with spying for Iran.[9] The Shin Bet intelligence agency claims that Segev made contact with Iran while living in Nigeria and offered his handlers information on Israel’s energy sector, its security sites, and the personal details of some public officials. He is also accused of helping Iranian agents make contacts within Israel’s security sector by introducing them as businessmen. At the time of this writing, Segev is claiming that he was trying to play a double agent against his Iranian handlers so that he could “return to Israel a hero.” If found guilty, he faces a very long time in prison.
1 Illegal Immigrant Family Separations Caused Political Chaos
Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s “zero tolerance” illegal immigration policy went into effect at the start of May. It wasn’t until this week, though, that it exploded. Following leaked recordings of illegal immigrant children wailing as they were separated from their parents at the US border, Washington, DC, found itself dealing with the most radioactive political fallout this side of Chernobyl. Sessions’s approach makes border agents arrest all illegal immigrants and place them in detention. Since it is illegal to jail minors with their parents, any children are placed in temporary shelters. This does not usually occur with migrants coming into the country at legal ports of entry. There were also cases of family separations under previous administrations but not as many as under the current policy. Unfortunately, the parents are usually given “expedited removal” and quickly sent back to their home nations, something you again can’t legally do to children. The result is that there are currently over 1,000 illegal immigrant children stuck in shelters on the US side of the border with their parents often stuck on the other side. The backlash against Sessions’s approach started Monday, with First Lady Melania Trump also criticizing the policy on Twitter. It grew to include the Methodist Church, which threatened to expel Sessions. By midweek, family-focused Republicans, illegal immigrant–friendly Democrats, the press, and a huge chunk of the public were in uproar. Even President Trump—no fan of illegal immigration—said he “did not like the sight of families being separated” and signed an executive order allowing immigrant families to be detained together.[10] However, the saga is far from over. The 1997 Flores Settlement Agreement makes it illegal to detain a child for more than 20 days, meaning the president’s executive order is merely a stopgap to cover the next two to three weeks. To prevent family separations from resuming, Congress will need to pass an immigration bill, a difficult task with midterm elections coming up.