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Hilton, Becerra lead California governor race: Key primary election results

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California, Iowa, New Jersey, New Mexico, Montana and South Dakota held key primaries on Tuesday.

Voters in six US states headed to the polls on Tuesday for a series of primary elections, which will help shape the political landscape before November’s midterms.

The contests included California’s race to replace term-limited Governor Gavin Newsom, Iowa’s open Senate and governor races, New Jersey’s closely watched House battleground, and key statewide contests in New Mexico, Montana and South Dakota.

The US midterms traditionally serve as a key litmus test of public support for the president. This year, as President Donald Trump sees his approval ratings plummet over the war on Iran, observers are watching more closely than ever.

Here are some key takeaways from the primaries:

Although millions of ballots for the governor candidates have yet to be counted, California voters appear to be setting up a November showdown between Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican Steve Hilton.

The winner of the mid-term election in November will replace Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom, who is barred from seeking a third term.

Becerra, a former health secretary and California attorney general, has emerged as one of the leading candidates in a crowded field of Democrats, while Hilton, a former Fox News host endorsed by Trump, has built his campaign around popular concerns over housing costs, homelessness and affordability.

Kimberly L Nalder, director of the Project for an Informed Electorate at Sacramento State University, said Becerra’s strong performance suggested many voters may be looking for continuity rather than a sharp change in direction after the Newsom years.

She pointed to voters’ decision to reject an effort to recall Newsom in 2021 as evidence that many Californians remain comfortable with the state’s Democratic leadership.

“If they choose a traditionally qualified candidate like Becerra, it indicates that Californians are content to keep governing in a similar way,” she told Al Jazeera. “We certainly saw that with the Newsom recall attempt. People’s minds hadn’t changed since Newsom was first elected.”

Nalder added that strategic voting may have played a chief role in the primary.

Under California’s top-two system, under which the two candidates with the most votes advance to the general election regardless of party, some Democrats appeared to back candidates they believed had the best chance of advancing to November rather than those closest to them politically.

“Democrats have been fearful of a double Republican result,” she said. “Many waited until the last moment to gauge who the frontrunners were so they could be most strategic.”

In San Francisco, state Senator Scott Wiener advanced in the race to replace former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, while other closely watched House contests could help determine whether Democrats maintain their dominance in California’s congressional delegation, experts say.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass also appeared on track to advance to a November run-off as she seeks a second term after a turbulent first four years in office.

One of the night’s biggest surprises came in Iowa’s Republican gubernatorial primary, when businessman Zach Lahn defeated Representative Randy Feenstra despite Feenstra’s endorsement from Trump.

Lahn campaigned as a conservative outsider, backing a total abortion ban, opposing what he called liberal ideology in public schools and embracing the “Make America Healthy Again” movement.

“Tonight is just the beginning,” Lahn told supporters after declaring victory.

The result was notable because it showed that Trump’s endorsement, while powerful, is not always decisive. Lahn will now face Democratic State Auditor Rob Sand, whom Democrats view as one of their strongest statewide candidates in years.

Iowa voters also set up a closely watched Senate race after state Representative Josh Turek defeated state Senator Zach Wahls in the Democratic primary, while Representative Ashley Hinson comfortably secured the Republican nomination.

Turek, a former Paralympian, cast himself as an outsider fighting for working-class voters.

“The status quo is not working. We need a fighter for the people, not for billionaires, large corporations and political donors,” he told supporters.

Hinson, who earned endorsements from Trump and retiring Senator Joni Ernst, thanked the president in her victory speech and enters the race as the Republican favourite.

Even so, Democrats believe the open seat gives them one of their best pick-up opportunities of the cycle.

Democrats chose former Navy helicopter pilot Rebecca Bennett to challenge Republican Representative Tom Kean Jr in New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District, one of the most competitive House races in the country.

The district is a top Democratic target as the party seeks to retake the House.

Bennett has already focused much of her campaign on Kean’s prolonged absence from Congress, after the Republican incumbent missed more than 100 House votes because of an undisclosed illness.

“You are failing us, and you do not deserve to represent us in Washington,” Bennett told supporters after her victory.

The race is expected to be a toss-up in November.

Former US Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, 65, won the Democratic nomination for governor of New Mexico, keeping alive a historic bid that could make her the first Native American woman elected governor in the US.

Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe and the first Native American to serve in a presidential cabinet, defeated Albuquerque District Attorney Sam Bregman in Tuesday’s primary.

Her campaign focuses on affordability, experience in government and her ties to Indigenous communities.

She will now face Republican Greggory Hull in November’s general election.

The election takes place as New Mexico benefits from a surge in oil revenues. Rising oil prices linked to the war with Iran have boosted income for the state, which is the second-largest oil producer in the US after Texas. The increase is expected to generate hundreds of millions of dollars in additional revenue through taxes, royalties and other payments tied to energy production.

Voters in Montana and South Dakota also settled key nominations before November’s elections.

In Montana, Democrat Alani Bankhead and Republican Kurt Alme won their parties’ nominations for an open US Senate seat, setting up a general election contest later this year.

In South Dakota, Attorney General Marty Jackley secured the Republican nomination for the state’s lone US House seat and will advance to the general election.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/6/3/hilton-becerra-lead-california-governor-race-key-primary-election-results?traffic_source=rss

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UK-China ‘ice age’ thaws: Why the West needs Beijing

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British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper hails ‘candour and respect’ in new ties with Beijing, despite differences.

Eight years after a British prime minister and foreign secretary made back-to-back visits to China, the Keir Starmer government is once again trying to reset relations with Beijing after a long period of what Starmer had in January described as an “ice age” in relations.

Prime Minister Starmer went to Beijing in January, and Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper is currently visiting on a three-day trip, as the United Kingdom and China try to revive economic and diplomatic ties despite lingering differences over security, human rights and the Russian war on Ukraine. Former PM Theresa May and her Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt made similar visits to China soon after each other in 2018.

The UK isn’t alone. Cooper’s visit to Beijing this week is the latest in a string of visits by global leaders and officials seemingly eager to engage with the second-largest economy in the world at a time of heightened global instability.

During her trip so far, Cooper has called for the two nations to work together to confront a host of global challenges, including conflicts in Iran and Ukraine and the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“It is in our shared interest to have a rules-based international order and to find ways to reduce rising geoeconomic tensions,” the foreign secretary said on Tuesday as she met Chinese Vice President Han Zheng at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People at the start of her visit.

While acknowledging “areas of disagreement” between London and Beijing, Cooper insisted that approaching discussions with “candour and respect” would help to increase mutual understanding.

“Those frank and constructive discussions can help us make meaningful progress for the benefit of our two countries and the wider world,” she said.

The rhetoric about a “rules-based order” comes at a time when, under President Donald Trump, the United States – the country that led the creation of the post-World War II global architecture – increasingly faces accusations of ripping apart the international laws that were its foundation. China has in recent years positioned itself as a grown-up, responsible and stable global power, in contrast to the US.

But behind Cooper’s comments, say analysts, is also a deeper, more pragmatic acknowledgement: Western nations like the UK need China now more than ever.

The West has come to rely heavily on China, especially when it comes to the production of advanced goods – like semiconductors, medical instruments and aerospace components – as well as its stranglehold on many of the earth’s critical natural resources required to manufacture them all, said John Minnich, assistant professor in the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics.

“This dependence is growing by the day,” Minnich told Al Jazeera. “Whether this is a good thing for the West or this trajectory is politically sustainable is another matter.”

Getting on a better footing with Beijing is a priority now, say observers. “The UK cannot afford a purely adversarial relationship with China,” Jing Gu, director of the Centre for Rising Powers and Global Development at the Institute of Development Studies in the UK, said.

“It’s a pragmatic response to the UK’s own global economic position and needs, and to the changing winds of US-China relations under the second Trump administration,” Minnich said.

This rapprochement has been in the works since the UK’s governing Labour party swept to power in July 2024. Former Foreign Secretary David Lammy travelled to China for a two-day diplomatic trip in October that year, as part of initial efforts to thaw what Starmer would dub a diplomatic “ice age” between the two countries. Starmer’s own trip in January, to meet President Xi Jinping, laid the groundwork for deeper economic engagement, including a $15bn investment by British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca and visa-free travel for Britons.

On Tuesday, China’s Vice President Han gave Cooper a warm welcome, along with a cultural visit to the Forbidden City, where she was shown around the world’s largest imperial palace complex by a tour guide before meeting her counterpart, Wang Yi, for talks at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse.

In his address at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, Han stressed the need to “intensify interactions and strengthen dialogue and cooperation for the sake of world peace and stability and for the growth of our respective economies”.

“Currently, the ongoing geopolitical conflicts are dealing a heavy blow to world peace and stability and affecting the prospect of the world economy,” he continued. Addressing Cooper, he said her visit would help “move our relations steadily forward along the strategic direction established by the leaders of our two countries”.

It’s not just the UK. A growing number of Western countries are seeking to reset ties with China at a time when global geopolitical tensions are causing havoc with supply chains and huge market volatility. This year, leaders and officials from the US, Ireland, Spain, Germany, Canada and Finland are just a number of those who have travelled to China in a flurry of diplomatic engagement.

US President Donald Trump’s trip to China last month signalled a shift in direction after last year’s “trade war”, in which the two sides slapped each other with tit-for-tat tariffs and China threatened to restrict exports of most of its rare-earth metals. Those tensions had been rising since Trump’s first term as president until he and Xi called a temporary truce late last year to allow for trade talks.

Also notable, however, was that Washington’s rapprochement with Beijing coincided with a tense period in US-UK relations.

Trump publicly took Starmer to task over his refusal to assist in the US-Israel war on Iran or to send naval backup to help the US reopen the strategic Strait of Hormuz. Similarly, Trump’s outbursts over the Western response to the war generally have depicted the EU as a foe and NATO as obsolete.

For the UK, Trump’s unpredictability is what has tipped the balance in favour of reinforcing bilateral cooperation with Beijing, as Britain struggles with sluggish economic growth and global energy price shocks triggered by the war on Iran.

And there is “plenty of room for mutual beneficial economic cooperation” between the two countries, Minnich said. “The UK is unusual among major Western countries in that its economic strengths complement rather than compete with China’s.

“Unlike Germany, the UK is not heavily dependent on high-value-added manufacturing, where China is increasingly competitive. Instead, it specialises in things like high-value financial and other services in which China remains relatively weak,” he added.

Cooper is expected to fly to Shenzhen, a major technology hub, to discuss trade links as well as “the challenges of the future of AI as it rapidly changes our world”. This is significant because China is outpacing almost every country in the world in producing ideas and innovation in areas that matter to the UK, including renewable energy.

Last year, the UK and China signed a partnership agreement on clean energy covering academic, regulatory, industrial and commercial partnerships. During Starmer’s visit to China earlier this year, the prime minister announced that Octopus Energy, the UK’s largest electricity supplier by market share, had formed a joint venture with China’s PCG Power to trade renewable energy in the Asian country.

Access to affordable, clean technology – which China has bundles of – could help the UK reduce the cost of decarbonisation and accelerate the energy transition. “But this cannot mean passive dependence,” Gu, at the Institute of Development Studies, said. “Middle powers such as the UK are not simply choosing sides; they are trying to buy time – time to support growth, accelerate the green transition, re

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/6/3/uk-china-ice-age-thaws-why-the-west-needs-beijing?traffic_source=rss

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Hezbollah video shows attack on Israeli troops at Lebanon’s Beaufort Castle

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Hezbollah video shows attack on Israeli troops at Lebanon’s Beaufort Castle

Hezbollah has released drone video showing attacks targeting Israeli forces occupying Beaufort Castle in southern Lebanon. Israeli troops seized the medieval fortress on May 31.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2026/6/3/hezbollah-video-shows-attack-on-israeli-troops-at-lebanons-beaufort-castle?traffic_source=rss

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How social media changes the way we see war

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We see war now as we see everything else – through a screen. Genocide, displacement and mass violence are livestreamed to our phones, tucked between cat videos and advertisements for products designed to distract us.

We don’t choose to be spectators, we become them almost unconsciously – scrolling, watching and moving on. In the age of digital spectatorship, the key question is no longer whether we see human suffering, but what, if anything, we choose to do once we have.

Join Ali Rae in Episode Five of All Hail The Military – a five-part series that reveals the systems, power and hidden complicities that sustain global militarism – and the profound impact it has on us all.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/all-hail/2026/6/3/how-social-media-changes-the-way-we-see-war?traffic_source=rss

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