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Canada's Carney has enjoyed a long political honeymoon. Now comes the test

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Mark Carney arrived on Canada's political scene last year as an Ivy League and Oxford educated economist and a former central banker for two countries.

He had an impressive resume and ambitions to be prime minister but had never run for public office until replacing Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader.

There was concern his lack of political experience would be a liability, but under his leadership, the Liberals won a minority government, which in a year had solidified into a narrow majority following the defection of five opposition members of parliament to his party.

Carney tore up the rulebook, jumping from political neophyte to leading a G7 nation, and he is enjoying a lengthy honeymoon both in Canada and around the world as a globetrotting prime minister.

Last week, Time Magazine named Carney one of the most influential people of the year.

In the write up, penned by European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde, she called him a "rock-star", and credited him with being "the first to conceptualise the breaking point" of the old geopolitical order now fractured under the second Donald Trump presidency.

"I trust he will now reinvent cooperation among the willing for the common good of all," Lagarde wrote.

Carney has promised a lot to Canadians – the most ambitious housing plan since World War Two, turning the country into an energy superpower, reducing its dependency on its largest trading partner, the US, and fighting American tariffs – and the expectations on him are immense.

Some argue he has now arrived at an inflection point where Canadians will be watching to see if he fulfills the transformative change he has promised, particularly on the domestic front.

"The country has been willing to give him a lot of rope to go out and do what he believes he needs to do in order to protect the country's interests," said Carlene Variyan, an Ottawa strategist who has worked with Canada's Liberal party for over a decade, including as its former campaign spokesperson.

The question defining where Carney goes forward, she added, whether he can be "the mascot globally" for a new coalition "while also taking care of his own people here at home?"

Carney spent weeks abroad in his first year, visiting countries like China, India and the United Arab Emirates to drum up business and investment.

He emerged as the face of a global anti-Trump movement after his speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January. The address was hailed for its honesty in naming a "rupture" in the international rules-based order and called for middle powers to work together to counter the "era of great power rivalry".

That speech raised his profile both abroad and at home, said David Coletto, a Canadian pollster and CEO of Abacus Data.

"It matters to Canadians that Canada has a leader that many in other parts of the world wish they had," Coletto told the BBC, adding that it reinforced the image of Carney as "right for the job" of prime minister at this turbulent moment in history.

He is currently enjoying his highest poll numbers yet, with 46% of voters saying they support him, according to poll aggregate website 338Canada.

Carney owes much of his success to Trump's unpopularity with Canadians, who are angered by US tariffs and the president's repeated assertions that Canada should become the "51st state".

That dynamic with the US has rewritten political norms in Canada, Coletto said, where voters typically judge governments on how they handle domestic issues.

Canadians now see the biggest threat as coming from the outside, giving Carney room – and importantly time – to fix problems they believe are largely outside his control.

Still, there are signs the extended honeymoon has an expiry date.

Carney is under pressure to negotiate a win with the US on the North American free trade agreement, known as the USMCA, which is undergoing a mandatory review this summer.

A big issue has been steep sector-specific tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on Canadian metals, automotives and lumber, which have already cost thousands of jobs.

So far, it doesn't seem like the two sides are any closer to a deal. Canada's newly appointed ambassador to the US, Mark Wiseman, told parliamentarians on Thursday that no date has been set for a formal round of negotiations to begin.

"This is going to be the thing that Carney will have to carefully manage the public's expectations on," Coletto said.

The prime minister appears have taken note. Last week, he released a 10-minute social media video telling Canadians that his government "is acting and will continue to act" to solve the country's problems.

Conservative opposition leader Pierre Poilievre said Canadians need more than assurances on YouTube.

"What has Mark Carney really done in a year on this? He hasn't held negotiations in five months," he told reporters in Ottawa last week, and criticised him for a lack of transparency on his trade plans.

"He's done absolutely nothing on this file in the last year other than to stoke fear and distract from his catastrophic failings here at home."

Affordability is also creeping back to the top of the agenda for many Canadians. The ongoing US and Israel war on Iran has raised prices at the pump globally, including in Canada, home prices continue to be out of reach for many, and youth unemployment is stubbornly high.

Nodding to those concerns, Carney recently announced a temporary tax break on fuel and a one-time grocery rebate that will be delivered to Canadians' bank accounts in June.

Other pledges have proven harder to fulfill, like the prime minister's vow to double the number of homes built annually in Canada to bring down costs. Experts have noted that Carney's first budget does not devote enough money to the effort, and instead appears to be banking on reducing demand by tightening immigration.

The housing promises, in effect, have been "watered down", wrote Canadian economist and former Trudeau advisor Mike Moffatt late last year in the Toronto Star, shortly after the budget was released.

Even if the bold promises catch up to the Carney government, the prime minister still has the gift of time on his side, Variyan noted. A majority government could mean that Canadians won't head to the polls until 2029 – that's when voters will judge Carney on how much he has been able to achieve.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c70d249rd0go?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Man becomes seventh Millionaire jackpot winner

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A retired IT analyst has become the seventh person to win the £1m jackpot on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?

Roman Dubowski said winning the ITV game show, which is hosted by Jeremy Clarkson, was "unreal", adding that he "had to have a cup of tea" afterwards and "let it sink in".

The contestant, who does quizzing as a hobby, is planning on buying a new house with his prize money and also hopes to travel, including trips to New Zealand and South America.

Dubowski, from Stockport, said that when he saw the final question he thought: "I think I know this straight away".

Dubowski correctly answered the final 15th question, which was: "Used since 1876, which trademarked logo is described in the James Joyce novel Ulysses and depicted in works by Manet and Picasso?"

The options were Bass Ale, The Famous Grouse, Coca-Cola and Stella Artois.

Dubowski said: "When it came up… I thought, I think I know this straight away."

He explained that he had seen the Manet painting – called A Bar at the Folies-Bergere – at The Courtauld Gallery in London.

He said he could "distinctly" remember seeing a red triangle on the painting, which "has always been the symbol of Bass beer".

The contestant decided to use the 50/50 lifeline to answer the question and said that when the answers were narrowed down to Coca-Cola and Bass Ale, he thought "well I may as well go for it".

Dubowski, who is originally from Manchester, correctly answered Bass Ale.

Asked to describe how he felt when he answered that final question correctly, he said: "It felt unreal… it didn't feel like the real world, almost, this isn't where I expected to be.

Dubowski said he had experienced a "strange bit of self-doubt" earlier after he was asked what was mixed with vinegar, mustard and oil to make a basic mayonnaise.

The possible answers were plain flour, salted butter, egg yolk and double cream.

He said he made the decision to ask the audience and 93% had chosen egg yolk, and he thought he "might go and walk away with nothing" at that point.

Asked how he celebrated the win, he said: "I did sort of go home quietly, to be honest, I didn't get drunk – I had to have a cup of tea.

"I think it was just sitting in a quiet room and letting it all sink in, and thinking about what happened in the previous 24 hours."

He said the first person he told was his sister, who was "absolutely thrilled" for him and he said he would be giving some of his prize money to his niece and nephew.

Dubowski had applied to go on the show when Chris Tarrant was host but "didn't get a response", and he had applied again after lockdown but was not successful.

"Then in October last year, I suddenly saw an advertisement, or something online saying they're recruiting for new competitors again," he said.

"I thought oh, might as well try again, got nothing to lose, and just from that sort of casual opening, it ended up with the top prize.

Other winners include: Judith Keppel (2000), David Edwards (2001), Robert Brydges (2001), Pat Gibson (2004) and Ingram Wilcox (2006).

Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgldlnrdkpro?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Israeli strikes kill 14 in Lebanon amid ongoing ceasefire

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Lebanon's Ministry of Health has said Israeli strikes on the country on Sunday killed 14 people, including two children and two women, and injured 37.

An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson had earlier issued evacuation warnings for several villages in southern Lebanon, writing that residents "must evacuate" immediately, and that staying would be "endangering their life".

The IDF later said it had carried out "artillery and aerial strikes" targeting Hezbollah operatives and sites in southern Lebanon that it claims were used "to advance attacks against IDF soldiers".

It also said a 19-year-old IDF soldier had been killed and six others injured by a Hezbollah drone attack in Lebanon.

Separately, Hezbollah launched three drones towards Israel, the IDF reported, which it said were intercepted by Israel's air force before they crossed the border.

The two countries remain under a precarious semi-permanent ceasefire, which took effect on 16 April and was extended by three weeks on Thursday last week.

Under the deal, Israel retains its "right to take all necessary measures in self-defence, at any time, against planned, imminent, or ongoing attacks".

Speaking at a government meeting, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the IDF is "active, and it is acting with force" in Lebanon, stating Hezbollah's actions are "disintegrating the ceasefire".

"We are acting vigorously according to the rules we agreed upon with the United States, and incidentally, with Lebanon as well. This means freedom of action, not only to respond to attacks, which is obvious, but to thwart immediate threats and also to neutralise emerging threats," he said.

Sunday's activity came after the IDF said it struck Hezbollah "military structures" overnight, and accused the Iran-backed group of launching two explosive unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) towards Israel.

Both Israel and Hezbollah have reported attacks from one another since the ceasefire came into place, accusing each other of violating the agreement.

On Saturday, Netanyahu ordered the Israeli military to "vigorously attack Hezbollah targets" in Lebanon.

At least six people were killed in strikes on southern Lebanon on the same day.

Meanwhile Iran's Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, returned to Pakistan on Sunday to set out Tehran's framework for resuming peace negotiations with Washington.

Last week, US President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire between the countries that had been due to expire on 22 April to allow talks to continue.

Araghchi was also in Islamabad on Saturday as part of a regional tour where he held talks with mediator Pakistan. Shortly after Araghchi left for Oman, Trump announced he was cancelling a planned trip by special envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner to Islamabad.

The White House had said that Iran had wanted to talk, but Tehran insisted that no direct negotiations with the US were ever scheduled.

Araghchi, who on Saturday said Tehran had "yet to see" if Washington was serious about diplomacy, is expected to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Monday.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gxgv8j7zlo?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Korda returns to world number one with Chevron win

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Nelly Korda has won 17 tournaments on the LPGA Tour

-18 N Korda (US); -13 P Tavatanakit (Tha), R Yin (Chi); -12 I Yoon (Kor), Y Liu (Chi)

Selected others: -6 L Woad (Eng); -5 C Hull (Eng)

Nelly Korda returned to the top of the world rankings after claiming a dominant five-shot victory in the LPGA Chevron Championship.

It is Korda's second Chevron title in three seasons and ensures she leapfrogs Jeeno Thitikul in the rankings, after the Thai missed the cut.

The American equalled the event's 54-hole scoring record on Saturday but fell two shots short of the tournament record of 20 under par.

"That was a hard weekend," Korda told NBC Sports.

"Honestly, having that big of a lead, it's not easy. It was definitely one of the hardest things I've had to do mentally.

"I have an amazing support system. An amazing family who are right behind me. An amazing caddie who is on the bag and I'm just happy to get it done."

Korda takes her tally of majors to three, after also winning the Women's PGA Championship in 2021.

England's Hamilton wins first European Tour title

Korda, 27, made a positive start to the day, with two birdies on the first three holes, but two bogeys on the back nine meant the record slipped away.

After rounds of 65 on Thursday and Friday, Korda followed with successive rounds of 70 over the weekend at Houston's Memorial Park.

Thailand's Patty Tavatanakit began the day five shots adrift in second but was unable to reduce the deficit, having also ended her tournament with a two-under-par 70.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/sport/golf/articles/c9qdqn18741o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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