What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Joe Biden has turned the US election on its head. After fiercely insisting for weeks that he would remain the Democratic nominee for president, he has bowed to pressure and dropped out of the race.
Here’s what it means for Vice-President Kamala Harris, for the Democrats more broadly and for Donald Trump.
Harris is a risk but one many Democrats will want to take
The prospects for Kamala Harris being the Democratic nominee have received a big boost with Joe Biden’s endorsement.
He gave her his full backing, calling his decision to make her vice-president four years ago the best he ever made.
She responded by saying she was honoured to have his endorsement and would do everything possible to win the nomination.
It is possible that most Democrats will follow the president’s lead and fall in line behind the vice-president to avoid ongoing uncertainty less than a month from the Democratic convention.
There are practical and political reasons for doing so.
She is next in the constitutional line of succession. The optics of passing over the first black woman on a presidential ticket would be terrible for the party. She would also immediately have access to the roughly $100 million in funds the campaign has raised so far.
But there are also risks. Public opinion surveys show Harris’ approval ratings are about as low as his. And in head-to-head matchups against Donald Trump, she fares roughly the same as Biden.
Second is that Harris has had a sometimes rocky time as vice-president. Early in the administration, she was given the task of addressing the root causes of the migration crisis at the US-Mexico border.
That’s a daunting challenge, and a number of missteps and misstatements opened her up to criticism. She’s also been the administration’s point person on abortion rights, which has been a topic she has much more effectively handled. But those first impressions have stuck.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Harris has already run for national office – her 2020 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination – and stumbled badly.
While she surged early, a combination of fumbled interviews, a lack of clearly defined vision and a poorly managed campaign led her to drop out before even the earliest primaries.
Opting for Harris is a risk for Democrats, but at this point there are no safe options. And the stakes – a possible Donald Trump victory – are as high as they get.
Democratic convention could be chaotic yet gripping
Over the past half-century, political conventions have been transformed into somewhat boring affairs. With every minute carefully scripted for television, they’ve become extended multi-day commercials for the presidential nominee.
Last week’s Republican convention was certainly that way – even with Donald Trump’s overly long, sometimes rambling nomination acceptance speech.
Next month’s Democratic convention in Chicago is shaping up to be very, very different. Whatever script the party and the Biden campaign had been working on just got thrown out the window. Even if the party falls in line behind Harris, it will be difficult to plan – and control – how things unfold on the convention floor.
And if Harris doesn’t succeed in uniting the party, the convention could turn into a political free-for-all, with various candidates vying for the nomination before the cameras and behind closed doors.
It could make for gripping political theatre, live and unpredictable, in a way the American public has never before witnessed.
For Republicans, strong v frail goes out window
This year’s Republican convention was a carefully calibrated machine, promoting the party’s most popular agenda items and focusing criticism on one man, President Joe Biden.
It turns out, the Republicans were targeting the wrong guy.
With the news of Biden’s abandoning of his re-election campaign, the Republican game plan spearheaded by Donald Trump has been turned on its head.
The Republicans spent an entire week of carefully scripted events focusing on the wrong weaknesses of the Democrat opposing them.
The campaign had highlighted their candidate’s strength and vitality by giving him a raucous entrance, preceded by appearances by former wrestler Hulk Hogan and Ultimate Fighting Championship impresario Dana White, as well as a performance by Kid Rock.
The attempts at contrast with Mr Biden’s perceived frailty – and the strategy to peel away younger male voters – were obvious.
But in any scenario now, the Democratic nominee is going to be someone much younger than the president.
A strategy of strong vs frail against Vice-President Kamala Harris or one of the more youthful Democratic governors who are mentioned as possible Biden successors just won’t pack the same punch.
If Harris is the nominee, expect the Republicans to try to tie her to the perceived failings of the current administration. For months they have called her the “border czar”.
Although the former prosecutor is by no means from the progressive wing of the party, previous Republican attacks on her suggest they may also paint her as “radical left”.
No matter who the nominee is, the Republicans are sure to blame the Democrats for covering up Biden’s age-related weaknesses – and putting the nation at risk.
At this point, everyone is flying blind with just a few months until the first presidential ballots are cast.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
Who could be Kamala Harris’s running mate?
US President Joe Biden on Sunday announced he would end his re-election campaign, and said Kamala Harris, his vice-president, should take his place.
“I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year,” he wrote on X. “Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump.”
Ms Harris taking over looks likely, although it is not a done deal.
Several others were touted as potential replacements for Mr Biden but have backed Ms Harris. If the endorsement becomes official, a running mate will be needed.
Delegates will vote next month at the Democratic National Convention to officially confirm who will replace Mr Biden, and the candidate for vice-president.
The following names could be in the mix.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
Gretchen Whitmer, the two-term governor of Michigan, is an increasingly popular Midwest Democrat who many pundits speculate will run for president in 2028.
She has campaigned for Mr Biden in the past and has not been shy about her political aspirations.
She told The New York Times that she wants to see a Generation X president in 2028, but stopped short of suggesting that she might fill that role.
In 2022, she led a campaign that left Michigan Democrats in control of the state’s legislature and the governor’s mansion.
That allowed her to enact a number of progressive policies, including protecting Michigan abortion access and the passage of gun safety measures.
Ms Whitmer quickly stated after Mr Biden’s withdrawal that her job “will remain the same… doing everything I can to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump”.
California Governor Gavin Newsom
California’s governor is one of the Biden administration’s fiercest surrogates.
He is often listed as a possible 2028 candidate, but many Democratic pundits had suggested he could be in the race to replace Mr Biden.
Mr Newsom raised his national profile in recent years by being a key party messenger on conservative media, and via a debate against Florida Governor Ron DeSantis last year.
He stood by the president before his announcement. He travelled to Washington to attend meetings in July with Mr Biden and other top Democratic governors, and headlined a Biden campaign event in Michigan on the 4 July.
Mr Newsom again praised Mr Biden as a “selfless” president after his withdrawal, and said he backed the “fearless” and “tenacious” Ms Harris to face Trump.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg
It is no secret that Pete Buttigieg has presidential aspirations.
He ran in 2020 and is often touted as one of the Biden administration’s best communicators.
Mr Buttigieg has managed a number of public crises during his time as transportation secretary.
He helped to oversee the government response to the East Palestine train derailment in Ohio, the Baltimore Bridge collapse and Southwest Airlines’ scheduling crisis in 2022.
Mr Buttigieg stated on Twitter/X that Mr Biden had “earned his place among the best and most consequential presidents in American history”.
He said he would do “all that I can to help elect Kamala Harris the next President”.
Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania Governor
Josh Shapiro has seen high approval ratings since he was elected in 2022 in a swing state Trump narrowly carried in 2016.
The governor, who previously served as the state’s attorney general, has worked across party lines during his tenure.
He made national headlines last year after quickly rebuilding a collapsed bridge on a crucial Philadelphia highway – a major political victory for a first-term governor.
The speedy repair was hailed by many as the perfect infrastructure talking point for a potential 2028 presidential candidate.
Mr Shapiro said Mr Biden was one of the “most consequential presidents in modern history” and would “do everything I can to help elect Kamala Harris as the 47th President of the United States”.
JB Pritzker, Illinois Governor
JB Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, has raised his profile in recent years by going after Trump and defending Mr Biden.
The billionaire businessman – heir to the Hyatt hotel chain – is quick to post criticism of Trump on social media.
After the debate he called Trump a “liar” and said he is a “34-count convicted felon who cares only about himself”.
Like Ms Whitmer, Mr Pritzker has a track record of completing agenda items on progressive Democrats’ to-do lists on issues like abortion rights and gun control.
He said Mr Biden had run “one of the most accomplished and effective presidencies of our lifetime”. He has not commented on who should succeed him.
Other possible candidates?
The list of potential nominees to the ticket stretches beyond these Democrats, as the party has developed a deep bench of talent.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, a two-term Democratic governor in a very conservative state, has earned national attention since re-election last year.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore found himself in the spotlight in recent months following the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
Senators Amy Klobuchar and Cory Booker have run for president in the past and have some name recognition among Democrats.
Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, who won a closely contested Senate race in a swing state.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
President Joe Biden surprised American voters on Sunday when he announced he would drop out of the race for president after weeks of resisting calls to step down.
Though he will carry out the rest of his presidency, he has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to take his place as the Democratic Party’s nominee.
The decision throws the party into uncharted waters with just a month to go before the Democratic National Convention.
Here’s a guide to what could come next.
What happens now?
The last time an incumbent US president abandoned their campaign for re-election was Lyndon Baines Johnson in 1968. As a result, the path for nominating a new candidate so close to Election Day is unclear.
President Biden had already won 3,896 pledged delegates – much more than the amount needed to secure his party’s nomination.
While Mr Biden’s endorsement makes Ms Harris the most likely pick for the nominee, after he releases his delegates, they are no longer pledged to a candidate.
It will ultimately be up to them to vote for whomever they choose.
Could there be an open convention?
The Democratic National Convention is scheduled to begin on 19 August.
If the Democratic Party does not come together to support a new candidate, that could set the stage for an open convention for the first time since 1968.
That would mean delegates would be free to decide who to vote for among multiple candidates if they emerge.
Candidates would need signatures from at least 300 delegates – no more than 50 coming from one state – for their name to appear on the ballot.
There would be an initial round of voting among the 3,900 pledged delegates, which includes voters deemed loyal to the Democratic party.
If no candidate receives a majority of votes after this first round, then more rounds of voting would take place. These rounds of voting would include superdelegates – party leaders and elected officials – who would all cast ballots until a nominee is chosen.
To secure the party nomination, a candidate needs 1,976 delegate votes.
Who might challenge Ms Harris?
As calls grew for Mr Biden to drop out of the race in recent weeks, a number of potential replacements emerged.
Michigan’s Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer has been floated as a candidate, though she has said she would not consider running if Mr Biden stepped aside. On Sunday, minutes after Mr Biden’s announcement, she said she would do everything she can “to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump”.
Other options include California Governor Gavin Newsom, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro.
Some of these candidates could be considered for the role of vice president if Ms Harris does ultimately win the nomination.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Republicans call on Biden to leave White House
Many Republicans quickly called on President Joe Biden to resign and leave the White House after his announcement on Sunday that he would withdraw from the 2024 presidential race.
Republican leaders said that Mr Biden’s decision to step aside confirmed their view that he was not in cognitive shape to serve as president – an issue that has dogged the Democrat since his disastrous debate last month.
“If Joe Biden is not fit to run for president, he is not fit to serve as president,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson, the most powerful Republican in congress.
“He must resign the office immediately. November 5 cannot arrive soon enough,” he added, referring to Election Day.
Mr Biden, in announcing that he was dropping out, said he would stay in office until the end of his term in January.
The White House a few hours later on Sunday reiterated he would not resign, stating: “He looks forward to finish his term and delivering more historic results for the American people.”
Leading Republicans piled on with similar calls to resign throughout Sunday afternoon, as they also directed fresh attacks at Vice-President Kamala Harris, who would move into the Oval Office should Mr Biden resign. Mr Biden has endorsed her to be the next Democratic nominee.
New York Representative Elise Stefanik, the Republican conference chair, made almost the exact same statement as Mr Johnson’s about Mr Biden’s ability to fulfil his presidential duties.
She closed her statement similarly as well: “He must immediately resign.”
Mr Biden’s rival for president, Donald Trump, said the Democratic leader was “not fit to serve from the very beginning” in response to the announcement – though he did not call for the president to resign.
Senator Steve Daines of Montana, who chairs Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, said that being president “is the hardest job in the world”.
“And I no longer have confidence that Joe Biden can effectively execute his duties as Commander-in-Chief,” he said in a statement.
Another Republican senator, Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, went further and appeared to suggest that Mr Biden should be forced from office by exercising the 25th Amendment of the US Constitution – a never-used method to replace the president if he cannot fulfil his duties.
Critics of Trump had called for using the amendment to remove him when he was in office.
Many in the political world had been expecting to Mr Biden to drop out of the race.
His rambling, frequently incoherent answers in the June 27 debate with Trump had stunned the country and left people wondering if he could serve as president for another four years. While in speeches and interviews Mr Biden often showed renewed vigour, he was also dogged by major stumbles and seeming memory problems.
Democrats in congress, worried that his shakiness would hurt their chances at re-election, and major donors began to press for him to drop out, but they did not press for him to resign.
The last president to abandon his election campaign, Lyndon B. Johnson, also served out the remainder of his term. Like Mr Biden, Johnson had said that giving up the race would allow him to focus on his presidential duties.
As the pressure on Mr Biden has grown in recent weeks, Republicans became more vocal about a resignation.
Just hours before the president announced he was stepping aside, Trump’s new running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, said: “Not running for reelection would be a clear admission that President Trump was right all along about Biden not being mentally fit enough to serve as Commander-in-Chief. There is no middle ground.”
“Joe Biden has been the worst President in my lifetime and Kamala Harris has been right there with him every step of the way,” he added.
Republicans take their attack to Kamala Harris
Mr Biden has endorsed Ms Harris to take up the mantle of the presidential campaign, although the party will still have to formally approve its nominee.
“I am honored to have the President’s endorsement and my intention is to earn and win this nomination,” Ms Harris said in a statement. “I will do everything in my power to unite the Democratic Party—and unite our nation—to defeat Donald Trump and his extreme Project 2025 agenda.”
Republicans have reportedly prepared to attack Ms Harris’s candidacy – as many believed she was the most likely successor.
Trump campaign sources have told US media outlets that they were readying attack ads and opposition research in case they faced her.
Most criticism centres on the vice-president’s lead role on immigration issues within the administration. Several speakers at the Republican convention last week portrayed Ms Harris as a failed “border czar”.
Those attacks returned on Sunday.
Speaker Johnson called her “a completely inept border czar” and said she had been “a gleeful accomplice” in “the destruction of American sovereignty, security, and prosperity”.
“She has known for as long as anyone of his incapacity to serve,” he said, while also accusing her of being part of a political coverup of Mr Biden’s problems.
Republican Governor Greg Abbott of Texas, known for taking a hard line on immigration that has led to legal actions, also expressed concerns about Ms Harris becoming president.
“I think I will need to triple the border wall, razor wire barriers and National Guard on the border,” he wrote on social media.
Donald Trump Jr, the former president’s son, broadly said her policies would be no different than Mr Biden’s.
“Kamala Harris owns the entire left-wing policy record of Joe Biden. The only difference is that she is even more liberal and less competent than Joe, which is really saying something,” he posted on X, formerly Twitter.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
World leaders show respect and support for Biden
Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the 2024 Presidential race has sent ripples around the world, with a number of global leaders reacting to the news.
He also endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris and said he would “focus all my energies on my duties as President” for the rest of his term.
Many of his allies paid tribute to his foreign policy achievements and acknowledged the difficulty of his decision.
“Thanks to [Biden], transatlantic cooperation is close, Nato is strong and the USA is a good and reliable partner for us. His decision not to run again deserves recognition,” Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz posted on X.
The United Kingdom’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he “respects” Mr Biden’s decision and “looks forward” to working together for the rest of his presidency.
“I know that, as he has done throughout his remarkable career, President Biden will have made his decision based on what he believes is in the best interests of the American people,” Mr Starmer added.
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thanked Mr Biden and US First Lady Jill Biden, calling the president a “true friend” to Canadians. “He’s a great man, and everything he does is guided by his love for his country,” Mr Trudeau said.
Some noted the difficulty of Mr Biden’s decision to step away from power.
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Mr Biden had “made difficult decisions” throughout his political career that have “kept the world safer, and democracy and freedom stronger”.
“I know that you were guided by the same principles when announcing your latest decision. Perhaps the most difficult one in your life,” he said.
Mr Biden has faced intense pressure from recent weeks from fellow Democrats to step aside, after a faltering debate performance against Donald Trump in June.
But even up until last week, Mr Biden has said that he planned to stay in the race. At 81, he is the oldest person ever to have occupied the Oval Office.
Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida noted that Biden’s announcement is one the US president considers “the best political decision he can make”.
“The Japan-US alliance is the cornerstone of our country’s diplomacy and security, so we will monitor the situation closely,” Mr Kishida said.
Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, Petr Fiala, described Mr Biden’s decision to withdraw as “responsible and personally difficult… but all the more valuable”.
But Mr Fiala also acknowledged growing political uncertainty in the US.
“I am keeping my fingers crossed for the USA that a good president emerges from the democratic competition of two strong and equal candidates,” he said.
Italy’s foreign minister and deputy PM Antonio Tajani said his country “must look with great serenity to the US”. “We will work well with whoever the next president is, whether Trump or Harris,” he said.
Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky said he respects Mr Biden’s “tough but strong decision” and thanked him for his “unwavering support for Ukraine’s fight for freedom.”
“We sincerely hope that America’s continued strong leadership will prevent Russian evil from succeeding or making its aggression pay off,” Mr Zelensky said.
Some countries at odds with the US have also reacted to Mr Biden’s decision.
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro called it “the most sensible and correct decision”.
“[Mr Biden] realized that at that age and with weakened health he could not assume the reins of his country, let alone a presidential candidacy,” Mr Maduro said at a campaign event for his own re-election.
And the Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s priority will still be on its war in Ukraine. “A lot can change” before the US presidential vote in November, he added.
“We need to be patient and carefully monitor what happens,” he said.
The many identities of the first woman vice-president
Less than four months out from the election, Vice-President Kamala Harris found herself in a difficult position.
President Joe Biden’s poor performance on the debate stage spurred mounting criticism about his ability to win the election. As anxiety turned to tension within the Democratic party, her name rose up the list of replacement candidates.
With Mr Biden’s announcement that he will be ending his campaign and putting his support behind her, Ms Harris has finally reached a position she’d long sought: the top of the Democratic ticket, and potentially the presidency.
But the journey there has been fraught and full of difficult questions, especially in recent months.
- LIVE UPDATES: Joe Biden withdraws from US presidential race
Four years ago, the one-time candidate for the Democratic nomination would have welcomed the party’s praises. By July 2024, Harris was in a more precarious position as part of an embattled incumbent ticket, her chances of another term tethered to Mr Biden’s performance.
In the 24 hours after the debate debacle, Ms Harris chose strong loyalty to Mr Biden.
The vice-president spoke on CNN, MSNBC and at a campaign rally. She defended her political partner’s record and attacked their opponent, former President Donald Trump.
“We believe in our president, Joe Biden, and we believe in what he stands for,” she said at the rally.
Ms Harris never wavered as a new well of support within the Democratic party pushed her into the spotlight and critics pressed Mr Biden to retire.
Still, it’s a second chance at a presidential campaign for the first woman as well as the first black and Asian-American to serve as vice-president.
Despite struggling to appeal to voters in 2020 and having low approval ratings during her tenure as vice president, Ms Harris’ supporters point to her advocacy for reproductive rights, appeal among black voters and her background as a prosecutor who would be running against a now-convicted felon to make the case for her serving as commander-in-chief.
“I believe she has been instrumental in addressing key issues such as voting rights and immigration reform,” Nadia Brown, director of Georgetown University’s Women’s and Gender Studies Program, said.
“She has also been Biden’s most powerful surrogate on issues of abortion access and outreach to black communities.”
How Kamala rose to become VP
Just five years ago, Ms Harris was the senator from California hoping to win the Democratic nomination for presidency.
She began her career in the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office and became the district attorney – the top prosecutor – for San Francisco in 2003, before being elected the first woman and the first black person to serve as California’s attorney general, the top lawyer and law enforcement official in America’s most populous state.
She gained a reputation as one of the Democratic party’s rising stars, using this momentum to propel her to election as California’s junior US senator in 2017.
But her presidential aims were unsuccessful in 2020.
Her adept debate performances were not enough to compensate for poorly articulated policies.
Her campaign died in less than a year and it was Mr Biden who returned the now 59-year-old to the national spotlight by putting her on his ticket.
Gil Duran, a communications director for Ms Harris in 2013 who critiqued her run for the presidential nomination, called it “a big reversal of fortune for Kamala Harris”.
“Many people didn’t think she had the discipline and focus to ascend to a position in the White House so quickly… although people knew she had ambition and star potential. It was always clear that she had the raw talent,” Duran said.
Ms Harris focused on several key initiatives while in the White House and she was instrumental in some of the Biden administration’s most touted accomplishments.
She launched a nationwide “Fight for Reproductive Freedoms” tour advocating for women to have the right to make decisions about their body. She highlighted harm caused by abortion bans and called on Congress to restore the protections of Roe v Wade after the Supreme Court’s conservative justices overturned the constitutional right to abortion in 2022.
Ms Harris set a new record for the most tie-breaking votes cast by a vice president in the history of the Senate. Her vote helped pass the Inflation Reduction Act and the American Rescue Plan, which provided COVID relief funding including stimulus payments.
Her tie-breaking vote also confirmed Justice Ketanji Brown Jakson to the Supreme Court.
But she also struggled to achieve broad appeal among Americans, facing criticism on all sides.
Despite leftward leanings on issues like gay marriage and the death penalty, she faced repeated attacks for not being progressive enough for some Democratic voters. “Kamala is a cop” was a common refrain on the 2020 campaign trail.
Mr Biden also called upon Ms Harris to lead efforts addressing the root causes of migration as a record number of immigrants fled to the US-Mexico border, an issue opponents point to as one where she hasn’t made enough progress.
She received backlash from Republicans and some Democrats for taking six months to plan a trip to the border after entering office.
But in recent weeks, as speculation about Mr Biden’s ability to win in November swirled, she found a renewed base of support.
The many identities of Kamala Harris
Born in Oakland, California, to two immigrant parents – an Indian-born mother and Jamaican-born father – her parents divorced when she was five and she was primarily raised by her Hindu single mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a cancer researcher and civil rights activist.
She grew up engaged with her Indian heritage, joining her mother on visits to India, but Ms Harris has said that her mother adopted Oakland’s black culture, immersing her two daughters – Kamala and her younger sister Maya – within it.
“My mother understood very well that she was raising two black daughters,” she wrote in her autobiography The Truths We Hold. “She knew that her adopted homeland would see Maya and me as black girls and she was determined to make sure we would grow into confident, proud black women.”
Her biracial roots and upbringing mean she embodies and can engage with and appeal to many American identities. Those parts of the country which have seen rapid demographic change, enough change to alter a region’s politics, see an aspirational symbol in her.
But it was her time at Howard University, one of the nation’s preeminent historically black colleges and universities, which she has described as among the most formative experiences of her life.
Lita Rosario-Richardson met Kamala Harris while at Howard in the 1980s when students would gather in the Yard area of the campus to hang out and discuss politics, fashion and gossip.
“I noticed she had a keen sense of argumentation,” she said.
They bonded over an aptitude for energetic debate with campus Republicans, their experience growing up with single mothers, even just both being the Libra star sign. It was a formative era politically too.
“Reagan was president at the time and it was the apartheid era and there was a lot of talk about divestiture with ‘trans Africa’ and the Martin Luther King holiday issue,” Ms Rosario-Richardson said.
“We know that, being descendants of enslaved people and people of colour coming out of colonisation, that we have a special role and having an education gives us a special position in society to help effect change,” she explained – it was a philosophy and a call to action that was part of the university experience Ms Harris lived.
But Ms Harris also operates with ease in predominantly white communities. Her early years included a brief period in Canada. When Ms Gopalan Harris took a job teaching at McGill University, Ms Harris and her younger sister Maya went with her, attending school in Montreal for five years.
Ms Harris says she’s always been comfortable with her identity and simply describes herself as an “American”.
She told the Washington Post in 2019 that politicians should not have to fit into compartments because of their colour or background.
“My point was: I am who I am. I’m good with it. You might need to figure it out, but I’m fine with it,” she said.
The making of witty ‘debate club’ Kamala
From the very earliest, as her friend Ms Rosario-Richardson attests, she showed the skills that allowed her to be one of few women to break through barriers.
“That is what attracted me to get her to join debate team [at Howard University], a fearlessness,” she said.
Wit and humour is part of that armoury. In a video posted to her social media in 2020 after winning the election, she shares the news of the win – with a very hearty laugh – with Mr Biden: “We did it, we did it Joe. You’re going to be the next president of the United States!”
The laugh she greeted the then president-elect with, when making that first momentous phone call, was one her friend recognised immediately and intimately.
“It clearly shows her personality, even in the short time she has been on the campaign trail.”
“She has always had that laugh, she has always had a sense of humour too, she had a sense of wit – even in the context of a university debate – to get those points across.”
The ability to deliver zingers to her opponents in live debate was very much part of the momentum behind the start of her bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Kamala, ‘Momala’, history-maker
In 2014, then-Senator Harris married lawyer Doug Emhoff and became stepmother to his two children.
She wrote an article for Elle magazine in 2019 about the experience of becoming a stepmother and unveiled the name that would then come to dominate many headlines that followed.
“When Doug and I got married, Cole, Ella, and I agreed that we didn’t like the term ‘stepmom’. Instead they came up with the name ‘Momala’.”
They were portrayed as the epitome of modern American “blended” family, an image the media took to and one that occupied many column inches about how we talk about female politicians.
Many argue she should also be seen and recognised as the descendant of another kind of family and that is the inheritor of generations of black female activists.
“She is heir to a legacy of grassroots organisers, elected officials, and unsuccessful candidates who paved this path to the White House. Black women are seen as a political force of nature in democratic politics and the Democratic party,” Nadia Brown, associate professor of political science and African American studies at Purdue University, told the BBC.
Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker and Septima Clark are some of the names she follows in the footsteps of, Ms Brown argues.
“Her win is historic but it is not hers alone. It is shared with countless black women who made this day possible.”
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Who could challenge Harris for Democratic nomination?
Biden ends re-election bid, upending White House race
US President Joe Biden has ended his re-election campaign and endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris to succeed him as the Democratic candidate, in an extraordinary decision that upends an already dramatic race for the White House.
Mr Biden, 81, said in a Sunday written statement that it was the “greatest honour” to serve but his withdrawal was “in the best interest of my party and the country”.
The announcement caps a tumultuous period in US politics, which began with his sometimes incoherent debate performance against Donald Trump on 27 June. Mr Biden says he will remain president until January.
Ms Harris, 59, said that she was “honoured” to be endorsed, adding she would “earn and win this nomination” and unite the country against Trump.
“We have 107 days until election day,” she said. “Together, we will fight. And together, we will win.”
While Ms Harris has been picking up endorsments from many big figures in the party, she is yet to be officially nominated, and that may not happen until the Democratic National Convention in August.
A resurgent Trump meanwhile has pulled ahead in polling and was confirmed as Republican nominee at the party’s convention in Milwaukee this week, five days after surviving an assassination attempt.
In the wake of Mr Biden’s decision, he declared the president “was not fit to run… and is certainly not fit to serve”. Other senior Republicans joined him in their criticism, and called on Mr Biden to leave the White House immediately, not just the Democratic candidacy.
- LIVE UPDATES: Joe Biden withdraws from US presidential race
Potential Harris rivals fall in line
Sources told the BBC that even senior White House staff and campaign officials were told of Mr Biden’s decision only moments before the statement was released on Sunday afternoon, although the president had spoken to Ms Harris and a handful of others beforehand.
Dozens of senior Democrats and grandees including former president Barack Obama, Senate leader Chuck Schumer and former House speaker Nancy Pelosi immediately praised the decision and lauded Mr Biden’s accomplishments in office.
Former president Bill Clinton and 2016 Democratic candidate for president Hillary Clinton said they backed Kamala Harris as the party’s candidate for November’s vote, saying they would “fight with everything we’ve got to elect her”.
While Mr Obama stated that he had “extraordinary confidence” that an “outstanding nominee emerges”, he did not explicitly back Ms Harris or any other candidate.
Ms Pelosi has not commented.
Peter Welch, the first Democratic senator to call on Biden to drop his re-election run, called for an “open process” to nominate Harris.
But there are already signs that many in the party will unify behind her, including from high-profile politicians who had been touted as potential rivals for the nomination in the event Mr Biden stepped aside.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, who is believed to have presidential ambitions, praised Mr Biden as “selfless” and said he backed the “fearless” and “tenacious” Ms Harris to face Trump.
Josh Shapiro, the Pennsylvania governor, said he would do “everything I can to help elect Kamala Harris as the 47th President of the United States”.
Pete Buttigieg, the current transport secretary and a former presidential contender, said Mr Biden was “one of the most consequential presidents in American history”, adding he would do “all that I can to help elect Kamala Harris the next President.”
Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, stated that her job “will remain the same… doing everything I can to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump.”
The Democratic National Committee meanwhile filed to amend the names of its fundraising committees to the Harris Victory Fund and Harris Action Fund.
Two major Democratic donors – LinkedIn co-funder Reid Hoffman and investor Alexander Soros – publicly endorsed Harris.
And within an hour of Mr Biden’s announcement, the pro-Trump super-PAC campaign fund Make America Great Again posted an advert attacking Mr Harris, claiming “she covered up Joe’s obvious mental decline”.
Trump added: “Whoever the Left puts up now will just be more of the same.”
Weeks of intense scrutiny
Mr Biden had faced intense scrutiny since his debate performance in June. Less than two weeks ago, he hosted a high-profile summit with Nato leaders in Washington.
The occasion did little to calm nerves within his own party, with him mistakenly introducing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin”, and appearing to refer Ms Harris as “Vice President Trump”.
At one point he told an interview that only the “Lord Almighty” could make him withdraw, but then later said he would consider doing so if he had a health condition. On Friday, while in isolation after testing positive for Covid, he said he would return to the campaign trail in the coming week.
In his statement on Sunday, Mr Biden thanked his Ms Harris, saying she was an “extraordinary partner”.
“And let me express my heartfelt appreciation for the American people for the faith and trust you have placed in me,” his statement added.
“I believe today and always have: that there is nothing America can’t do – when we do it together. We just have to remember we are the United States of America.”
Officials from the Democratic National Committee held an emergency meeting on Sunday evening.
The focus will now be on the party’s national convention, which is scheduled to start on 19 August.
Mr Biden swept the party’s primaries, meaning that the delegates representing each state at the convention were pledged to vote for him – although they are now expected to be released to vote for another candidate.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
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- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Bangladesh court scraps job quotas after deadly unrest
Bangladesh’s top court has scrapped most of the quotas on government jobs that had sparked violent clashes across the country that have killed more than 100 people.
A third of public sector jobs had been reserved for the relatives of veterans from the country’s war for independence from Pakistan in 1971.
But now the court has ruled just 5% of the roles can be reserved for veterans’ relatives.
Law Minister Anisul Huq said the government would implement the ruling within days. Some student leaders have vowed to continue protesting.
Speaking to the BBC, Mr Huq also denied that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina – who has been in power since 2009 – was losing her grip on Bangladesh.
“In that case you would have seen the mass population of the country to revolt. They have actually supported the government in this turmoil and they have said yes, the government should act to bring the violence to an end,” he said.
He blamed opposition forces for joining the protests and destroying “the symbols of Bangladesh’s development”.
Several protest movement coordinators have told the BBC that action would continue until the government took action.
“We applaud the court’s verdict,” said one coordinator, Nusrat Tabassum. “But our main demand is with the executive department. Until those demands are implemented, the ongoing nationwide complete shutdown program will continue.”
The students’ demands also include justice for protesters killed in recent days, the release of detained protest leaders, the restoration of internet services and resignations of government ministers.
Streets in the capital Dhaka are deserted as a second day of curfew is in force, but sporadic clashes continued even after the supreme court ruling.
About 115 people are known to have died but local media report a much higher casualty figure. At least 50 people were killed on Friday alone.
The Supreme Court ruling orders that 93% of public sector jobs should be recruited on merit, leaving 5% for the family members of the veterans of the country’s independence war.
A remaining 2% is reserved for people from ethnic minorities or with disabilities.
Scrapped in 2018 by Ms Hasina’s government, the quota system was reinstated by a lower court last month, sparking the protests.
- Why is Bangladesh in turmoil?
The government responded with a harsh crackdown, including a curfew and a communications blackout.
Protest coordinators say police and the student wing of the governing Awami League – known as the Bangladesh Chhatra League – have been using brutal force against peaceful demonstrators. The government denies this.
Many people have been detained by the authorities.
Nahid Islam, a coordinators of the quota reform movement, alleged that he had been subjected to physical and mental torture.
He told the BBC he had been picked up by people who said they were detectives, handcuffed and transferred to a private car.
“After some time I was taken out of the car and taken to a room in a house. I was interrogated and subsequently subjected to torture. At one point I fainted. After that I have no memory,” Mr Islam said.
He says he regained consciousness on the street in an area of Dhaka in the early hours of Sunday morning. “I still have blood clots on both shoulders and left leg,” he said.
The police have not commented.
The unrest has also seen arson attacks on government buildings, police check posts and the capital’s metro system, which the interior minister said had been left inoperable. Burnt out vehicles can be seen in most Dhaka neighbourhoods.
Clashes have been reported in other parts of the country. More than 800 prisoners escaped from a prison near Dhaka with 85 weapons and 10,000 ammunition rounds. Police say they have so far recaptured 58 of the prisoners.
UK-based analyst Kamal Ahmed told the BBC that the re-introduced job quota system had been exploited by the ruling Awami League party.
“The quota system was nothing but the governing Awami League rewarding their supporters and a ploy for entrenching the party’s influence in the future administration,” he said.
The ensuing protests were of “unprecedented intensity” and have expanded to become a “much wider people’s movement” against a backdrop of allegations of corruption, lack of accountability and the escalating cost of living, he said.
Law Minister Anisul Huq denied the quota system was benefiting the Awami League.
“I would say that actually 95% of the members of the ruling party have been either freedom fighters or have been supporters of the freedom fighters. It’s quite natural that they would be benefitting out of it,” he told the BBC.
Bangladesh is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, but that growth has not translated into jobs for university graduates.
Estimates suggest that around 18 million young Bangladeshis are looking for jobs. University graduates face higher rates of unemployment than their less-educated peers.
Clashes and demonstrations in UK and US
The tensions in Bangladesh have also seen demonstrations take place outside the country.
In the US there was a demonstration outside the White House, mainly involving Bangladeshi students studying in the country. In Times Square in New York, participants displayed banners demanding justice for the students killed over the past few days.
There were also disturbances in east London on Thursday evening as pro- and anti-government groups clashed.
Police said they found two large groups of men fighting among a wider demonstration of several hundred people in Whitechapel, which has a large ethnic Bangladeshi population.
Objects were then thrown at police, injuring two, and cars were damaged.
Republicans turn heat up on Secret Service chief over Trump shooting
Republican lawmakers are planning to return to Congress on Monday with the director of the Secret Service in their sights, as their frustration and anger grow over the agency’s response to an assassination attempt against Donald Trump.
First on the agenda will be a House committee hearing on Monday with Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, which Speaker Mike Johnson said would make for “must-see TV” for Americans concerned about security lapses at the Pennsylvania rally.
“She’s got a lot to answer for. And these concerns are bipartisan,” Mr Johnson told CNN on Sunday.
Republicans, who control the House, have been unified in pushing Ms Cheatle to step down – or be fired – after a 20-year-old gunman was able to shoot the former president in the ear at the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally last Saturday. Many of the lawmakers confronted her at the Republican convention last week, releasing videos of them demanding answers.
Her agency is charged with providing protection to more than the president and his family, including former presidents, others in line to the White House and political candidates.
US media is reporting that Trump had sought additional security in the months leading up to the assassination attempt, but the agency had turned them down or been unable to fulfill the requests due to staffing shortages. CBS News, BBC’s news partner, has reported that Trump’s security frustrations go back two years.
Agency spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement that “in some instances where specific Secret Service specialized units or resources were not provided, the agency made modifications”. That included relying on state and local law enforcement.
Eric Trump, the former president’s son, said he had been calling for beefed up security throughout the campaign, as he blamed the Biden administration and Ms Cheatle on Sunday for the assassination attempt and argued there had been “no accountability” for the agency’s actions.
“She should be out of a job,” he told Fox News.
Speaking to CNN, Mr Johnson said that in addition to the House hearing, lawmakers on Monday would release more details about a bipartisan task force with subpoena authority charged with investigating the Secret Service’s response.
“The initial excuses that [Ms Cheatle] has given for the lapses that happened last Saturday are just unbelievable, so we’re going to get down to the bottom of it,” he said.
Senators, too, are preparing to dig in on the Secret Service.
Republican Senator Ron Johnson told Fox News on Sunday that he would soon release “preliminary” information from his own report investigating the attack.
That report is intended to encourage people to come forward with more footage and firsthand accounts. He added that his investigation is now bipartisan, and will be conducted with Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut.
The Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general is also looking the attack, which occurred after the Secret Service identified the gunman as suspicious some 20 minutes before he opened fire, lawmakers revealed this weekend.
Mr Johnson’s appearance on CNN came just a day after reports emerged that top officials at the Secret Service had denied some requests from Trump’s security team for additional resources in the two years leading up to the assassination attempt.
The report, first published in the Washington Post, said the agency had refused additional resources such as more agents and snipers because of a lack of resources and staffing shortages within the Secret Service.
Mr Johnson blamed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for failing to allocate more resources to the Secret Service, an agency that it oversees.
The Republican House speaker told CNN on Sunday that Congress had increased funding to DHS in recent years, but that DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was responsible for ensuring the Secret Service had enough funds.
“Secretary Mayorkas is in charge of that agency. If he needed to allocate more resources to the Secret Service than that should have been done,” Mr Johnson said.
Mr Johnson added that he had spoken with Mr Mayorkas hours after the assassination attempt and that the DHS leader was unable to answer “basic questions”, including whether the gunman, Thomas Crooks, had used a drone to survey the outdoor rally area.
Law enforcement officials told US media on Saturday that Crooks had flown a drone above the site ahead of the shooting.
Trump has made several appearances since the incident, including at a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday, where he told the crowd that he “took a bullet for Democracy”.
His former White House physician, Dr Ronny Jackson, released a statement the same day saying the bullet created a 2cm-wide wound on Trump’s ear that was beginning to “heal properly”.
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Oscar Piastri took his maiden grand prix victory in a McLaren one-two ahead of Lando Norris in a dramatic race in Hungary, amid a heated row over team orders.
Behind them, in a race full of see-sawing action, old rivals Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen collided as they disputed third place.
Both continued but Hamilton held on to third and the Red Bull driver, his race full of radio messages peppered with swearing, dropped back to finish fifth behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.
McLaren’s team orders controversy unfolded as they tried to manage their way to a one-two, their first since the 2021 Italian Grand Prix.
Piastri led Norris for most of the race after taking the lead in a three-car fight between them and Verstappen around the first corner.
But an earlier final pit stop for Norris – made by McLaren to protect him against Hamilton’s Mercedes, which had stopped earlier – put him ahead of Piastri.
Norris was repeatedly asked to slow and let Piastri back past, and reminded of his responsibility to the team, but he refused to do so until just two laps from the end.
His engineer Will Joseph reminded him to “remember every Sunday morning meeting” and “I tried to protect you”.
He also told him that “the way to win a championship is with the team – you’re gonna need Oscar and you’re going to need the team”.
Norris argued that Piastri would have to catch him before he would let him by but all the time he was extending his lead.
For a long time, it appeared as if Norris would refuse to carry out the order, but in the end he acquiesced.
Hamilton and Verstappen collide on track
Hamilton and Verstappen’s incident happened on lap 63 as the Red Bull driver dived for the inside at Turn One.
The Dutchman overshot the corner and Hamilton’s front left wheel caught the right rear of Verstappen’s as the Red Bull speared past and into the run-off area.
It was the climax of a bad-tempered race for Verstappen as he railed against Red Bull’s strategy choices, that first put him behind Hamilton and then at the second pit stop also behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.
Verstappen caught and re-passed Leclerc but his anger seemed to spill over into his driving as he tried to pass Hamilton.
It was their second battle of the race – Verstappen had been stuck behind Hamilton in the second stint after making a later first pit stop than the Mercedes driver and failed to get by after a number of attempts.
Verstappen complained about his car’s performance, lack of grip and the team’s pit-stop choices, and when he was chastised by race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase for going too hard too soon on his tyres after his final stop, he again swore.
“Don’t give me that now,” he said. “You guys gave me this strategy. I’m trying to rescue my race.”
But he did the opposite and, after the collision, dropped behind Leclerc and was unable to catch the Ferrari.
McLaren one-two overshadowed any team row
Piastri took the lead at the start as he launched off the line better than Norris and got down the inside at Turn One.
They went three-wide around the corner with Verstappen on the outside, and the Dutchman then swept into the run-off area, responding to Piastri jinking slightly left and Norris doing the same, and used a slingshot to pass Norris as he returned to the track.
Norris complained that Verstappen had broken the rules and had to give the place back. Verstappen disagreed but after the stewards said the incident was under investigation, Red Bull advised their driver to cede the place.
Verstappen did so, but responded with the first of a long series of angry messages.
At the front, Piastri seemed in control of the race, extending a lead of more than three seconds before his first stop and then building it to nearly five by lap 32, shortly before half-distance.
But then he ran wide at the fast Turn 11, the lead immediately came down to 2.1 seconds, and Norris began to close in.
Norris held the gap at less than two seconds for 10 laps, until McLaren decided to pit the Briton to ensure he was not ‘undercut’ by Hamilton, who had made his final stop on lap 40.
The risk for McLaren was that Hamilton would close in enough on fresh tyres that Norris would come out behind him when he made his own stop.
So McLaren pitted Norris to protect against this, and then stopped Piastri two laps later.
But this meant that Norris had gained time on his fresh tyres and when Piastri rejoined, he was three seconds behind his team-mate.
The bargaining over who would win the race continued for the next 20 laps until Norris eventually decided his best long-term interests were in doing what he was told.
Behind Verstappen, Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz took sixth, while the second Red Bull of Sergio Perez and Mercedes’ George Russell recovered from their starting positions close to the back to take seventh and eighth.
RB’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll completed the points positions in ninth and 10th.
Couple found dead after trying to cross Atlantic
The bodies of a couple who set off on a sailing trip across the Atlantic Ocean have been found on a washed-up life raft almost six weeks after they were last seen.
Briton Sarah Packwood and her Canadian husband Brett Clibbery are thought to have abandoned their yacht and perished before washing up on Sable Island near Nova Scotia in Canada on 12 July.
The couple were reported missing on 18 June after leaving Nova Scotia in their 13m (42ft) eco-friendly yacht, Theros, a week earlier.
They were on the way to the Azores – about 3,228 km away – with the trip planned to take 21 days.
In a post on Facebook, Mr Clibbery’s son James confirmed the pair had died, saying that the last few days had been “very hard”.
He said the couple would be “forever missed”, adding: “There isn’t anything that will fill the hole that has been left by their, so far unexplained passing.”
It is unclear how the couple’s dream transatlantic crossing ended in tragedy. An investigation is still under way, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told the BBC on Sunday.
One theory investigators are exploring is that the yacht was struck by a passing cargo ship that did not notice the collision, according to Canadian news website Saltwire.
“The sailboat crew were either unable to avoid collision” or they could have been down below with Theros on automatic pilot, an anonymous source told Saltwire.
The Canadian coastguard and military aircraft have not spotted wreckage or any sign of the boat, Saltwire reports.
In a video posted to their YouTube channel, Theros Adventures, the pair explained how their trip – dubbed the Green Odyssey – would rely on sails, solar panels, batteries and an electric engine repurposed from a car.
“We’re doing everything we can to show that you can travel without burning fossil fuels,” Mr Clibbery said in the video, posted on 12 April.
“It’s probably the biggest adventure of our lives so far,” Ms Packwood added.
The pair met by chance in London in 2015, when Mr Clibbery, a retired engineer, was preparing to donate a kidney to his sister.
They married in Canada on their yacht a year later, before affirming their vows in a traditional handfasting ceremony at Stonehenge in 2017, according to Ms Packwood’s personal blog.
Their story was featured in a 2020 “How We Met” article in The Guardian.
Ms Packwood, originally from Long Itchington, Warwickshire, had worked in Rwanda with the UN after the 1994 genocide and had extensive experience as a humanitarian.
In what would be their final post on 11 June, the pair wrote on Facebook: “Captain Brett and First Mate Sarah set sail on the 2nd leg of The Green Odyssey on board Theros – GibSea 42 foot sailboat. Powered by the wind and sun. Heading east to the Azores.”
Modi’s new budget faces jobs crisis test in India
On Tuesday, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s coalition government will present its first federal budget following a narrow election victory.
A weakened Mr Modi, reliant for the first time on coalition partners, is widely expected to usher in a reset in his spending policies, while maintaining fiscal prudence.
Analysts suggest the new government may need to focus more sharply on the rural majority, who have not benefited as much as the wealthy from the country’s rapidly growing GDP.
- A jobs crisis in India is driving workers to Israel
The fact that this is Mr Modi’s third term will preoccupy him with thoughts of leaving a lasting legacy and may “tempt” him to do something about economic prosperity for the masses, says Rathin Roy, a former member of the prime minister’s Economic Advisory Council.
“It is the one area where his legacy will say he has conspicuously failed in the past.”
In the 10 years that he’s been in power, Mr Modi has poured billions of dollars into state funded infrastructure, building sea bridges and expressways. He’s also undertaken tax cuts for big corporations and launched subsidy schemes to incentivise exports-focused manufacturing.
India’s shaky macro economy has stabilised and its stock markets have soared.
But so have inequality and rural distress.
BMW cars have logged their highest sales ever in the first half of this year even as overall consumption growth has been the lowest in two decades.
Wages have stagnated, household savings have dropped and well-paying jobs remain out of reach for most Indians.
India’s regional imbalances are also stark. A majority of the country lives in northern and eastern India where per capita incomes are lower than Nepal, and health, mortality and life expectancy worse than Burkina Faso, according to Mr Roy.
Nine in 10 economists now say chronic joblessness is the biggest challenge confronting Modi 3.0. A post-election survey shows seven in 10 Indians support taxing the super-rich and eight in 10 economists believe growth has not been inclusive.
- India’s jobs crisis is more serious than it seems
Travelling through northern India’s agrarian heartland, the fate of its rural majority sticks out in sharp contrast with those living in its cities.
Muzaffarnagar in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh is barely a few hours away from the Indian capital, Delhi. Barring the state-of-the-art highway that cuts through the expansive open fields, it feels like a region that’s been largely bypassed by the country’s shiny economic boom.
Sushil Pal’s family has tilled the plains of Behra Asa village for generations. It’s hard toil that hardly pays anymore, he told the BBC.
Mr Pal didn’t vote for Mr Modi’s party this time despite supporting it in the previous two elections. The prime minister’s promise to double farm incomes, he says, has remained just that – a promise.
“My income has gone down. The costs for inputs and labour have gone up but not for my crop,” Mr Pal said. “They only marginally increased procurement prices for cane before the elections.
“All the money I make goes in paying school and college fees for my sons. One is an engineer but hasn’t had a job for two years,” he said.
Down the road from his field, an export-focused furniture workshop has seen its turnover drop by 80% in the past five years as global orders dried up following a post-Covid sales bump.
Rajneesh Tyagi, the owner, said he would have liked to sell locally to mitigate the lull overseas, but continuing rural distress means there’s no demand for his products.
“The farm economy is down and the biggest problem in growing local demand is high debt among the farmers and unemployment,” he added. “They have no capacity to buy anything”.
Mr Tyagi’s business represents a wide universe of micro enterprises that form the backbone of India’s economy. India Ratings, a credit ratings agency, estimates 6.3 million enterprises have shut down between 2015 and 2023, costing 16 million informal jobs.
In contrast, profits reported by India’s 5,000 listed companies rose sharply by 187% between 2018 and 2023, spruced up in part because of tax cuts, according to commentator Vivek Kaul.
- India’s economy: The good, bad and ugly in six charts
Bridging such gaping divides between the formal and informal parts of the economy and bringing prosperity to India’s villages will be the biggest challenges for Mr Modi as he embarks on a third term in office.
His first post-election budget may see a “tilt” towards welfarism though not necessarily a pivot away from more capital spending on big infrastructure projects, economists at Goldman Sachs said in a note.
A larger-than-expected dividend transfer from the central bank (0.3% of GDP) will enable the government to boost welfare spending and maintain capex, with a focus on rural economy and job creation, says the Wall Street bank.
Even those who manage money for some of India’s wealthiest concur with this view.
Rajesh Saluja, CEO and managing director of ASK Private Wealth, says poverty reduction will most likely be on the government’s budget agenda and it can be done “without upsetting the fiscal math”, given the strong revenues and tax collections.
But economists warn more cash handouts are a poor substitute for real reform-led development. About 800 million Indians already live on free grain and some states spend close to 10% of their revenues on welfare schemes.
The budget will have to lay out a vision for how the government plans to put millions into the workforce and create earning potential.
“The reduced footprint of the unorganised sector has implications for employment generation. Therefore, a judicious mix of policy which allows coexistence of both formal and informal sectors needs to be pursued in the interim,” says Sunil Kumar Sinha, principal economist at India Ratings.
India should also incentivise low-end, labour intensive manufacturing in sectors such as textiles and agri-food processing to address its massive domestic demand, Mr Roy says.
Economists at India’s largest bank SBI have suggested extending production-linked incentives Mr Modi has offered to exports-oriented sectors to small enterprises.
“So far, when we think of manufacturing, we are thinking of posh people. We are thinking of supercomputers. We are thinking of getting Apple to come and make a few iPhones here,” Mr Roy said.
“These are not things that 70% of India’s population consumes. We should produce in India what 70% of India’s population wants to consume. If I’m able to make 200-rupee ($2.4, £1.8) shirts in this country and not let that import demand leak to Bangladesh and Vietnam, it will boost manufacturing.”
‘Significant number’ of devices back up – CrowdStrike
Cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike says “a significant number” of devices that were impacted by a global IT outage on Friday are now back online.
In a social media post, the company – whose faulty security update caused Microsoft Windows computers to crash around the world – added it “continues to focus on restoring all systems”.
Microsoft has estimated that the incident, which is being described as one of the worst IT outages in history, impacted 8.5m computers around the world.
Businesses, banks, hospitals and airlines were among the worst-hit, with some still struggling to fully restore their systems.
“We understand the profound impact this has had on everyone. We know our customers, partners and their IT teams are working tirelessly and we’re profoundly grateful,” CrowdStrike said.
“We apologise for the disruption this has created.”
The firm also said it is deploying a new fix that it hoped would speed up the recovery of computer systems.
However, CrowdStrike did not say how many devices were still being impacted.
More than 1,400 flights, into or out of the US, were cancelled on Sunday, according to aviation tracking and data platform FlightAware.
Delta and United Airlines were the worst affected US airlines.
Health services in Britain, Israel and Germany were also impacted on Friday, with some services cancelled.
The massive outage has put a spotlight on the vulnerability of global computer networks, showing how a single glitch can cause global chaos.
“All too often these days, a single glitch results in a system-wide outage, affecting industries from healthcare and airlines to banks and auto dealers” said the Chair of the US Federal Trade Commission, Lina Khan, in a social media post.
“These incidents reveal how concentration can create fragile systems.”
Until this incident the company had been one most trusted brands in the cybersecurity industry.
According to CrowdStrike’s website, it has 29,000 customers around the world, including some of the biggest companies in the US.
One major economy largely unscathed by the outage was China, as CrowdStrike is not widely used in the country.
China is also not as reliant on Microsoft as the rest of the world.
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Final leaderboard
-9 Schauffele (US); -7 Rose (Eng), Horschel (US); -6 Lawrence (SA)
Selected: -5 Henley (US); -4 Lowry (Ire); -1 Rahm (Spa), Im (Kor), Scheffler (US); Level Jordan (Eng), Brown (Eng)
Full leaderboard
Xander Schauffele held off the challenge of Justin Rose to win the 152nd Open Championship at the end of a captivating week at Royal Troon.
It is a second major title in three months for 30-year-old Schauffele, who becomes the first player to win The Open and US PGA Championship in the same year since Rory McIlroy in 2014.
The American hit a stunning bogey-free six-under 65 to finish on nine under, two clear of his playing partner Rose, who shot a 67 in a fascinating duel in breezy conditions.
“Hearing your name called with Open champion after it is something I’ve dreamed of for a very long time,” said the Champion Golfer of the Year.
For Rose, whose sole major remains his 2013 US Open triumph, it has been the closest he has come to lifting the Claret Jug, 26 years after he finished joint fourth as a 17-year-old to win the Silver Medal as low amateur.
“The dream’s been alive all week and I did an awesome job,” the 43-year-old, who came through a qualifying event in Somerset, told BBC Sport.
“This will be a tough one but a great one. I played in some of the hardest weather all week. I played some of the best golf but it didn’t quite add up to the trophy.”
Three birdies in his opening seven holes had put Rose briefly in the lead on six under, but Schauffele surged three clear of his fellow Olympic gold medallist with an electrifying run of five birdies in nine holes from the sixth.
He took just 31 shots to compete the back nine, which has been routinely referred to this week as the hardest in championship golf.
Overnight leader Billy Horschel, who faded after a fast start, birded the final three holes to join Rose in joint second.
‘My caddie was about to puke on 18th tee’
Victory for Schauffele caps a remarkable season in the majors, recording top-10 finishes in all four, with two wins.
And his win here means all four men’s majors have been won by American players for the first time since 1982, with Scottie Scheffler claiming his second Masters in April, and Bryson DeChambeau the US Open in June.
“I thought [winning the US PGA Championship] would help me and it actually did,” said Schauffele.
“I had this sense of calm, a calm I didn’t have when I played earlier at the PGA.
“For some reason, I was calm and collected. I was telling my caddie Austin that I felt pretty calm coming down the stretch and he said he was about to puke on the 18th tee!
“I just told myself to just hit it down there and keep moving along.”
How the final round unfolded
With six players tied for second at the start of play, the most going into the final round of a major for 30 years, there was bound to be drama.
And it began before the leaders teed off.
Spain’s Jon Rahm, who resumed on two over par, opened with three successive birdies and added another on the seventh to get to two under, just two behind overnight leader Horschel.
But while there were birdies to be had on the front nine, Rahm also showed how tough the back nine would be as he had eight pars and a bogey to finish on one under.
Shane Lowry, who started at one under, was the first of the serious contenders to charge, with four birdies in five holes as the 2019 champion reached the turn at four under, his eventual finishing total.
But those behind him were also making headway.
World number one Scheffler briefly flickered, reaching four under after eight but a three-putt double bogey from eight feet on the ninth stalled his challenge and he closed with another six at the last to post a 72 and one-under total.
Rose was three under for his front nine as he briefly led on six under. Schauffele picked up shots at the sixth and seventh holes, and then had the only birdie of the day on the par-four 11th to join Rose.
By this point, South African Thriston Lawrence, out in the final group with Horschel, had gone one clear on seven under after four birdies on his front nine.
Horschel was hanging in there. The overnight leader birdied three of his opening five holes to get to six under but bogeys on the eighth and 10th holes looked to have ended his hopes. Three successive birdies to finish joint second came with the pressure of winning off.
While others faded at the start of the back nine – Sam Burns, who was among those in second place at the start of day, dropped six shots on the 10th, 11th and 12th holes as he posted an 80 – Schauffele stomped on the accelerator.
He followed his birdie on 11 with two more on the 13th and 14th holes to reach eight under.
It was the turning point. Schauffele was suddenly two clear of Lawrence and three clear of Rose, who both bogeyed the 12th.
Schauffele and Rose both birdied the long 16th and the American knew at that point he was almost home. Two pars were enough, while Rose saluted the crowd after rounding off his championship with a birdie at the last before warmly embracing the victor.
Rose at least has the comfort of knowing that he has already qualified for next year’s Open at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland.
Also qualified for 2025 are fellow Englishmen Dan Brown and Matthew Jordan, who ended level par and joint 10th.
Brown, the world number 272, led after round one and continued to defy expectation throughout the week but finally faded on Sunday.
Like Rose, he too began the final round one off the lead but, playing with Scheffler, he had four bogeys in his opening six holes and he closed with a 74.
It means England’s hopes of a first winner of The Open extend to a 33rd year, with Sir Nick Faldo’s triumph at Muirfield in 1992 still the last.
Scotland’s Calum Scott scooped the Silver Medal as low amateur. His closing 76 won him that title on eight over par.
Malaysia tracks down missing oil tanker which fled after collision
Malaysia says it has intercepted a large oil tanker that was involved in a collision with another ship before fleeing the scene and turning off its tracking system.
The coastguard says it has located and detained Ceres I, sailing under the flag of São Tomé and Príncipe, and two tugboats that were towing the vessel off the country’s eastern coast.
The ship had collided with the Singapore-flagged Hafnia Nile on Friday, causing both ships to catch fire.
Officials in Singapore say all crew members from both ships were rescued.
Malaysia’s coastguard said Ceres I had left the location immediately after the collision that caused a blaze and injured at least two crew members.
The incident happened about 55 km northeast of the Singaporean island of Pedra Branca, the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) said.
The head of Malaysian coast guard’s search and rescue team, Zin Azman Mohamad Yunus, has not explained why the São Tomé and Príncipe-flagged tanker tried to flee, but added that further investigations would be carried out.
The authorities in Singapore said after around 40 crew members were rescued from the blazing ships, around 26 of them remained on Ceres I to tackle the fire.
The Singapore-flagged Hafnia Nile, was reportedly carrying naphtha, a highly flammable type of petroleum.
The cause of the collision is still unclear. Singapore maritime authorities said ship traffic in the busy waterway was unaffected.
However, Malaysian coastguard officials found an oil spill covering around 17 square kilometres.
Ceres I is a large crude oil carrying supertanker. Some reports suggests it could be part of a so-called ‘dark fleet’, carrying oil from countries under sanctions.
A market intelligence service, S&P Global Commodities at Sea, says the ship, operated by China’s Shanghai Prosperity Ship Management, has previously carried Iranian crude, which is subject to US sanctions.
Alert issued in India after boy dies from high risk Nipah virus
Health authorities in India’s Kerala state have issued an alert after a 14-year-old boy died of the Nipah virus.
According to the state’s health minister, an additional 60 people have been identified as being in the high-risk category of having the disease.
Kerala Health Minister Veena George said the boy was from the town of Pandikkad and that those who came into contact with him have been isolated and tested.
People in the area have been asked to take precautions such as wearing masks in public areas and refraining from visiting people in hospital.
The Nipah virus infection is a “zoonotic illness” transmitted from animals like pigs and fruit bats to humans, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
It can also be transmitted through contaminated food and through contact with an infected person.
The WHO has described the virus as a priority pathogen by the WHO because of its potential to trigger an epidemic.
The virus has been linked to dozens of deaths in Kerala state since it was first reported there in 2018.
The 14-year-old died on Sunday, just a day after he was confirmed to have the virus, according to Indian media reports.
It can also be transmitted through contaminated food and through contact with an infected person.
Parts of Kerala are said to be the most at-risk globally for the virus. An investigation published by Reuters last year found that Kerala, which is a tropical state and is witnessing rapid urbanisation and rapid tree loss, created “ideal conditions for a virus like Nipah to emerge”.
Experts say that due to habitat loss, animals are living in closer proximity to humans and this helps the virus jump from animals to humans.
The state government recently announced that it was creating an action plan to prevent a Nipah outbreak.
Last year, authorities in Kerala state closed schools and offices after confirming five cases.
Prime sued in trademark case by US Olympic committee
The US Olympic and Paralympic Committee is suing Logan Paul and KSI’s Prime energy drinks brand, accusing it of trademark infringement.
It claims that Prime is using trademarked Olympic phrases and symbols on a special edition of its hydration drink featuring basketball star and three-time Olympic gold medallist Kevin Durant.
The committee said it does not have an agreement with Prime for the use of its terminology and trademarks, and said its actions had been “deliberate” and “in bad faith”.
The BBC has contacted Prime for comment.
The committee filed the lawsuit in Colorado on Friday, and also accused Prime of using the trademarks in internet campaigns and promotions.
The lawsuit, seen by the BBC’s partner CBS News, said that consumers could be misled into thinking there is an agreement between the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee and Prime.
The organisation said it had issued a cease and desist letter to Prime, but the drinks brand had continued to market the product, using the branding.
Criticism has previously been levelled at the company due to it being marketed at a younger audience, with some schools in the UK issuing warnings or choosing to ban it.
While the company’s energy drink contains caffeine, it also sells a drink marketed for “hydration”, which is caffeine-free.
Earlier this month, US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called for an investigation into the brand due to the high caffeine content of its energy drink.
Responding to this, Prime has said that it complies with regulatory requirements in the countries it operates in.
Prime founders Logan Paul and KSI have over 40 million YouTube followers between them.
Prime was released in the UK with much hype in 2022 – resulting in some shops limiting the number of bottles which could be sold per customer. It has collaborated with some of the biggest sporting stars and teams in the world including Arsenal and the LA Dodgers.
Afghanistan – wish you were here? The Taliban do
When it comes to planning a holiday, Afghanistan is not at the top of most people’s must-visit lists.
Decades of conflict mean that few tourists dared step foot in the Central Asian nation since its heyday as part of the hippie trail in the 1970s. And the future of whatever tourism industry had survived was thrust into further uncertainty by the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.
But a quick scroll through social media suggests that not only has tourism survived, it has – in its own, extraordinarily niche way – boomed.
“Five reasons why Afghanistan should be your next trip,” gush the delighted influencers, their cameras sweeping across glistening lakes, through mountainous passes and into colourful, busy markets.
“Afghanistan hasn’t been this safe in 20 years,” others declare, posing next to the vast chasms left behind by the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas more than 20 years ago.
Behind the sunny claims and glamorous videos are questions about the risks these travellers are taking, and exactly who this burgeoning industry is truly helping: a population struggling to survive, or a regime keen to shift the narrative in its favour?
“It is very ironic to see those videos on TikTok where there is a Taliban guide and Taliban official giving tickets to tourists to visit the [site of the] destruction of the Buddhas,” points out Dr Farkhondeh Akbari, whose family fled Afghanistan during the first Taliban regime in the 1990s.
“These are the people who destroyed the Buddhas.”
‘It’s just raw’
The list of countries visited by Sascha Heeney do not, on first hearing, sound like ideal holiday destinations – places many will be more used to reading about in the news.
But then, that appears to be exactly why Heeney, and thousands more like her across the globe, picked them out: off the beaten track, as far away from a five-star resort as you can get – and therefore, almost entirely unique.
So perhaps it is not surprising she was won over by Afghanistan.
“It is just raw,” says the part-time travel guide from Brighton, UK. “You don’t get much rawer than there. That can be attractive – if you want to see real life.”
What do the Taliban get out of it? After all, they have a reputation for being deeply suspicious, hostile even, towards outsiders, particularly Westerners.
And yet here they are, posing – if slightly uncomfortably – alongside the tourists, guns on show, their bearded faces potentially about to go viral on TikTok (banned in the country since 2022).
At one level, the answer is simple. The Taliban – largely isolated internationally, under widespread sanctions and prevented from accessing funds given to Afghanistan’s former government – need money.
The tourists – whose numbers have crept up from just 691 in 2021 to more than 7,000 last year, according to AP news agency – bring it.
Most seem to join one of myriad tours offered by international companies, providing a peek at the “real Afghanistan” for a few thousand dollars a trip.
Mohammad Saeed, the head of the Taliban government’s Tourism Directorate in Kabul, said earlier this year that he dreamed of the country becoming a tourist hotspot. In particular, he revealed, he was eyeing up the Chinese market – all with the backing “of the Elders”.
“All they want to do [with tourism], it’s good,” says Afghan tour guide Rohullah, whose smiling face has been shared dozens of times by happy clients since he started leading groups three years ago.
“Tourism creates a lot of jobs and opportunities,” he adds – and he should know.
After what he refers to as “the change” in 2021 – when the Taliban seized power as the US pulled out – he was offered a job as a tour guide by a friend. Before that, he had spent eight years working for the Afghan finance ministry.
And he hasn’t regretted it. Tour groups like Heeney’s need drivers and local guides, and with tourist numbers continuing to rise, there is no shortage of work.
It is not surprising then to find groups of young men – and they are all men – attending Taliban-approved hospitality classes in Kabul, hoping to take advantage of the burgeoning industry.
“We expect much for this year,” Rohullah says. “This is a peaceful time – it was not possible to travel to all parts of Afghanistan before, but for now, it really is possible.”
The killing of three Spanish tourists and an Afghan at a market in Bamiyan in May by the Islamic State-affiliated ISK militant group stood out for being unusual because it targeted foreigners.
The British Foreign Office continues to advise against all travel to the country, which remains a target for attacks. ISK carried out 45 in 2023 alone, according to the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point.
Of course, part of the reason for Afghanistan’s increased security now is that during the 20 year war which engulfed the country after the US invasion, the Taliban themselves were responsible for much of the violence.
Take – for example – the first three months of 2021, when the UN attributed more than 40% of the 1,783 civilian casualties recorded to the Taliban. It wasn’t just the Taliban though. The same report noted US-led Afghan government forces were responsible for 25% of the casualties in the same period.
‘Know the rules and learn the game’
What is perhaps more surprising is that Heeney and two other members of the group she led for Lupine Tours earlier this year were women – and they were far from the only ones. Young Pioneer Tours – which has long experience of organising holidays to North Korea and other off-grid destinations – even runs exclusively female trips to Afghanistan. Rohullah has guided female solo travellers “without any issues”.
The Taliban’s strict rules for their own female population – which has seen them forced out of the workplace, out of secondary education and even out of the Band-e-Amir national park, a stop on many of the international tours on offer – do not preclude female tourists visiting.
It does mean that “women and men have different encounters” in Afghanistan, acknowledges Rowan Beard, who has been bringing groups to the country since 2016. It is not necessarily a bad thing, he argues.
“Men cannot speak with women; women can,” he explains. “Our female tourists had the opportunity to sit with a group of women and hear from them about their experiences, and further insights into the country.”
But everyone needs to follow the rules put in place. Heeney and her group were briefed in advance of what would be required in order to meet those rules, including on how they dressed, how to act and who they could, and couldn’t, talk to.
The Taliban – ever-present, watching from the sidelines with their guns – were among those who did not speak to Heeney or the female members of her group. She didn’t begrudge it.
“You have to kind of know the rules and learn the game,” she explains.
For Heeney, speaking with the women – who were “incredibly happy” the group was visiting – was a highlight on a tour where the “absolutely lovely”, generous and welcoming people of Afghanistan stood out.
In videos posted on social media, the women are noticeably missing from vibrant street scenes – a fact glossed over by one visitor, who declares people shouldn’t worry, they are just inside doing what women around the world love to do: shop.
‘Whitewashing our suffering’
Watching these slick videos from outside Afghanistan, some are left with a bitter taste.
“[Tourists think] it is just this backward part of the world, and they can do whatever they want – we don’t care,” says Dr Akbari, now a postdoctoral researcher at Monash University in Australia.
“We just go and enjoy the landscape and get our views and our likes. And this hurts us a lot.”
It is, she adds, “unethical tourism with a lack of political and social awareness”, which allows the Taliban to gloss over the realities of life now they are back in power.
Because this is, arguably, the other value of tourism to the Taliban: a new image. One which doesn’t highlight the rules controlling the lives of Afghan women.
“My family – they have no male guardian – cannot travel from one district to another district,” Dr Akbari points out. “We are talking about 50% of the population who have no rights… We are talking about a regime which has installed gender apartheid.
“And yes, there is a humanitarian crisis: I’m happy that tourists might go and buy something from a shop and it might help a local family, but what is the cost of it? It is normalising the Taliban regime.”
Heeney admits she did have a “moral struggle” over the Taliban’s position on women before she visited.
“Of course, I feel very strongly about their rights – it crossed my mind,” she says. “But then as a traveller… I think countries are deserving to go to, and be listened to – we have a skewed idea. I like to see with my own eyes. I can make my own judgment.”
Beard argues for letting people “make their own conclusions rather than there being a one-size-fits-all answer to the experience women have in the country”.
The overly positive view shared by some on social media can definitely be seen as problematic, says Marina Novelli, professor of marketing and tourism at Nottingham University School of Business.
“I would be very wary of the sensationalisation of a destination,” she says, explaining that some may “paint an image that is naïve”.
“Sometimes travellers also want to send a positive message – but that does not mean that problems [aren’t still there].”
Boycotting is also not the way forward, argues Prof Novelli, who sits on an international tourism ethics board.
“I find that problematic – it isolates these countries even more.”
It also opens up a question over where to draw the line – there are plenty of tourist destinations in the global north which have governments with questionable practices, she says.
However, the potential for benefit is also worth considering: in Saudi Arabia, she says, a growing tourism industry has led to a widening role in society for women.
“I think tourism can be a force for peace, for cross-cultural exchange,” Prof Novelli says.
That potential though does not make it easier for women like Dr Akbari, and her family and friends in Afghanistan.
“Our pains and our sufferings are being whitewashed,” she says, “brushed with these fake strokes of security the Taliban want.”
‘I wanted my clitoris back’ – FGM survivor opts for reconstructive surgery
Shamsa Sharawe has become infamous within the Somali community across the world for speaking out against female genital mutilation (FGM) . In a video to illustrate what happened to her vulva when she was aged six she cut off the petals of a rose with a razor blade and then stitched up what was left of the flower.
The TikTok post went viral – with nearly 12 million views since it was shared 16 months ago.
No Somali, even in the diaspora, talks openly about FGM – never mind the problems that can come with it like painful periods, the difficulty of urinating, the agony of having sex and the dangers and trauma of giving birth when one’s vulva (including the lips and clitoris) have been cut off and the vaginal opening has been narrowed to a tiny hole.
This form of FGM – known as infibulation or “type three” – is what happens to most girls in Somalia as it is a commonly held belief that the cutting off their outer genitalia will guarantee their virginity.
Women who do not undergo FGM are regarded by many in Somali society as having loose morals or a high sex drive, which risks ruining a family’s reputation.
Yet the 31-year-old TikToker, who came to live in the UK in 2001 when her family fled Somalia’s civil war, is not afraid to take on such taboos with humorous, engaging and sometimes heart-breaking honesty.
Using the name Shamsa Araweelo on TikTok, she has shared a horrific account of how she was forcibly married off and raped not long after she turned 18 while on a trip to Somalia. It took six months for her to find a way to escape back to the UK.
But perhaps the biggest taboo of all has been to admit that she wanted her genitalia back – so much so that she has paid to have reconstructive surgery as it is not available to women through the UK’s National Health Service (NHS).
She found out that this was possible when she was contacted by Haja Bilkisu, a German citizen who had undergone FGM as a child on a visit to her birth country of Sierra Leone.
Responding to Ms Sharawe’s rose video, Ms Bilkisu explained that she had had her clitoris reconstructed thanks to Dr Dan mon O’Dey at Germany’s Luisenhospital in Aachen.
“I was terrified of the idea of re-cutting, even though this time it was with my consent,” Ms Sharawe tells the BBC.
“But I had to do it for my mental health. I just wanted to never feel pain again.”
The surgery includes the reconstruction of the clitoris and labia – in Ms Sharawe’s case using tissue from her buttocks – and the removal of cysts and scar tissue in order to reduce pain and restore a woman’s sex life. In some instances, the vaginal opening is also enlarged back to normal.
Ms Sharawe, who was featured in last year’s BBC list of 100 women for her determination to end FGM, decided to share her journey to Germany and recovery so other women like her could know their options.
Yet it has taken years of abuse and the trauma of a second failed marriage for her to find the courage to take on the establishment within the Somali community.
Ms Sharawe, now a single mother with a 10-year-old daughter, also feels let down by the NHS.
It only offers deinfibulation for FGM survivors – that is surgery that opens up the vagina, but does not replace any removed tissue and will not undo any of the damage.
Ms Sharawe decided to look for funds to pay for surgery in Germany.
Through online crowdfunding, she managed to raise £25,000 ($32,000) – and underwent a four-and-half hour procedure in December.
She was in Germany for three weeks and on her return, the anti-FGM activist and teaching assistant was not able to leave her house for months as she recovered.
The childcare costs and other expenses on top of the surgery mean she is still in debt – owing around £3,000 to the hospital.
“Paying for damage you didn’t choose for yourself, or you didn’t create, is really unfair,” she says.
There are four different types of FGM with varying levels of severity:
- Clitoridectomy: partial or total removal of the sensitive clitoris
- Excision: partial or total removal of the clitoris plus the inner skin folds surrounding the vagina (labia minora)
- Infibulation: cutting and repositioning of the outer skin folds around the vagina (labia minora and labia majora). Often includes stitching to leave only a small gap
- Covers all other harmful procedures like pricking, piercing, incising, scraping and cauterising the clitoris or genital area.
- What is FGM, where does it happen and why?
In the past couple of decades, medical techniques have been developed to try to repair the damage – pioneered in 2004 by French surgeon Dr Pierre Foldès.
Undergoing surgery was really a power move, a way to fight back”
Clitoral reconstruction is covered by public health insurance in Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland.
However, in Africa – where the majority of girls and women who have undergone FGM live – access to surgery is limited to Kenya, where patients must pay around £1,000, and Egypt, where non-governmental organisations can cover the costs.
“Not every surgeon can do this surgery. It’s complicated and every patient is different,” says Dr Adan Abdullahi, a specialist in Kenya.
But he says women with every type of FGM could benefit: “It has a positive effect on childbirth, especially for ‘type three’, which is associated with a narrowing of the vagina.”
Other issues, such as pain during sex, can be significantly improved or cured, he says – adding that his patients often experience improved self-esteem “and a sense of completeness”.
Ms Bilkisu says she does feel more complete since her surgery, which was covered by the German health system: “Undergoing surgery was really a power move, a way to fight back.”
But the 30-year-old recruitment agent encourages others to do their research thoroughly before deciding: “Reconstruction is not only to reconstruct the clitoris.
“A lot of women who are cut have thick scar tissue. You have to discuss it with your doctor. What can you do to make the vulva more elastic?”
Ms Bilkisu, who was determined to have “a normal sexual experience” one day and autonomy over her body, has had three operations over the last three years – each one taking around six hours.
“That’s tough on your body. You’re put under anaesthesia. You have to take medication afterwards. I couldn’t walk for three weeks,” she says.
The physical toll of such operations means some doctors, like Dr Reham Awwad in Egypt, are keen to promote non-surgical procedures.
The co-founder of the Restore clinic says that although reconstruction surgery can bring relief, the cutting is sometimes so severe that even the most advanced surgical techniques cannot restore sexual function.
“I definitely don’t think surgery is the answer for everyone,” she tells the BBC.
Around half the cases at her clinic, which opened in 2020, are now treated using non-surgical means like injections of platelet-rich plasma which promotes tissue rejuvenation.
“The plasma [can] lead to regeneration and stimulation of increased blood flow and reducing inflammation in the areas where you inject it,” she says.
However, she cautions that the high cost means such treatments are beyond the reach of many.
Her clinic also offers psychological therapies to overcome trauma for women cut at an age when they can remember the experience.
For those who do opt for reconstructive surgery, the results can be emotional.
“The first time I actually saw my clitoris I was taken aback because for me it was like this doesn’t belong to me,” said Ms Bilkisu, who was eight years old when she underwent “type two” FGM.
Ms Sharawe agrees it takes some getting used to, plus learning how to deal with things like proper period bleeds.
It will take her another six months to completely recover – and she has not been able to afford to go back to Germany for a check-up, which worries her.
“But now I know how it feels to be a full woman… I am a very happy woman,” she says.
“I can wear underwear without discomfort or pain. I can wear trousers. I feel normal.”
And while she has experienced an expected backlash from some Somalis on social media – some of her family have surprised her with their support.
One of her uncles even wanted to know if the surgery was available in the UK for his wife.
“He didn’t feel comfortable knowing his wife’s FGM was still affecting her even after 50-plus years. He wanted to improve the quality of her life… because we [all] deserve to have a good quality of life.”
You may also be interested in:
- Inside the beauty pageant in one of the world’s worst places to be a woman
- Somalia’s hidden world of sex work
- What beauty parlours reveal about Somali women
Israel strikes Houthis in Yemen after drone hits Tel Aviv
Israel has carried out air strikes on the Houthi-controlled Red Sea port of Hodeidah in Yemen, a day after a drone launched by the group hit Tel Aviv.
Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said his country aimed to send a message to the Houthi movement.
“The fire that is currently burning in Hodeidah, is seen across the Middle East and the significance is clear,” he said.
Houthi-linked news outlets said three people were killed and more than 80 injured in Saturday’s strikes, in what Houthi official Mohammed Abdulsalam said was a “brutal Israel aggression against Yemen”.
On Sunday morning, the Israeli military said it had shot down a missile fired from Yemen before it crossed into Israel’s air space.
It added that air sirens had been activated in Israel’s Red Sea port of Eilat “following the possibility of falling shrapnel”.
Mr Abdulsalam said that the Israeli strikes were aimed at pressuring the Houthis to stop supporting the Palestinians in Gaza, something he said would not happen.
It is the first time Israel has responded directly to what it says have been hundreds of Yemeni drone and missile attacks aimed at its territory in recent months.
Footage from Hodeidah showed huge fires raging on Saturday evening. The Houthi-run government in Sanaa said Israel struck oil storage facilities close to the shore, as well as a nearby power plant.
In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said: “After nine months of continuous aerial attacks by the Houthis in Yemen toward Israel, IAF [Israeli Air Force] fighter jets conducted an extensive operational strike over 1,800km [1,118 miles) away against Houthi terrorist military targets” in the area of the port of Hodeidah.
“The IDF is capable of operating anywhere required and will strike any force that endangers Israelis,” the statement said, adding that Saturday’s operation was codenamed Outstretched Arm.
Mr Gallant said the Israeli jets had struck the group because they had harmed Israelis.
“The Houthis attacked us over 200 times. The first time that they harmed an Israeli citizen, we struck them. And we will do this in any place where it may be required,” he said.
Speaking on Saturday evening after the attacks, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country would defend itself “by all means”.
“Anyone who harms us will pay a very heavy price for their aggression,” he said in a televised address, claiming the port was an entry point for Iranian weapons.
He also said it showed Israel’s enemies there was no place it could not reach.
On Friday a block of flats in Tel Aviv was hit by what an Israeli military official said was an Iranian-made unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), which had been modified to fly long distance.
The Houthis said it carried out that attack, and vowed to stage more.
The attack killed a 50-year-old man who had recently moved to Israel from Belarus and injured eight others.
The Israeli military official said its defence forces had detected the incoming drone but had not tried to shoot it down because of “human error”.
Previously, almost all Houthi missiles and drones fired towards Israel had been intercepted and none were known to have reached Tel Aviv.
The Houthi Supreme Political Council, the movement’s executive body, was quoted by Houthi-run media on Saturday evening saying that there would be an “effective response” to the airstrikes.
Although Israel has not struck the Houthis in Yemen before, the US and UK have been launching air strikes against the group for months to try to stop the Houthis from attacking commercial shipping in the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea.
The Houthis initially said they were attacking ships connected with Israel, or heading to or from there. However, many of the vessels have no connection with Israel and since air strikes began the group has also targeted vessels linked to the UK and US.
Why Nigerians are praying for the success of a new oil refinery
A prayer was held a few months ago in Kano, a very religious city in northern Nigeria.
It was organised to pray for the success of a huge new Nigerian oil refinery that next month is due to start producing petrol for the first time.
Praying for such an industrial facility might seem incongruous, but many Nigerians are hopeful that the Dangote Petroleum Refinery will lead to both a big increase in the availability of petrol, and a subsequent drop in prices.
The $19bn (£15bn) refinery, based along the coast from Nigeria’s commercial hub Lagos, in the south of the country, is the size of almost 4,000 football pitches.
Its construction began back in 2016, and it started production of diesel and an aviation fuel in January of this year. Petrol is now set to follow.
The hope is that the facility will end Nigeria’s dependence on imports of these fuels.
While Nigeria is Africa’s largest producer of crude oil, and the world’s 15th biggest, none of its existing government-owned refineries are operational.
The privately-owned Dangote refinery has been built by Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote.
Born in Kano, the 67-year-old has a net worth of $12.6bn (£9.7bn), according to Forbes magazine.
Via his company, Dangote Group, he made his fortune in cement and sugar before taking on what many say is his biggest challenge yet when he launched the refinery.
The recent prayer session in Kano was organised by shop owner Lado Danladi, and held at a nearby mosque. He was joined by some of his neighbouring shopkeepers.
“I run a small phone charging shop, and every day I buy $5 petrol for my small generator as there’s no stable electricity,” says Mr Danladi. “But since I heard about the Dangote Refinery I have been praying for its success.
“I can’t estimate the hours I have lost trying to get fuel in the past during shortages, so hopefully the refinery will end the suffering, and help small businesses like mine get cheap and easy fuel.”
Mr Danladi’s fellow shop owners, a meat seller, and a drinks vendor all have similar complaints of buying “expensive” fuel to power generators.
For decades Nigerians enjoyed subsidised petrol prices. But last year incoming President Bola Tinubu stopped the subsidies, saying that they were no longer affordable. This led to prices surging by as much as four-fold.
Then this spring and early summer, shortages of petrol led to queues outside petrol stations, and the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Company warned against people panic buying.
The situation is not helped by Nigeria’s corruption problem. According to the closely-watched global corruption index, from non-governmental organisation Transparency International, Nigeria ranks 145th out of 180 countries.
The higher the placing, the more corrupt a country is deemed to be.
The Dangote refinery will have the capacity to produce 650,000 barrels of fuel per day once fully operational.
Devakumar Edwin, vice president of Dangote Group says the refinery will be producing 500,000 before the end of August, which will exceed the country’s 480,000 barrels per day usage. The aim is to export the surplus.
Abubakar Maigandi, the president of Nigeria’s independent petrol marketers, who has been in the oil business for 30 years, says the Dangote refinery will solve their longstanding logistics problem.
“I foresee Dangote refinery solving the logistics issue we face at the moment trying to get hold of imported petrol for consumers, since this will be refined here in Nigeria,” he says.
“This will also mean cheaper petrol for Nigerians since importation costs have been removed. My hope is also that Dangote refinery deal with us directly without middlemen who will complicate things.”
Nigerian public affairs analyst Sani Bala says the Dangote refinery needs to “crash the price of petrol” for its impact to be felt across the country.
He adds: “Personally, I also think we shouldn’t be solely relying on the Dangote refinery for our energy needs. What if something happens to it? We go back to drawing board. There should be another working refinery.
“Also, as an environmental activist it also concerns me the level of emissions, we’ll be seeing from this mammoth oil refining facility not forgetting the impact on those communities nearby.”
Speaking about the impact of the facility on local people, a dialogue was held to discuss concerns last year.
Youth leader Arepo Azeez says there are numerous issues, such as “vibrations” from the refinery. “We also worry over possible accidental discharges of crude oil into the waters, incidences of mishandling of equipment, which will result in the spilling of crude oil, and even refined products when the refinery fully comes on stream.”
Yet for Mr Lado back in Kano, he is really looking forward to the prospect of much cheaper petrol.
Why is the Bangladeshi government facing so much anger?
Bangladesh is in turmoil.
Street protests are not new to this South Asian nation of 170 million people – but the intensity of the demonstrations of the past week has been described as the worst in living memory.
More than 100 people have died in the violence, with more than 50 people killed on Friday alone.
The government has imposed an unprecedented communications blackout, shutting down the internet and restricting phone services.
What started as peaceful protests on university campuses has now transformed into nationwide unrest.
Thousands of university students have been agitating for weeks against a quota system for government jobs.
A third of public sector jobs are reserved for the relatives of veterans from the country’s war for independence from Pakistan in 1971.
The students are arguing that the system is discriminatory, and are asking for recruitment based on merit.
Protest coordinators say police and the student wing of the governing Awami League – known as the Bangladesh Chhatra League – have been using brutal force against peaceful demonstrators, triggering widespread anger.
The government denies these allegations.
“It’s not students anymore, it seems that people from all walks of life have joined the protest movement,” Dr Samina Luthfa, assistant professor of sociology in the University of Dhaka, tells the BBC.
The protests have been a long time coming. Though Bangladesh is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, experts point out that growth has not translated into jobs for university graduates.
Estimates suggest that around 18 million young Bangladeshis are looking for jobs. University graduates face higher rates of unemployment than their less-educated peers.
Bangladesh has become a powerhouse of ready-to-wear clothing exports. The country exports around $40 billion worth of clothes to the global market.
The sector employs more than four million people, many of them women. But factory jobs are not sufficient for the aspiring younger generation.
Under Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule, Bangladesh has transformed itself by building new roads, bridges, factories and even a metro rail in the capital Dhaka.
Its per-capita income has tripled in the last decade and the World Bank estimates that more than 25 million people have been lifted out of poverty in the last 20 years.
But many say that some of that growth is only helping those close to Ms Hasina’s Awami League.
Dr Luthfa says: “We are witnessing so much corruption. Especially among those close to the ruling party. Corruption has been continuing for a long time without being punished.”
Social media in Bangladesh in recent months has been dominated by discussions about corruption allegations against some of Ms Hasina’s former top officials – including a former army chief, ex-police chief, senior tax officers and state recruitment officials.
Ms Hasina last week said she was taking action against corruption, and that it was a long-standing problem.
During the same press conference in Dhaka, she said she had taken action against a household assistant – or peon – after he allegedly amassed $34 million.
“He can’t move without a helicopter. How has he earned so much money? I took action immediately after knowing this,”
She did not identify the individual.
The reaction of the Bangladeshi media was that this much money could only have been accumulated through lobbying for government contracts, corruption, or bribery.
The anti-corruption commission in Bangladesh has launched an investigation into former police chief Benazir Ahmed – once seen as a close ally of Ms Hasina – for amassing millions of dollars, allegedly through illegal means. He denies the allegations.
This news didn’t escape ordinary people in the country, who are struggling with the escalating cost of living.
In addition to corruption allegations, many rights activists point out that space for democratic activity has shrunk over the past 15 years.
“For three consecutive elections, there has been no credible free and fair polling process,” Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch, told the BBC.
“[Ms Hasina] has perhaps underestimated the level of dissatisfaction people had about being denied the most basic democratic right to choose their own leader,” Ms Ganguly said.
The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) boycotted elections in 2014 and 2024 saying free and fair elections were not possible under Ms Hasina and that they wanted the polls to be held under a neutral caretaker administration.
Ms Hasina has always rejected this demand.
Rights groups also say more than 80 people, many of them government critics, have disappeared in the past 15 years, and that their families have no information on them.
The government is accused of stifling dissent and the media, amid wider concerns that Sheikh Hasina has grown increasingly autocratic over the years. But ministers deny the charges.
“The anger against the government and the ruling party have been accumulating for a long time,” says Dr Luthfa.
“People are showing their anger now. People resort to protest if they don’t have any recourse left.”
Ms Hasina’s ministers say the government has shown extreme restraint despite what they describe as provocative actions by protesters.
They say demonstrations have been infiltrated by their political opposition and by Islamist parties, who they say initiated the violence.
Law Minister Anisul Huq said the government was open to discussing the issues.
“The government has been reaching out to the student protesters. When there is a reasonable argument, we are willing to listen,” Mr Huq told the BBC earlier this week.
The student protests are probably the biggest challenge that has faced Ms Hasina since January 2009.
How they are resolved will depend on how she handles the unrest and, most importantly, how she addresses the public’s growing anger.
Fined for yellow and blue shoes: How Russian laws smother dissent
Dissent is not tolerated in Vladimir Putin’s Russia.
For years Kremlin critics have faced a host of laws which could be used against them, and since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine that toolbox of measures has swelled in size.
The laws target basic rights such as freedom of speech and freedom of assembly – even though they are enshrined in Russia’s constitution.
The repressive nature of the punishments, often disproportionate to the offence, harks back to the methods of the old Soviet Union.
Spreading ‘false information’
The law used most widely against critics of the war in Ukraine is the criminal offence of spreading “deliberately false information” about the Russian army.
It was rushed through parliament shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was “urgently needed because of the absolutely unprecedented information war waged against our country”.
According to prominent Russian human rights group OVD-Info, more than 300 people have since been charged or convicted under it.
Even though the law mentions “false” information, it has been used against people who highlight crimes that are well-documented but denied by Russia.
Ilya Yashin is one of the most high-profile critics of the war to be convicted under this law. The former head of a Moscow disctrict council was given eight and half years in jail for a live stream on YouTube in which he urged an investigation into the murder of civilians in the Ukrainian town of Bucha.
In April 2023, prominent opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza was sentenced to 25 years in jail on charges of treason and spreading “false information” about the Russian army.
His case was partly based on a speech in which he accused Russian troops in Ukraine of committing war crimes by using cluster bombs in residential areas and bombing maternity hospitals and schools.
The law has also been applied to Russians with far smaller public profiles.
Russian-language tutor Raisa Boldova, 61, was handed a suspended one-year community service sentence for posting critical comments about attacks on civilians in Ukraine, including the bombing of the Mariupol maternity hospital.
In an echo of a chilling Soviet practice of confining dissidents to mental hospitals, the court also ordered her to undergo a compulsory psychiatric evaluation.
‘Discrediting’ the Russian army
Another recent law penalises “discrediting” the Russian army, and it has been applied to a broad variety of actions interpreted either as support for Ukraine or criticism of the war.
These include:
- Wearing clothes in the blue-and-yellow colours of the Ukrainian flag
- Writing anti-war slogans on cakes, as did pastry chef Anastasia Chernysheva
- Dyeing one’s hair blue-and-yellow or listening to Ukrainian music
- Displaying anti-war posters with messages ranging from “No War” to eight asterisks – the number of Russian letters that spell “No War” – or even just a blank sheet of paper.
A village priest in Kostroma region was fined for discrediting Russia’s armed forces after praying for peace and mentioning the sixth commandment, “Thou shalt not kill”.
Targeting ‘foreign agents’
Russia’s “foreign agents” law allows restrictions to be imposed on critics without convicting them of any wrongdoing.
Individuals or organisations that have criticised or scrutinised government policies are targeted if they are deemed to have received money from abroad – even from a relative – or merely to be under “foreign influence”.
The label has to be attached to all public communications, a practice designed to undermine trust in them and one that resembles the Soviet practice of branding dissidents “enemies of the people”.
Among Russia’s “foreign agents” are election monitor Golos, prominent pollster Levada Centre, rights group OVD-Info, a movement of wives of mobilised soldiers called The Way Home and numerous independent news websites and journalists including Nobel Peace Prize winner Dmitry Muratov.
Books written by so-called foreign agents have started to disappear from shops and libraries.
‘Undesirable organisations’ and ‘extremists’
A “foreign agent” label can make life difficult – but being declared “undesirable” amounts to an outright ban.
All manner of organisations have been banned from Russia in this way – from the NGO Greenpeace to London-based think-tank Chatham House, as well as a number of key Russian media outlets.
Late opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation was disbanded after being declared “extremist” – another label used to effectively erase individuals and organisations from public life.
Navalny himself was handed a lengthy prison sentence and died in jail in February 2024. His widow says he was killed by President Putin. Several of Navalny’s lawyers were themselves arrested on charges of extremism.
Rallies and protests
In Russia, anyone who wishes to hold a demonstration needs permission from the authorities. If the rally is critical of the government, that is practically impossible.
“One-person pickets” are allowed, but many are regularly shut down – ostensibly because of Covid restrictions.
One man was fined for wearing blue-and-yellow shoes – seen as a violation of laws regulating political demonstrations. And a journalist from Vologda Region, Antonida Smolina, was visited by police after someone complained about photographs she had posted online showing her posing in a yellow coat against a blue sky.
Other actions outlawed in Russia include “disrespect” for the authorities and calls for sanctions to be imposed on the country.
Laws as a tool to ‘legitimise repression’
According to Natalia Prilutskaya of Amnesty International, the Kremlin uses laws to “legitimise repression”, partly by exploiting the vague wording of some Russian laws.
“This vagueness allows law enforcement structures to qualify basically any activity as a forbidden activity, or at least it makes it easier,” Ms Prilutskaya told the BBC.
Dmitrii Anisimov, spokesman for Russian human rights group OVD-Info, argues that laws are a particularly important for the Kremlin because of the way Russia’s security apparatus functions.
“The Russian security community is fairly bureaucratic and it needs legal norms for their actions,” he said. Legislation used by the security services had been “deliberately designed in a way that makes their application simple and widespread”, he added.
Ms Prilutskaya says it all adds up to a general climate of repression, which she blames on President Vladimir Putin.
“The ambitions of one person have brought Russia to the edge of a really deep abyss,” she said.
Inches from death: An hour that shook America
The flinch was instinctive as the first crack sounded around Butler’s showgrounds. Donald Trump’s hand darted to his ear as more cracks came in. Screams welled up from the crowd as he ducked, and as Secret Service agents buried him in the mass of their bodies.
It had just gone 18:12 on Saturday, 13 July, and Thomas Matthew Crooks, having already been flagged by police as suspicious, had managed to climb onto a warehouse roof, line up his AR-15 style rifle, and fire a volley of bullets towards the former president.
What happened in just a few moments at Butler Farm Show grounds would shake American politics, and leave many asking how a man was able to enter the grounds with a powerful gun, climb to a firing spot unchallenged, and get within an inch of Trump’s life.
Using witness accounts, original reporting and statements from law enforcement, the BBC has pieced together a picture of the events that chaotic day.
The late afternoon summer sun beat down from a clear blue sky, as this small town in Pennsylvania prepared for its biggest spectacle in years.
The crowds were flocking to a showground transformed into a slice of Americana; everything festooned in red, white and blue, a sea of flags, campaign posters covering almost every surface.
Greg Smith was among them. He had spent the day at his home in Butler with friends and family, eating BBQ and drinking beer, before heading down the road to take in the spectacle.
“We were hanging out, having a party. Then we were all like ‘hey, Trump’s here – let’s walk up to the rally and look at him through the fence’,” he told the BBC. “It was just a good time.”
Corey Comperatore, 50, a retired volunteer firefighter and avowed Trump supporter, was also there with his wife and one of their two daughters. They scored a prime spot to the right of the stage, and waited for the show to begin.
Local police mingled with the crowd outside the event’s security fences. Secret Service agents and state police worked together inside the perimeter, while anti-sniper teams were positioned on roofs of nearby buildings, watching.
Somewhere in that crowd was Crooks, a 20-year-old from nearby Bethel Park. But he wasn’t with family, or friends, and his motivations were not the same. In the hours before, his parents Matthew and Mary had reported him missing to the police, saying they were “worried” that he had disappeared.
At some point before the rally, too, Crooks had scoped out the area using a drone, according to US media reports.
Security sources told CBS, the BBC’s US news partner, that Crooks first came to the attention of police at 17:10, 52 minutes before Trump took to the stage, and was “identified as a person of interest”. Why was that not disclosed?
It was 20 minutes later, at 17:30, that Crooks was noticed looking at a roof by a local SWAT team stationed in buildings outside the security perimeter.
One officer took a photo and radioed to others that he had seen a man peering through a rangefinder – a device hunters use to measure distance to a target.
They did not report seeing a gun. Crooks remained free to wander.
Another 22 minutes passed before Crooks was again spotted – at 17:52 – this time on the roof of a warehouse around 140m (400ft) from the stage. It was outside the security perimeter on a direct line of sight to the podium where Trump was due to speak.
Mr Smith was near that building, standing by a tree, and spotted Crooks too. “I looked over, and there’s a guy crawling up the roof with a rifle,” he told the BBC – the first time it appears anyone saw an actual weapon.
“We’re telling police ‘hey, there’s a guy on the roof with a rifle’, and they’re running around on the ground like they don’t know what’s going on. It was, like, two minutes – this guy was crawling up the roof.”
He said Secret Service agents on the roof of an adjacent building were “looking with binoculars” as he pointed.
Trump takes the stage at 18:02 wearing a dark blue suit, open-neck white shirt and red Make America Great Again baseball cap. He is shadowed by three Secret Service agents in dark suits, white shirts and dark sunglasses.
A full 10 minutes had elapsed since Crooks was spotted on the roof.
God Bless the USA (I’m Proud To Be An American) by Lee Greenwood blasts from festival loudspeakers hoisted high in the air.
Walking past several gold-trimmed flags, Trump shakes hands with supporters to applause and cheers. Within a minute he is at the podium, the crowd as his backdrop chanting “USA! USA!” and holding banners reading “Trump 2024” and “You’re Fired”.
“This is a big crowd, a big, big beautiful crowd,” he tells the gathering in its thousands. “Hello Butler and hello to Pennsylvania, I’m thrilled to be back.”
Around this time, approximately 140m away, Crooks is challenged by police.
According to Tom Knights, Butler’s township manager, four of the town’s traffic officers are radioed about a suspicious person on the roof. They “instinctively” bolt from their posts to confront the danger.
One of the officers is boosted by a colleague and pokes their head over the roof lip. They find themselves in the sights of an AR-15-style rifle held by a long-haired man with glasses. The officer is in an impossible position, and drops eight feet to the ground, according to Mr Knights.
The officers radio another alert, but Crooks remains unhindered.
Mr Smith later recalled continuing to point at the roof and yell to police. “I’m standing here like this,” he told the BBC, “telling them ‘hey there’s a guy up here’, and then I’m thinking in my mind like, ‘why is Trump still talking? Why do I still hear him on stage?'”
But Trump is in full flow, launching into familiar topics about the country being “stolen”, the “rigged” 2020 election, “crooked” Joe Biden and “laughing” Kamala Harris.
Seven minutes in, at 18:09, he turns the topic to immigration. “We have millions and millions of people in our country that shouldn’t be here. Dangerous people. Criminals. Drug dealers,” he says.
At about 18:11, he goes “off auto-cue” and turns to a chart on his right showing immigration levels, and rails at Mr Biden’s border policies.
“And if you want to really see something that said… take a look what happened…”
He doesn’t finish his thought. The time is 18:12, and Crooks fires his first shot.
A snap is heard and Trump flinches. More snaps, and Trump clutches his right ear and begins to duck beneath the podium.
A shout of “DOWN DOWN DOWN GET DOWN” is heard as confused screams well up from the crowd. Within seconds the former president is mobbed by four Secret Service agents as yet more shots echo around the grounds.
Shocked crowd members duck in their seats – there is nowhere to go. They know nothing of the condition of the former president now under a scrum of security.
To the left of the stage, a loudspeaker rig appears to have been hit by a bullet, gas escaping from the hydraulics as the speakers begin falling to the ground. Confused screams become ever louder.
A video posted to the TMZ website shows Crooks on the roof around this time, the air filled with the sounds of gunfire and the yells from people below. “What is he doing?” screams one woman, as a man warns “he’s turning this way, guys”.
But Crooks has only seconds to live. Secret Service counter-snipers acquire him as a target within 11 seconds of his first shot. Fifteen seconds after that he is dead, CBS quoted security sources as saying.
“I heard about four or five shots and everyone was running,” said Mr Smith afterwards. “I stood by the tree and watched him get shot in the head by the Secret Service. They took him out but… security failure, 100%.”
Back on the stage, Trump is buried under even more agents. “Hold, hold are you ready? On you,” says one of the guards as his words are picked up by the podium microphone. “Move! Move!”
Officers in combat gear then take up positions around them, their assault rifles at the ready.
“Shooter’s down, we’re clear,” an agent shouts and Trump is hoisted back into view. Blood covers his ear and there are spatters on his face and shirt collar, but he tells the agents, “let me get my speaker, let me get my shoes…. wait wait wait.”
He then repeatedly punches his fist into the air and mouths the words “fight, fight, fight”, before being hauled away by agents still using their bodies as cover.
Shouts of “USA! USA!” rise up as Trump is led off the stage, approximately one minute and 10 seconds after the first shot.
While the former president survived without serious injury, others had not. Some of Crooks’ bullets missed Trump but struck the crowd. Mr Comperatore, the volunteer firefighter, was hit in the head as he shielded his family.
A doctor seated behind the stage, James Sweetland, tried to help. “Someone over there was screaming, ‘He’s been shot, he’s been shot’,” Dr Sweetland told the BBC.
“The guy had spun around [and was] jammed between the benches. There was a lot of blood.”
He couldn’t do anything to help. Mr Comperatore was dead.
Two other people, David Dutch, 57, and 74-year-old James Copenhaver, were critically injured, but survived.
A few hours later, back at home, Mr Smith recalled watching the “terrifying” aftermath on television. “There were a lot of kids up there with us, terrified. They’re still terrified. My kid was terrified, crying and begging me to take him home.
“I can’t accept that there is ever a reason for something like this to happen.”
The would-be assassin was dead, Trump had survived, but answers are yet to be given about how this could have happened so easily.
Cyanide teacups in Room 502: Mystery of the Bangkok hotel deaths
There was little to indicate what had happened on the fifth floor of the Grand Hyatt Erawan in Bangkok until police officers opened the door.
No-one was heard to scream, or had rung for help. No-one had even made it to the door.
Even inside, there were apparently no signs of struggle – the untouched late lunch still laid out neatly on the table for the occupants to enjoy.
From outside of Room 502, the only clue to the horror inside the locked room was the fact the group were late checking out of the hotel.
And yet inside were six bodies, alongside tea cups laced with cyanide.
It didn’t take officers long to work out the occupants of the room had drunk the poisoned tea, or to find out who the apparent victims were.
But days after police revealed the grim discovery, big questions remain: why them – and who did it?
Who are the six people who died?
Four of the victims are Vietnamese nationals – Thi Nguyen Phuong, 46, her husband Hong Pham Thanh, 49, Thi Nguyen Phuong Lan, 47, and Dinh Tran Phu, 37.
The other two are American citizens of Vietnamese origin – Sherine Chong, 56, and Dang Hung Van, 55.
According to investigators, Chong was believed to have borrowed 10 million baht ($280,000; £215,000) from husband and wife Hong Pham Thanh and Thi Nguyen Phuong to invest in a hospital building project in Japan. The couple, who owned a construction business, had apparently tried in vain to get their money back.
In fact, the matter was due to go to court in Japan in a matter of weeks.
On the face of it, this meeting appeared to be an attempt to discuss the issue in advance of the case.
Thi Nguyen Phuong Lan was there because Chong – who US media have said lived in Oakland, California – had asked her to act as her intermediary with the couple regarding the investment.
But how were the other two linked to the case?
Dinh Tran Phu – a successful make-up artist whose clientele includes movie stars, singers and beauty queens in Vietnam – was at the gathering working for Chong.
His father, speaking to BBC Vietnamese, emphasised the fact he had travelled to Thailand with his regular clients, not with strangers.
A close friend, meanwhile, said he knew both Thi Nguyen Phuong and Thi Nguyen Phuong Lan, having introduced them to treatments at a friend’s spa in Da Nang, where he lived.
Dang Hung Van’s participation in the hotel suite meeting was not immediately clear.
Police said there was a seventh name in the hotel reservation, the sister of one of the six. That person returned to Vietnam from Thailand last week and police said she was not involved in the incident.
What happened in their hotel suite?
The group checked into the hotel separately over the weekend and were assigned five rooms – four on the seventh floor, and one on the fifth.
Chong checked into Room 502 on Sunday. The five others visited her in her suite that day, but they headed back to their respective rooms for the night.
Before noon on Monday, Dang Hung Van ordered six cups of tea while Dinh Tran Phu, the make-up artist, ordered fried rice from their respective rooms. They asked that it be delivered to Room 502 at 14:00 local time.
A few minutes before 14:00, Chong started receiving the food orders at Room 502. She was alone in the suite at that time.
Police said she refused the waiter’s offer to brew tea for her party. The waiter also found that she “spoke very little and was visibly under stress”.
The rest of the group started arriving soon after. The couple went in lugging a suitcase.
At 14:17, all six could be seen by the door before it was shut. From then on, there was no sign of movement from inside.
They had been scheduled to check out on Monday but failed to do so.
Police entered the room at 16:30 on Tuesday and found the six dead on the floor.
The initial investigation found that two appeared to have tried get to the suite’s door, but failed to reach it in time.
All the bodies bore signs of cyanide poisoning, which can – in certain doses – kill within minutes. Their lips and nails had turned dark purple indicating a lack of oxygen, while their internal organs turned “blood red”, which is another sign of cyanide poisoning.
Investigators say there is “no other cause” that would explain their deaths “except for cyanide”.
Further tests are being carried out to determine the “intensity” of the deadly chemical and to rule out any other toxins.
Cyanide starves the body’s cells of oxygen, which can induce heart attacks. Early symptoms include dizziness, shortness of breath and vomiting.
Its use in Thailand is heavily regulated and those found to have unauthorised access face up to two years in jail.
Who poisoned them?
Police suspect that one of the dead was behind the poisoning and was driven by crushing debt – but have not said who.
According to Vietnamese outlet VN Express, investigators said Chong had been sued by all the other five over their failed investments.
The meeting in Bangkok was called to negotiate a settlement, but the attempt failed.
What other leads are investigators chasing?
Police have sought a statement from the group’s tour guide in Bangkok, 35-year-old Phan Ngoc Vu.
The guide reportedly said that before she died, Thi Nguyen Phuong Lan, the mediator, had asked someone to buy traditional medicine containing snake blood for her joint pains.
Then there are the two metal beverage containers that did not belong to the hotel found by police in the suite.
The containers were placed beside the cyanide-laced teacups, near the dining table.
What is certain is that officials want the matter resolved quickly.
Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh has directed officials in Hanoi to co-ordinate closely with their Thai counterparts on the investigation.
As for Thai authorities, it couldn’t have come at a worse time for Thailand. It had just expanded visa-free entry to 93 countries to revive its tourism industry, a key economic pillar that has yet to fully recover from the pandemic.
Barely a year before, a 14-year-old boy shot dead two people at a luxury shopping mall, also in Bangkok.
Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin was with police on the scene at the Grand Hyatt on Tuesday night. He said there was no danger to public safety and that it was a private matter.
For the families left behind, the shock is palpable.
BBC Vietnamese got hold of the make-up artist’s mother, Tuy, on the phone, but she was sobbing so uncontrollably that she hung up after a short conversation. She said she thought her son was just on a routine work trip.
His father, Tran Dinh Dung, said in a separate interview that he did not notice anything strange with his son the last time he saw him.
The Spanish fightback against record tourism
If you can elbow your way onto one of Majorca’s sunspots this summer, you will witness two unstoppable forces.
The first, as old as time, the waves of the Balearic Sea, methodically erasing the day’s lovingly crafted sandcastles.
The second, a more modern phenomenon, the tsunami of tourism threatening to consume all in its path.
Every inch of beach is taken. Finding a parking space is like striking gold.
If you leave your sunbed for too long, your possessions are unceremoniously turfed to make space for the long queue of would-be usurpers.
All these are the signs of a bonanza that’s seen and heard across the island, not least in the incessant beeping of contactless payment machines ringing out from the teeming hotels, restaurants and bars.
A chorus of commerce powered by record numbers of visitors.
But if this is a tale of colossal wealth being showered onto a business-savvy Spanish community, Sonia Ruiz certainty has not shared any of it.
We meet the mother of one, 31, in a park a few hundred metres from the shore in the capital, Palma.
Her four-year-old son Luca negotiates the various playground slides with no apparent concern.
But Sonia is really struggling. Her landlord has asked them to leave and she says finding a new place is impossible.
“Every day I’m looking and every day the rent is higher,” she says.
“I even stop people in the street and ask if they have something because the day is approaching when I will have to leave the apartment, and I just see me and my son homeless because there is absolutely nothing.”
Sonia and her partner are separated but have been forced to live together because individually they cannot afford the cost of rent, despite taking home 2,400 euros a month between them.
“They ask you for deposits of several months. Some have even told me that they don’t want children, they don’t want animals. And so many people are looking.”
Like thousands of Majorcans, Sonia is protesting this weekend against the surge in tourism that is being blamed for plummeting living standards among the local population.
Activists say spiralling housing costs are being driven by a huge number of houses and apartments being bought by foreigners, or at least rented out to them for large chunks of the summer.
“It’s impossible to sustain this sort of model,” 25-year-old Pere Joan Femenia explains from outside the cathedral in Majorca’s capital, Palma.
He is part of a movement called “Menys Turisme, Més Vida”, or “Less Tourism, More Life”.
He says not only are unprecedented numbers of visitors pricing locals out of the housing market, they are also using up public spaces, public services and natural resources.
Pere started his activism five years ago as part of Greta Thunberg’s climate movement, but his focus has shifted to the cost of living for his fellow islanders.
“Businesses are changing from one’s selling traditional products to multi-nationals selling ice cream and we are losing our identity. We want to preserve our culture,” he says.
Pere points over to the port, far beyond the rows of street vendors and swelling crowds filling the square, explaining that some cruises disgorge as many of 12,000 visitors every day onto the island.
He says it is a myth that Majorca needs ever-expanding tourism to survive, and that the reality is many locals are preparing to leave for good because they can no longer afford it here.
Pere argues that putting limits on flights arriving and cruises docking will immediately ease the pressure on the island.
It is a demand that will form part of the slogans and banners carried around Palma during this weekend’s protest.
Spain’s National Institute of statistics says last year 14.4 million foreign tourists visited the Balearic Islands, of which Majorca is by far the biggest – followed by Menorca then Ibiza.
The institute says the number of international visitors to the archipelago increased by 9.1% compared with 2022 while their spending went up even more – 16.4%.
When Spanish visitors are taken into account too, activists claim this year could see 20 million visitors to the Balearics.
As Spain’s tourist hotspots have developed over the decades, the debate over whether the millions of visitors bring more problems than benefits has intensified.
This year it feels like something has changed. The anger among many locals is reaching a new level – notably demonstrated in Barcelona recently when visitors were drenched with water pistols.
There have been demonstrations elsewhere on the mainland, in Malaga, as well as in the Canary Islands. Spain’s tourist magnets are now looking to repel a seemingly inexorable deluge.
Some British newspapers compiled lists of “hostile holiday hotspots” to avoid in the summer of 2024.
On a packed beach in Magaluf, the long-time destination of choice for millions of British holidaymakers, the Green family from Rotherham are paddling happily.
This is dad Adam’s first trip abroad, although calling it a “holiday” may be a stretch as he and his wife keep tabs on their seven kids.
“It’s hectic, but we’re getting there. Apart from the heat, it’s great” he says.
I ask whether they’ve heard about the various protests that have been taking place and if it made them think twice about coming out to Majorca.
“I saw a little bit on the news”, says Charlotte, “but I tried not to watch it because I didn’t want it to stress me out and put me off coming because we’d already booked and paid for it.”
And how about the central thrust of the local protesters’ argument – that burgeoning tourism is having a hugely negative impact?
“Don’t the tourists boost it and make the money for this place?” asks Adam.
“People travel around the world and this is it. With no tourists there’d be no jobs, no wages, no nowt. They rely on it, don’t they?”
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What Covid revealed about gender inequality in India
How do you assess the impact of the Covid pandemic on a population?
One way is by examining life expectancy, or the average number of years a person can expect to live.
A team of 10 researchers from the UK, the US and Europe have studied the mortality impacts of the pandemic in India by sex, social group and age. Their peer-reviewed paper has been published in Science Advances, a US journal.
They found that life expectancy at birth in India was 2.6 years lower and mortality was 17% higher in 2020 compared to 2019. This implied 1.19 million excess deaths in 2020. Excess deaths are a simple measure of how many more people are dying than expected, compared with previous years.
The researchers of the new study say life expectancy declines in India were larger and affected a younger age profile compared to high-income countries.
They found that mortality rose among all age groups, but compared to high-income countries, the increase was particularly pronounced in younger age groups, leading to larger declines in life expectancy.
The researchers also found something which was more worrying.
For one, females experienced a life expectancy decline of one year greater than males. This contrasts with patterns in most other countries and may be due to gender inequality, say the researchers from University of Oxford, University of California, Berkeley and Paris School of Economics, among others.
Also, marginalised social groups – Muslims, Dalits, and tribespeople – in India saw larger declines in life expectancy compared to privileged upper caste people, exacerbating existing disparities.
The researchers agree that before Covid, these groups already had significant disadvantages in life expectancy. The pandemic worsened these disparities, with declines comparable to or greater than those seen among Native Americans, Blacks, and Hispanics in the US in 2020, the study says.
“These findings uncover large and unequal mortality impacts during the pandemic in the world’s most populous country,” Sangita Vyas, of CUNY Hunter College and one of the researchers, told me.
More than 4.7 million people in India – nearly 10 times higher than official records suggest – are thought to have died because of Covid, according to a 2022 World Health Organization (WHO) report. India’s government rejected the figure, saying the methodology was flawed.
To be sure, the latest study looked at deaths from all causes, not just deaths from Covid. “For that reason we can’t conclude that women in India were more likely to die of Covid than men,” says Ms Vyas. “What we can conclude is that the increase in mortality from all causes was greater for women than men”.
The researchers believe these patterns partly stem from gender inequality.
Previous research shows Indian households spend less on healthcare for females compared to males, a disparity which likely worsened during the pandemic. Fewer females appear in India’s official Covid-19 case data, despite surveys showing similar infection rates among males and females.
Furthermore, severe disruptions to maternal healthcare and livelihoods due to lockdowns likely contributed to these trends.
How did the researchers come to these findings? They surveyed data of more than 765,000 people – a sample size that accurately reflects the diversity and distribution of a quarter of India’s population – to identify patterns missed by incomplete data and disease surveillance.
India’s National Family Health Survey 5 collected high quality data on recent household deaths and socio-economic characteristics. This allowed researchers to analyse age, sex, and group-specific mortality patterns. They compared mortality in 2019 and 2020 using data from the same households interviewed in 2021.
The researchers believe more research is necessary to explore why females in India experienced higher excess deaths than males, why excess mortality affected younger age groups more in India compared to other countries, and why Muslims saw significant declines in life expectancy compared to other social groups.
“These patterns likely resulted from disparities in healthcare access and underlying health, differing impacts of lockdowns on public health and livelihoods, and increased discrimination against marginalised groups,” says Ms Vyas.
How China swerved worst of global tech meltdown
While most of the world was grappling with the blue screen of death on Friday, one country that managed to escape largely unscathed was China.
The reason is actually quite simple: CrowdStrike is hardly used there.
Very few organisations will buy software from an American firm that, in the past, has been vocal about the cyber-security threat posed by Beijing.
Additionally, China is not as reliant on Microsoft as the rest of the world. Domestic companies such as Alibaba, Tencent and Huawei are the dominant cloud providers.
So reports of outages in China, when they did come, were mainly at foreign firms or organisations. On Chinese social media sites, for example, some users complained they were not able to check into international chain hotels such as Sheraton, Marriott and Hyatt in Chinese cities.
Over recent years, government organisations, businesses and infrastructure operators have increasingly been replacing foreign IT systems with domestic ones. Some analysts like to call this parallel network the “splinternet”.
“It’s a testament to China’s strategic handling of foreign tech operations,” says Josh Kennedy-White, a cybersecurity expert based in Singapore.
“Microsoft operates in China through a local partner, 21Vianet, which manages its services independently of its global infrastructure. This setup insulates China’s essential services – like banking and aviation – from global disruptions.”
Beijing sees avoiding reliance on foreign systems as a way of shoring up national security.
It is similar to the way some Western countries banned Chinese tech firm Huawei’s technology in 2019 – or the UK’s move to ban the use of Chinese-owned TikTok on government devices in 2023.
Since then, the US has launched a concerted effort to ban sales of advanced semiconductor chip tech to China, as well as attempts to stop American companies from investing in Chinese technology. The US government says all of these restrictions are on national security grounds.
An editorial published on Saturday in the state-run Global Times newspaper made a thinly veiled reference to these curbs on Chinese technology.
“Some countries constantly talk about security, generalise the concept of security, but ignore the real security, this is ironic,” the editorial said.
The argument here is that the US tries to dictate the terms of who can use global technology and how it is used, yet one of its own companies has caused global chaos through lack of care.
The Global Times also took a jab at the internet giants who “monopolise” the industry: “Relying solely on top companies to lead network security efforts, as some countries advocate, may hinder not just the inclusive sharing of governance outcomes but also introduce new security risks.”
The reference to “sharing” is probably an allusion to the debate over intellectual property insofar as China is often accused of copying or stealing western technology. Beijing insists this is not the case and advocates for an open global technology marketplace – while still keeping tight control over its domestic scene.
Not everything was totally unaffected in China, however. A small numbers of workers expressed thanks to an American software giant for ending their working week early.
“Thank you Microsoft for an early vacation,” was trending on the social media site Weibo on Friday, with users posting pictures of blue error screens.
Trump tells Michigan rally he ‘took a bullet for democracy’
Donald Trump has told a rally in Michigan that he “took a bullet for democracy” when an attempt was made on his life last week.
He also derided President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris at the event in Grand Rapids – his first with new running mate JD Vance and the first since he survived the assassination attempt.
He told a packed arena that Democrats had accused him of being “a threat to democracy” and, to huge applause, said he was ready to “take back the White House”.
An investigation is under way into the shooting last weekend, which left Trump with a wounded ear – though the prominent white bandage he wore throughout the Republican National Convention had on Saturday been replaced by a discreet flesh-toned plaster.
The gunman flew a drone above the site of the shooting ahead of time, law enforcement officials have told US media.
The Grand Rapids event was one of several campaign stops the former president has made in the key battleground state, as polls show him in a close race against Mr Biden.
Mr Biden, meanwhile, has had to pause campaign events after testing positive for Covid-19. He continues to resist growing calls from members of his own party to drop out of the race due to concerns about his age and cognitive abilities.
During his speech Mr Trump repeated the falsehood that the 2020 election – which he lost to Mr Biden – had been “rigged”.
He mocked the crisis around Mr Biden’s own bid for re-election as president, saying: “They don’t know who their candidate is, and neither do we.”
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In rhetoric that departed from his calls for unity immediately after the shooting, he used insulting language about Mr Biden and about Ms Harris, who is well-placed to become the Democratic nominee if Mr Biden steps aside.
Mr Trump again sought to distance himself from Project 2025 – a detailed 900-page proposal from the Heritage Foundation think tank.
Led by former Trump administration officials, Project 2025 calls for measures including the sacking of thousands of civil servants, expanding the power of the president, dismantling the Department of Education, sweeping tax cuts, a ban on pornography and halting sales of the abortion pill.
“The radical right… they’re seriously extreme,” he said.
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Trump was not scheduled to address the crowd until 17:00 EST (21:00 GMT) but by 13:00, a line stretched for about three miles (4.8km) outside the 12,000-person Van Del Arena.
Many of those at the event, in the battleground state of Michigan, told the BBC that the assassination attempt – which killed an audience member and wounded two others – would not stop them from showing support for the Republican presidential nominee.
Some said they came precisely because of the shooting.
Unlike that rally, held in Butler, Pennsylvania, the Grand Rapids event was indoors – allowing security officers to carefully monitor who entered and to cut off threats from outside the rally.
In his speech, Trump thanked the “thousands and thousands” of people who came to see him “almost exactly” a week after the assassination attempt.
“I stand before you only by the grace of almighty God,” he said, repeating his belief that divine intervention saved him from being killed.
Wendy and Steve Upcott of Clarkston, Michigan, were among the thousands who drove from all over the state to see him, many reassured by the increased security.
The couple said their 26-year-old daughter begged them not to attend the event two hours from home, fearing for their safety in the wake of the assassination attempt. But they felt obliged to come after the shooting last weekend.
“The chances of it happening again just one week to the day later is unlikely,” said Ms Upcott.
Them and many others in Grand Rapids were decked out in red Make America Great Again caps, along with cowboy hats, shirts and full outfits resembling the American flag. T-shirts with Trump’s mug shot were also for sale.
Laura Schultz said she thought about her safety on Saturday morning before she decided to come to the event with a friend.
“You can’t let fear stop you,” she said.
Other rally-goers, including several young adults, said the assassination attempt pushed them to attend the Michigan rally.
It was the first Trump campaign event for fellow Donald, a 24 year old from Grand Rapids, who wore a shirt with the viral image of Trump pumping his fist after being shot.
“This is the first event after the attempted assassination. I think it’s probably going to be the most important rally,” he said, declining to share his last name.
Donald said he had no fears for his own safety, because of the hundreds of police officers, including some on horseback.
But others said they remained scared for Trump.
“It should be a concern for most Americans that he is still not safe,” Ms Upcott said.
“He needs to be very careful,” said Ms Schultz.
Other supporters expressed outrage at the US Secret Service over the incident last week.
The agency has faced intense scrutiny after shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks was able to take aim at Trump in Pennsylvania by climbing onto a roof of a building near the rally stage, even after rallygoers pointed him out to police.
Investigators have still yet to name a motive for the 20-year-old gunman who was later killed by Secret Service agents.
Since then, the country has become more attuned to possible threats to both presidential candidates. Police in Jupiter, Florida, on Friday arrested a man for allegedly posting threats to Trump on social media, while a different man from Florida was arrested a few days earlier for allegedly threatening President Joe Biden.
Saturday’s Michigan indoor event space was much easier to secure, with metal detectors and military personnel sweeping the whole building, said former Secret Service agent Jason Russell, who has worked on campaign events at the Grand Rapids arena.
“You’ll have a pretty, pretty significant number of agents on site,” Mr Russell said, adding that they would be able to keep Trump out of view until his entrance.
On Saturday, the former White House physician, Dr Ronny Jackson, released a statement about his condition after having examined Trump.
The bullet created a 2cm-wide wound on Trump’s ear that extended down to the cartilage, Dr Jackson said, which is beginning to “heal properly.” No stitches had been needed, he added.
Trump’s campaign also announced that it plans to hold its next rally in Charlotte, North Carolina on 24 July at the Bojangles Coliseum.
Bella Hadid’s Adidas advert dropped after Israeli criticism
Adidas has dropped the supermodel Bella Hadid, who is half Palestinian, from an advertising campaign for retro shoes referencing the 1972 Munich Olympics.
Israel had criticised the choice of Ms Hadid. It accused her of hostility to Israel and noted that 11 Israeli athletes had been killed by Palestinian attackers at the Munich Games.
Adidas subsequently apologised and said it would “revise” its campaign.
Ms Hadid has been a vocal supporter of the Palestinians and earlier this year donated money to support relief efforts for the war in Gaza.
BBC News has contacted Hadid’s representatives for comment.
The German sportswear company had chosen Hadid to promote its SL72 trainers, which were first launched to coincide with the 1972 Olympics.
Adidas recently relaunched the SL72 shoes as part of a series reviving classic trainers.
However images of the American model wearing the shoes prompted criticism, including on Israel’s official account on X (formerly Twitter).
“Guess who the face of their campaign is? Bella Hadid, a half-Palestinian model,” a post read on Thursday.
It referred to the attack at the 1972 games, which happened when members of the Palestinian Black September group broke into the Olympic village. In addition to the Israeli athletes, a German police officer was also killed.
Other social media users defended Ms Hadid and called for a boycott of Adidas following the move to pull the campaign.
Adidas confirmed to AFP that Hadid had been removed from the campaign.
In a statement provided to the news agency, the company said it would be “revising the remainder of the campaign” with immediate effect.
“We are conscious that connections have been made to tragic historical events — though these are completely unintentional — and we apologise for any upset or distress caused.”
Hadid, whose father is Palestinian property tycoon Mohamed Anwar Hadid, has been vocal in her support for people affected by the war in Gaza.
In an Instagram post in May, Hadid said she was “devastated at the loss of the Palestinian people and the lack of empathy coming from the government systems worldwide”.
Last month, she and her supermodel sister Gigi donated $1m (£785,000) to support Palestinian relief efforts.
The conflict in Gaza began when Hamas gunmen launched an unprecedented attack on Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking 252 back to Gaza as hostages.
Israel responded by launching a military campaign in Gaza with the aims of destroying Hamas and freeing the hostages.
More than 38,900 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Clint Eastwood’s partner Christina Sandera dies
Christina Sandera, the partner of Oscar-winning actor and director Clint Eastwood, has died at the age of 61.
Eastwood, 94, confirmed her death in a statement to BBC News, adding: “Christina was a lovely, caring woman, and an important part of my life.”
He added that he would “miss her very much”.
The pair are reported to have been together for ten years. Sandera’s cause of death was not revealed.
The legendary actor and Sandera kept their relationship under wraps.
However, they were seen together in public on numerous occasions, including on the red carpets for The Mule and The 15:17 To Paris.
In 2016, they were pictured attending a screening of Sully at Directors Guild Of America in Los Angeles.
A year earlier, they attended a garden party fundraising event for animal rescue efforts.
One of the most recognisable Hollywood stars, Eastwood is known for his action and western hero roles.
His spaghetti westerns redefined the genre, while he also won fans around the world as Harry Callahan in the five Dirty Harry films throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
But as both actor and director he has stepped outside those roles, handling comedy and making serious biopics.
In a career spanning seven decades, Eastwood has scooped up multiple Academy Awards and Golden Globe Awards.
Eastwood’s 40th film as a director, Juror No. 2, is currently in postproduction.
Eastwood was previously married twice, first to model Margaret Neville Johnson, and later to TV news anchor Dina Ruiz.
His relationship with Ruiz ended in divorce in 2014.
Trump shooter flew drone above rally site ahead of time – US media
The gunman who tried to assassinate Donald Trump flew a drone above the site of the shooting ahead of time, law enforcement officials have told US media.
They say it remains unclear whether Thomas Matthew Crooks did this hours or days before the fateful rally in Pennsylvania on 13 July, reports CBS, the BBC’s US media partner.
Trump, now officially the Republican presidential nominee, has said he was saved “by luck or by God” when a bullet pierced his right ear during a campaign speech.
A spectator was killed in the attack, while two others were seriously injured.
Crooks, 20, was shot dead at the scene by Security Service agents, who have come under intense scrutiny over the precautions taken to protect Trump at the rally – held outside in the city of Butler.
Security Service chief Kimberly Cheatle has been summoned to testify before a committee of the US House of Representatives on 22 July.
First reported by the Wall Street Journal, investigators told CBS they were still trying to determine when exactly Crooks flew the drone.
They said they believed it was within days of the rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds.
Other US outlets, also citing security officials, claimed the device was flown above the area on the day the event took place.
The drone is thought to have been used by the shooter to pick the best line of sight for the podium where Trump was due to speak.
Crooks fired multiple shots from the roof of a building that was little more than 130m (430ft) from Trump.
In an interview with Fox News to be broadcast in full on Monday, Trump said nobody had warned him before he went on stage that there was a potential shooter.
“How did somebody get on that roof? And why wasn’t he reported, because people saw he was on that roof,” he said.
The drone – found in the gunman’s vehicle after the attack – is now being examined by investigators.
Two explosive devices, a tactical vest, and four magazines full of the same ammunition used in the attack were also discovered in the shooter’s vehicle.
The development comes as US Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas hit back at accusations by “some people” questioning the presence of women in law enforcement.
He praised “highly skilled and trained” women serving at every level “who risk their lives on the front lines for the safety and security of others”.
Several female agents were part of Trump’s security protocol during the shooting in Butler, shielding him after the shots were fired and leading him from the stage to a nearby security vehicle.
A number of social media users – including influential US conservative activists – later suggested that female agents were not best suited for jobs in the Secret Service.
“There should not be any women in the Secret Service,” one such activist, Matt Walsh, wrote on X. “These are supposed to be the very best, and none of the very best at this job are women.”
Some also criticised hiring practices that were focusing too much on diversity, equity and inclusion.
Mr Mayorkas said the Department of Homeland Security would “with great pride, focus and devotion to mission, continue to recruit, retain and elevate women in our law enforcement ranks”.
“Our department will be the better for it, and our country more secure,” he added.
CrowdStrike and Microsoft: What we know about global IT outage
A massive tech failure has caused travel chaos around the world, with banking and healthcare services also badly hit.
Flights have been grounded because of the IT outage – a flaw which left many computers displaying blue error screens.
There were long queues, delays and flight cancellations at airports around the world, as passengers had to be manually checked in.
Cyber-security firm CrowdStrike has admitted that the problem was caused by an update to its antivirus software, which is designed to protect Microsoft Windows devices from malicious attacks.
Microsoft has said it is taking “mitigation action” to deal with “the lingering impact” of the outage.
Here is a summary of what we know so far.
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- GPs, pharmacies and airports hit by outage
What caused the outage?
This is still a little unclear.
CrowdStrike is known for producing antivirus software, intended to prevent hackers from causing this very type of disruption.
According to CrowdStrike boss George Kurtz, the issues are only impacting Windows PCs and no other operating systems, and were caused by a defect in a recent update.
“The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed,” he said.
“This is not a security incident or cyber-attack.”
What exactly was wrong with the update is yet to be revealed, but as a potential fix involves deleting a single file, it is possible that just one rogue file could be at the root of all the mayhem.
When will it be fixed?
It could be some time.
CrowdStrike’s Mr Kurtz, speaking to NBC News, said it was the firm’s “mission” to make sure every one of its customers recovered completely from the outage.
“We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travellers, to anyone affected by this, including our companies,” he said.
He has since told CNBC that while some systems can be fixed quickly, for others it “could be hours, could be a bit longer”.
CrowdStrike has issued its fix. But according to those in the know, it will have to be applied separately to each and every device affected.
Computers will require a manual reboot in safe mode – causing a massive headache for IT departments everywhere.
What’s the solution?
Something important to note here, is that personal devices like your home computer or mobile phone are unlikely to have been affected – this outage is impacting businesses.
Microsoft is advising clients to try a classic method to get things working – turning it off and on again – in some cases up to 15 times.
The tech giant said this has worked for some users of virtual machines – PCs where the computer is not in the same place as the screen.
“Several reboots (as many as 15 have been reported) may be required, but overall feedback is that reboots are an effective troubleshooting step at this stage,” it said.
It is also telling customers with more in-depth computing knowledge that they should delete a certain file – the same solution one CrowdStrike employee has been sharing on social media.
But this fix is intended for experts and IT professionals, not regular users.
Which airports have been affected?
The problems have emerged across the world, but were first noticed in Australia, and possibly felt most severely in the air travel industry, with more than 3,300 flights cancelled globally.
- UK airports saw delays, with long queues at London’s Stansted and Gatwick.
- Ryanair said it had been “forced to cancel a small number of flights today (19 July)” and advised passengers to log-on to their Ryanair account, once it was back online, to see what their options are.
- British Airways also cancelled several flights.
- Several US airlines, notably United, Delta and American Airlines, grounded their flights around the globe for much of Friday. Australian carriers Virgin Australia and Jetstar also had to delay or cancel flights.
- Airports in Tokyo, Amsterdam and Delhi were also impacted.
Meanwhile, the problems have also hit payment systems, banking and healthcare providers around the world.
Railway companies, including Britain’s biggest which runs Southern, Thameslink, Gatwick Express and Great Northern, warned passengers to expect delays.
In Alaska, the 911 emergency service was affected, while Sky News was off air for several hours on Friday morning, unable to broadcast.
How could it affect me?
The outage might also impact people getting paid on time.
Melanie Pizzey, head of the Global Payroll Association, told PA news agency that she’d been contacted by “numerous clients” who couldn’t access their payroll software.
She said the outage could mean firms are unable to process staff payments this week, but there may be a knock-on effect too.
“We could see a backlog with regard to processing payrolls for the coming month end, which may delay employees from receiving their monthly wage,” she said.
If you’re worried about your own, personal devices, we have some good news.
The software at the centre of this outage is generally used by businesses, which means that most people’s personal computers won’t be impacted.
That means if you’re wondering whether you need to delete a certain file to avoid your computer restarting constantly, the simple answer is no, you don’t.
What is CrowdStrike?
It’s a reminder of the complexity of our modern digital infrastructure that CrowdStrike, a company that’s not exactly a household name, can be at the heart of such worldwide disarray.
The US firm, based in Austin, Texas, is a listed company on the US stock exchange, featuring in both the S&P 500 and the high-tech Nasdaq indexes.
Like a lot of modern technology companies, it hasn’t been around that long. It was founded a mere 13 years ago, but has grown to employ nearly 8,500 people.
As a provider of cyber-security services, it tends to get called in to deal with the aftermath of hack attacks.
It has been involved in investigations of several high-profile cyber-attacks, such as when Sony Pictures had its computer system hacked in 2014.
But this time, because of a flawed update to its software, a firm that is normally part of the solution to IT problems has instead caused one.
In its last earnings report, CrowdStrike declared a total of nearly 24,000 customers. That’s an indication not just of the size of the issue, but also the difficulties that could be involved in fixing it.
Each of those customers is a huge organisation in itself, so the number of individual computers affected is hard to estimate.
How bodies of frozen climbers were finally recovered from Everest ‘death zone’
Tshiring Jangbu Sherpa cannot forget the dead body he saw just metres from the summit of Mount Lhotse in the Himalayas more than a decade ago.
The Nepali was working as a guide for a German climber trying to scale the world’s fourth highest mountain in May 2012. The body blocking their path was thought to be Milan Sedlacek, a Czech mountaineer who’d perished just a few days earlier.
Mr Sherpa was curious why the Czech climber had died so close to the top. One of the gloves on the frozen corpse was missing.
“The bare hand might have slipped away from the rope,” the guide says. “He might have been killed after losing his balance and crashing onto the rock.”
The body stayed where it was – and every climber scaling Mount Lhotse thereafter had to step past it.
Mr Sherpa, 46, had no idea then that he would return 12 years later to retrieve the climber’s body, as part of a team of a dozen military personnel and 18 sherpas deployed by the Nepali army to clean up the high Himalayas.
There have been more than 300 deaths in the Everest region since records of mountain climbing there began a century ago, and many of these bodies remain. The death toll has kept increasing: eight people have been killed so far this year; and 18 died in 2023, according to Nepal’s tourism department.
The government first launched the clean-up campaign in 2019, which included removing some bodies of dead climbers. But this year was the first time that authorities set a goal to retrieve five bodies from the so-called “death zone”, above an altitude of 8,000m (26,247 feet).
In the end the team – who subsisted on water, chocolate and sattu, a mixture of chickpea, barley and wheat flour – retrieved four bodies.
One skeleton and 11 tonnes of rubbish were removed at lower attitudes after a 54-day operation that ended on 5 June.
“Nepal has received a bad name for the garbage and dead bodies which have polluted the Himalayas on a grave scale,” Major Aditya Karki, the leader of this year’s operation, told BBC Nepali.
The campaign also aims to improve safety for the climbers.
Maj Karki says many have been startled by the sight of bodies – last year, one mountaineer could not move for half an hour after seeing a dead body on the way to Mount Everest.
Cost and difficulties
Many people cannot afford to retrieve the bodies of relatives who have died on mountains in Nepal. Even if they have the financial means, most private companies refuse to help get bodies from the death zone because it is too dangerous.
The military allocated five million rupees ($37,400; £29,000) this year to retrieve each body. Twelve people are needed to lower a body from 8,000m, with each needing four cylinders of oxygen. One cylinder costs more than $400, meaning that $20,000 is needed for oxygen alone.
Every year, there is only about a 15-day window during which climbers can ascend and descend from 8,000 metres, as the winds slow down during the transition between wind cycles. In the death zone, the wind speed often exceeds 100 km per hour.
After locating the bodies, the team mostly worked after nightfall because they did not want to disturb other mountaineers. In the Everest region, which also consists of Lhotse and Nuptse, there is only one single ladder and ropeway for people climbing up and down from base camp.
“It was very tough to bring back the bodies from the death zone,” Mr Sherpa says. “I vomited sour water many times. Others kept coughing and others got headaches because we spent hours and hours at very high altitude.”
At 8,000m, even strong sherpas can carry only up to 25kg (55 pounds), less than 30% of their capacity at lower altitudes.
The body near the summit of Mount Lhotse, which stands at 8,516m, was discoloured after exposure to the sun and snow for 12 years. Half of the body was buried in snow, Mr Sherpa says.
All four climbers’ bodies retrieved were found in the same position as they had died. Their frozen state meant their limbs could not be moved, making transportation even more difficult.
Nepali law states that all bodies have to remain in the best condition before they are returned to authorities – any damage could result in penalties.
The clean-up team arranged a roping system to bring the bodies down gradually, because pushing them from behind or pulling them from in front was not possible. Sometimes, the bodies became stuck in the rocky, icy terrain, and pulling them out again was a laborious task.
It took 24 hours non-stop to bring the body presumed to belong to the Czech climber to the nearest camp, which is just about 3.5km away, Mr Sherpa says. The team then spent another 13 hours getting the body down to another lower camp.
Next stop for the bodies was a journey to Kathmandu by helicopter, but the crew was stuck in the town of Namche for five days because of bad weather. They arrived in the capital safely on 4 June.
Identification
The four bodies and the skeleton have been kept at a hospital in Kathmandu.
The army has found identification documents on two bodies – Czech climber Milan Sedlacek and American mountaineer Roland Yearwood, who died in 2017. The Nepali government will be in communication with the respective embassies.
The process of identifying the other two bodies is ongoing.
Sherpa climbers and guides keep track of the locations and possible identities of lost climbers, so they have provided potential information on some of the bodies. They believe all the bodies belong to foreigners, but the government has not confirmed this.
About 100 sherpas have died on the Himalayas since records began, so many families have been waiting for years to perform the last Buddhist rites for their loved ones.
Authorities have said they will bury the bodies if no one comes to claim them three months after identification – regardless of whether the bodies belong to a foreigner or a Nepali.
Mr Sherpa first climbed in the Himalayas at the age of 20. In his career, he has scaled Everest three times and Lhotse five times.
“Mountaineers have got famous from climbing. The Himalayas have given us so many opportunities,” he says.
“By doing this special job of retrieving dead bodies, it’s my time to pay back to the Great Himalayas.”
US woman freed after 43 years in prison for murder she didn’t commit
A woman who served 43 years for a murder she did not commit has been released after her conviction was overturned.
Sandra Hemme was 20 years old when she was found guilty of stabbing to death library worker Patricia Jeschke from St Joseph, Missouri, in November 1980. She was given a life sentence.
There was no evidence that linked her to the crime other than a confession she gave under heavy sedation in a psychiatric hospital, a review into her case found.
Now 64, she is believed to have served the longest known wrongful conviction of a woman in US history according to her representatives.
Her legal team at the Innocence Project said they are grateful that Ms Hemme is finally reunited with her family, and they will “continue to fight” to clear her name.
While she is no longer incarcerated, her case is still being reviewed.
Circuit Court Judge Ryan Horsman’s original 118-page ruling overturning her conviction came on 14 June. It said Ms Hemme’s lawyers had clear proof of her innocence, including evidence that was not given to her defence team at the time.
“This court finds that the totality of the evidence supports a finding of actual innocence,” Judge Horsman concluded.
The review found that local police ignored evidence that directly pointed to one of their own officers – Michael Holman – who later went to prison for another crime and died in 2015.
Holman’s truck was seen in the area the day of the murder, his alibi could not be corroborated, and he used Patricia Jeschke’s credit card after claiming he found it in a ditch.
A pair of distinctive gold earrings identified by Ms Jeschke’s father were also found in Holman’s home.
None of this was disclosed to Ms Hemme’s defence team at the time, the review said.
Ms Hemme was interrogated by police several times under the influence of antipsychotic medication and a powerful sedative after being involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital. She had been receiving occasional psychiatric treatment since she was 12 years old.
Her responses were “monosyllabic” and she was “not totally cognisant of what was going on”, court documents showed, and at times could barely hold her head up straight and was in pain from muscle spasms – a side effect of the medications.
Judge Horsman’s review noted that no forensic evidence linked Ms Hemme to the murder. She had no motive and there were no witnesses linking her to the crime.
Sandra Hemme finally left prison on Friday, and the Kansas City Star reports that she will live with her sister.
After her release she was reunited with family in a nearby park, where she hugged her sister, daughter and granddaughter.
Her father had been hospitalised and was receiving palliative care this week. Her legal team said she was planning to visit him as soon as she can.
Defence lawyer Sean O’Brien told the Star that she will still need help because she has spent most of her life in prison and was ineligible for social security.
Biden ends re-election bid, upending White House race
US President Joe Biden has ended his re-election campaign and endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris to succeed him as the Democratic candidate, in an extraordinary decision that upends an already dramatic race for the White House.
Mr Biden, 81, said in a Sunday written statement that it was the “greatest honour” to serve but his withdrawal was “in the best interest of my party and the country”.
The announcement caps a tumultuous period in US politics, which began with his sometimes incoherent debate performance against Donald Trump on 27 June. Mr Biden says he will remain president until January.
Ms Harris, 59, said that she was “honoured” to be endorsed, adding she would “earn and win this nomination” and unite the country against Trump.
“We have 107 days until election day,” she said. “Together, we will fight. And together, we will win.”
While Ms Harris has been picking up endorsments from many big figures in the party, she is yet to be officially nominated, and that may not happen until the Democratic National Convention in August.
A resurgent Trump meanwhile has pulled ahead in polling and was confirmed as Republican nominee at the party’s convention in Milwaukee this week, five days after surviving an assassination attempt.
In the wake of Mr Biden’s decision, he declared the president “was not fit to run… and is certainly not fit to serve”. Other senior Republicans joined him in their criticism, and called on Mr Biden to leave the White House immediately, not just the Democratic candidacy.
- LIVE UPDATES: Joe Biden withdraws from US presidential race
Potential Harris rivals fall in line
Sources told the BBC that even senior White House staff and campaign officials were told of Mr Biden’s decision only moments before the statement was released on Sunday afternoon, although the president had spoken to Ms Harris and a handful of others beforehand.
Dozens of senior Democrats and grandees including former president Barack Obama, Senate leader Chuck Schumer and former House speaker Nancy Pelosi immediately praised the decision and lauded Mr Biden’s accomplishments in office.
Former president Bill Clinton and 2016 Democratic candidate for president Hillary Clinton said they backed Kamala Harris as the party’s candidate for November’s vote, saying they would “fight with everything we’ve got to elect her”.
While Mr Obama stated that he had “extraordinary confidence” that an “outstanding nominee emerges”, he did not explicitly back Ms Harris or any other candidate.
Ms Pelosi has not commented.
Peter Welch, the first Democratic senator to call on Biden to drop his re-election run, called for an “open process” to nominate Harris.
But there are already signs that many in the party will unify behind her, including from high-profile politicians who had been touted as potential rivals for the nomination in the event Mr Biden stepped aside.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, who is believed to have presidential ambitions, praised Mr Biden as “selfless” and said he backed the “fearless” and “tenacious” Ms Harris to face Trump.
Josh Shapiro, the Pennsylvania governor, said he would do “everything I can to help elect Kamala Harris as the 47th President of the United States”.
Pete Buttigieg, the current transport secretary and a former presidential contender, said Mr Biden was “one of the most consequential presidents in American history”, adding he would do “all that I can to help elect Kamala Harris the next President.”
Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, stated that her job “will remain the same… doing everything I can to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump.”
The Democratic National Committee meanwhile filed to amend the names of its fundraising committees to the Harris Victory Fund and Harris Action Fund.
Two major Democratic donors – LinkedIn co-funder Reid Hoffman and investor Alexander Soros – publicly endorsed Harris.
And within an hour of Mr Biden’s announcement, the pro-Trump super-PAC campaign fund Make America Great Again posted an advert attacking Mr Harris, claiming “she covered up Joe’s obvious mental decline”.
Trump added: “Whoever the Left puts up now will just be more of the same.”
Weeks of intense scrutiny
Mr Biden had faced intense scrutiny since his debate performance in June. Less than two weeks ago, he hosted a high-profile summit with Nato leaders in Washington.
The occasion did little to calm nerves within his own party, with him mistakenly introducing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin”, and appearing to refer Ms Harris as “Vice President Trump”.
At one point he told an interview that only the “Lord Almighty” could make him withdraw, but then later said he would consider doing so if he had a health condition. On Friday, while in isolation after testing positive for Covid, he said he would return to the campaign trail in the coming week.
In his statement on Sunday, Mr Biden thanked his Ms Harris, saying she was an “extraordinary partner”.
“And let me express my heartfelt appreciation for the American people for the faith and trust you have placed in me,” his statement added.
“I believe today and always have: that there is nothing America can’t do – when we do it together. We just have to remember we are the United States of America.”
Officials from the Democratic National Committee held an emergency meeting on Sunday evening.
The focus will now be on the party’s national convention, which is scheduled to start on 19 August.
Mr Biden swept the party’s primaries, meaning that the delegates representing each state at the convention were pledged to vote for him – although they are now expected to be released to vote for another candidate.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Couple found dead after trying to cross Atlantic
The bodies of a couple who set off on a sailing trip across the Atlantic Ocean have been found on a washed-up life raft almost six weeks after they were last seen.
Briton Sarah Packwood and her Canadian husband Brett Clibbery are thought to have abandoned their yacht and perished before washing up on Sable Island near Nova Scotia in Canada on 12 July.
The couple were reported missing on 18 June after leaving Nova Scotia in their 13m (42ft) eco-friendly yacht, Theros, a week earlier.
They were on the way to the Azores – about 3,228 km away – with the trip planned to take 21 days.
In a post on Facebook, Mr Clibbery’s son James confirmed the pair had died, saying that the last few days had been “very hard”.
He said the couple would be “forever missed”, adding: “There isn’t anything that will fill the hole that has been left by their, so far unexplained passing.”
It is unclear how the couple’s dream transatlantic crossing ended in tragedy. An investigation is still under way, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told the BBC on Sunday.
One theory investigators are exploring is that the yacht was struck by a passing cargo ship that did not notice the collision, according to Canadian news website Saltwire.
“The sailboat crew were either unable to avoid collision” or they could have been down below with Theros on automatic pilot, an anonymous source told Saltwire.
The Canadian coastguard and military aircraft have not spotted wreckage or any sign of the boat, Saltwire reports.
In a video posted to their YouTube channel, Theros Adventures, the pair explained how their trip – dubbed the Green Odyssey – would rely on sails, solar panels, batteries and an electric engine repurposed from a car.
“We’re doing everything we can to show that you can travel without burning fossil fuels,” Mr Clibbery said in the video, posted on 12 April.
“It’s probably the biggest adventure of our lives so far,” Ms Packwood added.
The pair met by chance in London in 2015, when Mr Clibbery, a retired engineer, was preparing to donate a kidney to his sister.
They married in Canada on their yacht a year later, before affirming their vows in a traditional handfasting ceremony at Stonehenge in 2017, according to Ms Packwood’s personal blog.
Their story was featured in a 2020 “How We Met” article in The Guardian.
Ms Packwood, originally from Long Itchington, Warwickshire, had worked in Rwanda with the UN after the 1994 genocide and had extensive experience as a humanitarian.
In what would be their final post on 11 June, the pair wrote on Facebook: “Captain Brett and First Mate Sarah set sail on the 2nd leg of The Green Odyssey on board Theros – GibSea 42 foot sailboat. Powered by the wind and sun. Heading east to the Azores.”
What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Joe Biden has turned the US election on its head. After fiercely insisting for weeks that he would remain the Democratic nominee for president, he has bowed to pressure and dropped out of the race.
Here’s what it means for Vice-President Kamala Harris, for the Democrats more broadly and for Donald Trump.
Harris is a risk but one many Democrats will want to take
The prospects for Kamala Harris being the Democratic nominee have received a big boost with Joe Biden’s endorsement.
He gave her his full backing, calling his decision to make her vice-president four years ago the best he ever made.
She responded by saying she was honoured to have his endorsement and would do everything possible to win the nomination.
It is possible that most Democrats will follow the president’s lead and fall in line behind the vice-president to avoid ongoing uncertainty less than a month from the Democratic convention.
There are practical and political reasons for doing so.
She is next in the constitutional line of succession. The optics of passing over the first black woman on a presidential ticket would be terrible for the party. She would also immediately have access to the roughly $100 million in funds the campaign has raised so far.
But there are also risks. Public opinion surveys show Harris’ approval ratings are about as low as his. And in head-to-head matchups against Donald Trump, she fares roughly the same as Biden.
Second is that Harris has had a sometimes rocky time as vice-president. Early in the administration, she was given the task of addressing the root causes of the migration crisis at the US-Mexico border.
That’s a daunting challenge, and a number of missteps and misstatements opened her up to criticism. She’s also been the administration’s point person on abortion rights, which has been a topic she has much more effectively handled. But those first impressions have stuck.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Harris has already run for national office – her 2020 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination – and stumbled badly.
While she surged early, a combination of fumbled interviews, a lack of clearly defined vision and a poorly managed campaign led her to drop out before even the earliest primaries.
Opting for Harris is a risk for Democrats, but at this point there are no safe options. And the stakes – a possible Donald Trump victory – are as high as they get.
Democratic convention could be chaotic yet gripping
Over the past half-century, political conventions have been transformed into somewhat boring affairs. With every minute carefully scripted for television, they’ve become extended multi-day commercials for the presidential nominee.
Last week’s Republican convention was certainly that way – even with Donald Trump’s overly long, sometimes rambling nomination acceptance speech.
Next month’s Democratic convention in Chicago is shaping up to be very, very different. Whatever script the party and the Biden campaign had been working on just got thrown out the window. Even if the party falls in line behind Harris, it will be difficult to plan – and control – how things unfold on the convention floor.
And if Harris doesn’t succeed in uniting the party, the convention could turn into a political free-for-all, with various candidates vying for the nomination before the cameras and behind closed doors.
It could make for gripping political theatre, live and unpredictable, in a way the American public has never before witnessed.
For Republicans, strong v frail goes out window
This year’s Republican convention was a carefully calibrated machine, promoting the party’s most popular agenda items and focusing criticism on one man, President Joe Biden.
It turns out, the Republicans were targeting the wrong guy.
With the news of Biden’s abandoning of his re-election campaign, the Republican game plan spearheaded by Donald Trump has been turned on its head.
The Republicans spent an entire week of carefully scripted events focusing on the wrong weaknesses of the Democrat opposing them.
The campaign had highlighted their candidate’s strength and vitality by giving him a raucous entrance, preceded by appearances by former wrestler Hulk Hogan and Ultimate Fighting Championship impresario Dana White, as well as a performance by Kid Rock.
The attempts at contrast with Mr Biden’s perceived frailty – and the strategy to peel away younger male voters – were obvious.
But in any scenario now, the Democratic nominee is going to be someone much younger than the president.
A strategy of strong vs frail against Vice-President Kamala Harris or one of the more youthful Democratic governors who are mentioned as possible Biden successors just won’t pack the same punch.
If Harris is the nominee, expect the Republicans to try to tie her to the perceived failings of the current administration. For months they have called her the “border czar”.
Although the former prosecutor is by no means from the progressive wing of the party, previous Republican attacks on her suggest they may also paint her as “radical left”.
No matter who the nominee is, the Republicans are sure to blame the Democrats for covering up Biden’s age-related weaknesses – and putting the nation at risk.
At this point, everyone is flying blind with just a few months until the first presidential ballots are cast.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
Biden’s momentous and ‘closely-held’ decision surprises own aides
Joe Biden’s senior White House and campaign staff had spent the past week insisting the president planned to stay in the 2024 race despite an onslaught of calls within the Democratic Party for him to step aside.
As recently as Saturday, the president’s aides were putting together a campaign schedule for him to pick up upon his return to the White House next week. He had been recovering from Covid at his beach house on the eastern shores of Delaware, insisting that he was still running but infuriated as a co-ordinated effort to pressure him to exit by some Democrats began to spill into public view.
By Sunday morning, the president had changed his mind, according to sources who were granted anonymity to speak candidly about how the day unfolded.
On Saturday evening, Mr Biden began to consider whether he should withdraw, one of the toughest decisions of his 50-year political career. He huddled with a small circle of aides, which included Steve Richetti, one of his closest advisers, Mike Donilon, his chief strategist, Annie Tomasini, his deputy chief of staff and Anthony Bernal, the chief of staff to First Lady Jill Biden.
Mr Richetti, who has been a close aide of the president’s since his Senate days, drove out to the president’s beach house on Friday. Mr Donilon, another aide who has played a key role in some of the president’s biggest political decisions, joined on Saturday. Mr Biden and his aides pored over new polling data and discussed whether he could defeat Donald Trump in the current political landscape.
Faced with the new data and bracing for another week of more public defections within the party, the president had a decision to make. He worked with Mr Donilon, drafting the historic statement that would bring an end to candidacy while Mr Richetti worked through the details of rolling out the announcement and informing other staff.
Biden made the final decision that he was dropping out on Sunday morning, separately calling chief of staff Jeff Zients, his campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon and Vice-President Kamala Harris to inform them, sources familiar with how the events of Sunday unfolded told the BBC.
On Sunday afternoon at 13:45 EDT (17:45 GMT), the president held a video call with his most senior White House and campaign staff, including Anita Dunn, who manages his White House communications strategy. One minute later, he released a public statement that sent shockwaves across the American political landscape and upended the 2024 election.
“He said he had been reflecting on it over the past couple of days,” a senior White House official told the BBC. “It was a closely-held decision.”
Though Mr Biden did not mention Ms Harris in his initial statement, he tweeted his endorsement for his vice-president about half an hour later. The two spoke multiple times throughout the day in the lead-up to the stunning announcement, according to two sources familiar with the conversations.
The first lady, who is the president’s closest adviser and someone whose counsel is considered to have been one of the deciding factors in his decision, said in a statement that she was supportive of his exit.
“Down to the last hours of the decision only he could make, she was supportive of whatever road he chose,” Elizabeth Alexander, the first lady’s communications director, said of Mrs Biden. “She’s his biggest believer, champion and always on his side, in that trusted way only a spouse of almost 50 years can be.”
Many in the White House and on the campaign were not informed of Mr Biden’s plans in advance. Most found out from the post on social media.
Mr Zients, the president’s chief-of-staff, held a call with White House officials and emailed the wider West Wing staff to confirm the announcement and thank them for their hard work. He also led a call with the president’s cabinet secretaries.
Mr Biden, meanwhile, spoke to several congressional Democrats, governors and supporters, according to a White House statement. He planned to continue calling making calls on Sunday night and on Monday, the statement said.
Kamala Harris, who said she planned to “earn and win” the presidential nomination, spent Sunday afternoon calling lawmakers – including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries – key party officials and governors to shore up support for her candidacy.
Though she’s already earned the support of the president and top Democrats, her ascension to the top of the ticket is not certain until delegates vote to confirm Mr Biden’s replacement at the Democratic National Convention in August.
Notably, former president Barack Obama has not explicitly endorsed her, while BIll and Hillary Clinton have.
During a campaign call on Sunday afternoon, as many were still digesting the news, top officials said the team would be “full steam ahead” behind the vice-president.
“All of you, all of us, wherever we come from, are here for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris and to defeat Donald Trump. And while today is a big day of transition, nothing changes with why you got here and what we’re all here to do,” said Jen O’Malley Dillon, the campaign chair, according to a source familiar with the call.
“But the path forward is a path that is for all of us to do this together.”
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
Who could be Kamala Harris’s running mate?
US President Joe Biden on Sunday announced he would end his re-election campaign, and said Kamala Harris, his vice-president, should take his place.
“I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year,” he wrote on X. “Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump.”
Ms Harris taking over looks likely, although it is not a done deal.
Several others were touted as potential replacements for Mr Biden but have backed Ms Harris. If the endorsement becomes official, a running mate will be needed.
Delegates will vote next month at the Democratic National Convention to officially confirm who will replace Mr Biden, and the candidate for vice-president.
The following names could be in the mix.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
Gretchen Whitmer, the two-term governor of Michigan, is an increasingly popular Midwest Democrat who many pundits speculate will run for president in 2028.
She has campaigned for Mr Biden in the past and has not been shy about her political aspirations.
She told The New York Times that she wants to see a Generation X president in 2028, but stopped short of suggesting that she might fill that role.
In 2022, she led a campaign that left Michigan Democrats in control of the state’s legislature and the governor’s mansion.
That allowed her to enact a number of progressive policies, including protecting Michigan abortion access and the passage of gun safety measures.
Ms Whitmer quickly stated after Mr Biden’s withdrawal that her job “will remain the same… doing everything I can to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump”.
California Governor Gavin Newsom
California’s governor is one of the Biden administration’s fiercest surrogates.
He is often listed as a possible 2028 candidate, but many Democratic pundits had suggested he could be in the race to replace Mr Biden.
Mr Newsom raised his national profile in recent years by being a key party messenger on conservative media, and via a debate against Florida Governor Ron DeSantis last year.
He stood by the president before his announcement. He travelled to Washington to attend meetings in July with Mr Biden and other top Democratic governors, and headlined a Biden campaign event in Michigan on the 4 July.
Mr Newsom again praised Mr Biden as a “selfless” president after his withdrawal, and said he backed the “fearless” and “tenacious” Ms Harris to face Trump.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg
It is no secret that Pete Buttigieg has presidential aspirations.
He ran in 2020 and is often touted as one of the Biden administration’s best communicators.
Mr Buttigieg has managed a number of public crises during his time as transportation secretary.
He helped to oversee the government response to the East Palestine train derailment in Ohio, the Baltimore Bridge collapse and Southwest Airlines’ scheduling crisis in 2022.
Mr Buttigieg stated on Twitter/X that Mr Biden had “earned his place among the best and most consequential presidents in American history”.
He said he would do “all that I can to help elect Kamala Harris the next President”.
Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania Governor
Josh Shapiro has seen high approval ratings since he was elected in 2022 in a swing state Trump narrowly carried in 2016.
The governor, who previously served as the state’s attorney general, has worked across party lines during his tenure.
He made national headlines last year after quickly rebuilding a collapsed bridge on a crucial Philadelphia highway – a major political victory for a first-term governor.
The speedy repair was hailed by many as the perfect infrastructure talking point for a potential 2028 presidential candidate.
Mr Shapiro said Mr Biden was one of the “most consequential presidents in modern history” and would “do everything I can to help elect Kamala Harris as the 47th President of the United States”.
JB Pritzker, Illinois Governor
JB Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, has raised his profile in recent years by going after Trump and defending Mr Biden.
The billionaire businessman – heir to the Hyatt hotel chain – is quick to post criticism of Trump on social media.
After the debate he called Trump a “liar” and said he is a “34-count convicted felon who cares only about himself”.
Like Ms Whitmer, Mr Pritzker has a track record of completing agenda items on progressive Democrats’ to-do lists on issues like abortion rights and gun control.
He said Mr Biden had run “one of the most accomplished and effective presidencies of our lifetime”. He has not commented on who should succeed him.
Other possible candidates?
The list of potential nominees to the ticket stretches beyond these Democrats, as the party has developed a deep bench of talent.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, a two-term Democratic governor in a very conservative state, has earned national attention since re-election last year.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore found himself in the spotlight in recent months following the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
Senators Amy Klobuchar and Cory Booker have run for president in the past and have some name recognition among Democrats.
Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, who won a closely contested Senate race in a swing state.
- LIVE: Latest updates as Joe Biden drops out of US presidential election race
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Biden has endorsed Harris. What happens next?
- ANALYSIS: What Biden quitting means for Harris, the Democrats and Trump
The many identities of the first woman vice-president
Less than four months out from the election, Vice-President Kamala Harris found herself in a difficult position.
President Joe Biden’s poor performance on the debate stage spurred mounting criticism about his ability to win the election. As anxiety turned to tension within the Democratic party, her name rose up the list of replacement candidates.
With Mr Biden’s announcement that he will be ending his campaign and putting his support behind her, Ms Harris has finally reached a position she’d long sought: the top of the Democratic ticket, and potentially the presidency.
But the journey there has been fraught and full of difficult questions, especially in recent months.
- LIVE UPDATES: Joe Biden withdraws from US presidential race
Four years ago, the one-time candidate for the Democratic nomination would have welcomed the party’s praises. By July 2024, Harris was in a more precarious position as part of an embattled incumbent ticket, her chances of another term tethered to Mr Biden’s performance.
In the 24 hours after the debate debacle, Ms Harris chose strong loyalty to Mr Biden.
The vice-president spoke on CNN, MSNBC and at a campaign rally. She defended her political partner’s record and attacked their opponent, former President Donald Trump.
“We believe in our president, Joe Biden, and we believe in what he stands for,” she said at the rally.
Ms Harris never wavered as a new well of support within the Democratic party pushed her into the spotlight and critics pressed Mr Biden to retire.
Still, it’s a second chance at a presidential campaign for the first woman as well as the first black and Asian-American to serve as vice-president.
Despite struggling to appeal to voters in 2020 and having low approval ratings during her tenure as vice president, Ms Harris’ supporters point to her advocacy for reproductive rights, appeal among black voters and her background as a prosecutor who would be running against a now-convicted felon to make the case for her serving as commander-in-chief.
“I believe she has been instrumental in addressing key issues such as voting rights and immigration reform,” Nadia Brown, director of Georgetown University’s Women’s and Gender Studies Program, said.
“She has also been Biden’s most powerful surrogate on issues of abortion access and outreach to black communities.”
How Kamala rose to become VP
Just five years ago, Ms Harris was the senator from California hoping to win the Democratic nomination for presidency.
She began her career in the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office and became the district attorney – the top prosecutor – for San Francisco in 2003, before being elected the first woman and the first black person to serve as California’s attorney general, the top lawyer and law enforcement official in America’s most populous state.
She gained a reputation as one of the Democratic party’s rising stars, using this momentum to propel her to election as California’s junior US senator in 2017.
But her presidential aims were unsuccessful in 2020.
Her adept debate performances were not enough to compensate for poorly articulated policies.
Her campaign died in less than a year and it was Mr Biden who returned the now 59-year-old to the national spotlight by putting her on his ticket.
Gil Duran, a communications director for Ms Harris in 2013 who critiqued her run for the presidential nomination, called it “a big reversal of fortune for Kamala Harris”.
“Many people didn’t think she had the discipline and focus to ascend to a position in the White House so quickly… although people knew she had ambition and star potential. It was always clear that she had the raw talent,” Duran said.
Ms Harris focused on several key initiatives while in the White House and she was instrumental in some of the Biden administration’s most touted accomplishments.
She launched a nationwide “Fight for Reproductive Freedoms” tour advocating for women to have the right to make decisions about their body. She highlighted harm caused by abortion bans and called on Congress to restore the protections of Roe v Wade after the Supreme Court’s conservative justices overturned the constitutional right to abortion in 2022.
Ms Harris set a new record for the most tie-breaking votes cast by a vice president in the history of the Senate. Her vote helped pass the Inflation Reduction Act and the American Rescue Plan, which provided COVID relief funding including stimulus payments.
Her tie-breaking vote also confirmed Justice Ketanji Brown Jakson to the Supreme Court.
But she also struggled to achieve broad appeal among Americans, facing criticism on all sides.
Despite leftward leanings on issues like gay marriage and the death penalty, she faced repeated attacks for not being progressive enough for some Democratic voters. “Kamala is a cop” was a common refrain on the 2020 campaign trail.
Mr Biden also called upon Ms Harris to lead efforts addressing the root causes of migration as a record number of immigrants fled to the US-Mexico border, an issue opponents point to as one where she hasn’t made enough progress.
She received backlash from Republicans and some Democrats for taking six months to plan a trip to the border after entering office.
But in recent weeks, as speculation about Mr Biden’s ability to win in November swirled, she found a renewed base of support.
The many identities of Kamala Harris
Born in Oakland, California, to two immigrant parents – an Indian-born mother and Jamaican-born father – her parents divorced when she was five and she was primarily raised by her Hindu single mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a cancer researcher and civil rights activist.
She grew up engaged with her Indian heritage, joining her mother on visits to India, but Ms Harris has said that her mother adopted Oakland’s black culture, immersing her two daughters – Kamala and her younger sister Maya – within it.
“My mother understood very well that she was raising two black daughters,” she wrote in her autobiography The Truths We Hold. “She knew that her adopted homeland would see Maya and me as black girls and she was determined to make sure we would grow into confident, proud black women.”
Her biracial roots and upbringing mean she embodies and can engage with and appeal to many American identities. Those parts of the country which have seen rapid demographic change, enough change to alter a region’s politics, see an aspirational symbol in her.
But it was her time at Howard University, one of the nation’s preeminent historically black colleges and universities, which she has described as among the most formative experiences of her life.
Lita Rosario-Richardson met Kamala Harris while at Howard in the 1980s when students would gather in the Yard area of the campus to hang out and discuss politics, fashion and gossip.
“I noticed she had a keen sense of argumentation,” she said.
They bonded over an aptitude for energetic debate with campus Republicans, their experience growing up with single mothers, even just both being the Libra star sign. It was a formative era politically too.
“Reagan was president at the time and it was the apartheid era and there was a lot of talk about divestiture with ‘trans Africa’ and the Martin Luther King holiday issue,” Ms Rosario-Richardson said.
“We know that, being descendants of enslaved people and people of colour coming out of colonisation, that we have a special role and having an education gives us a special position in society to help effect change,” she explained – it was a philosophy and a call to action that was part of the university experience Ms Harris lived.
But Ms Harris also operates with ease in predominantly white communities. Her early years included a brief period in Canada. When Ms Gopalan Harris took a job teaching at McGill University, Ms Harris and her younger sister Maya went with her, attending school in Montreal for five years.
Ms Harris says she’s always been comfortable with her identity and simply describes herself as an “American”.
She told the Washington Post in 2019 that politicians should not have to fit into compartments because of their colour or background.
“My point was: I am who I am. I’m good with it. You might need to figure it out, but I’m fine with it,” she said.
The making of witty ‘debate club’ Kamala
From the very earliest, as her friend Ms Rosario-Richardson attests, she showed the skills that allowed her to be one of few women to break through barriers.
“That is what attracted me to get her to join debate team [at Howard University], a fearlessness,” she said.
Wit and humour is part of that armoury. In a video posted to her social media in 2020 after winning the election, she shares the news of the win – with a very hearty laugh – with Mr Biden: “We did it, we did it Joe. You’re going to be the next president of the United States!”
The laugh she greeted the then president-elect with, when making that first momentous phone call, was one her friend recognised immediately and intimately.
“It clearly shows her personality, even in the short time she has been on the campaign trail.”
“She has always had that laugh, she has always had a sense of humour too, she had a sense of wit – even in the context of a university debate – to get those points across.”
The ability to deliver zingers to her opponents in live debate was very much part of the momentum behind the start of her bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Kamala, ‘Momala’, history-maker
In 2014, then-Senator Harris married lawyer Doug Emhoff and became stepmother to his two children.
She wrote an article for Elle magazine in 2019 about the experience of becoming a stepmother and unveiled the name that would then come to dominate many headlines that followed.
“When Doug and I got married, Cole, Ella, and I agreed that we didn’t like the term ‘stepmom’. Instead they came up with the name ‘Momala’.”
They were portrayed as the epitome of modern American “blended” family, an image the media took to and one that occupied many column inches about how we talk about female politicians.
Many argue she should also be seen and recognised as the descendant of another kind of family and that is the inheritor of generations of black female activists.
“She is heir to a legacy of grassroots organisers, elected officials, and unsuccessful candidates who paved this path to the White House. Black women are seen as a political force of nature in democratic politics and the Democratic party,” Nadia Brown, associate professor of political science and African American studies at Purdue University, told the BBC.
Fannie Lou Hamer, Ella Baker and Septima Clark are some of the names she follows in the footsteps of, Ms Brown argues.
“Her win is historic but it is not hers alone. It is shared with countless black women who made this day possible.”
- WATCH: How Joe Biden’s bid for re-election came to an end
- IN FULL: Biden’s letter announcing his withdrawal
- PROFILE: Kamala Harris, the VP who Biden is backing for president
- EXPLAINED: Who could challenge Harris for Democratic nomination?
Malaysia tracks down missing oil tanker which fled after collision
Malaysia says it has intercepted a large oil tanker that was involved in a collision with another ship before fleeing the scene and turning off its tracking system.
The coastguard says it has located and detained Ceres I, sailing under the flag of São Tomé and Príncipe, and two tugboats that were towing the vessel off the country’s eastern coast.
The ship had collided with the Singapore-flagged Hafnia Nile on Friday, causing both ships to catch fire.
Officials in Singapore say all crew members from both ships were rescued.
Malaysia’s coastguard said Ceres I had left the location immediately after the collision that caused a blaze and injured at least two crew members.
The incident happened about 55 km northeast of the Singaporean island of Pedra Branca, the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) said.
The head of Malaysian coast guard’s search and rescue team, Zin Azman Mohamad Yunus, has not explained why the São Tomé and Príncipe-flagged tanker tried to flee, but added that further investigations would be carried out.
The authorities in Singapore said after around 40 crew members were rescued from the blazing ships, around 26 of them remained on Ceres I to tackle the fire.
The Singapore-flagged Hafnia Nile, was reportedly carrying naphtha, a highly flammable type of petroleum.
The cause of the collision is still unclear. Singapore maritime authorities said ship traffic in the busy waterway was unaffected.
However, Malaysian coastguard officials found an oil spill covering around 17 square kilometres.
Ceres I is a large crude oil carrying supertanker. Some reports suggests it could be part of a so-called ‘dark fleet’, carrying oil from countries under sanctions.
A market intelligence service, S&P Global Commodities at Sea, says the ship, operated by China’s Shanghai Prosperity Ship Management, has previously carried Iranian crude, which is subject to US sanctions.
Alert issued in India after boy dies from high risk Nipah virus
Health authorities in India’s Kerala state have issued an alert after a 14-year-old boy died of the Nipah virus.
According to the state’s health minister, an additional 60 people have been identified as being in the high-risk category of having the disease.
Kerala Health Minister Veena George said the boy was from the town of Pandikkad and that those who came into contact with him have been isolated and tested.
People in the area have been asked to take precautions such as wearing masks in public areas and refraining from visiting people in hospital.
The Nipah virus infection is a “zoonotic illness” transmitted from animals like pigs and fruit bats to humans, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
It can also be transmitted through contaminated food and through contact with an infected person.
The WHO has described the virus as a priority pathogen by the WHO because of its potential to trigger an epidemic.
The virus has been linked to dozens of deaths in Kerala state since it was first reported there in 2018.
The 14-year-old died on Sunday, just a day after he was confirmed to have the virus, according to Indian media reports.
It can also be transmitted through contaminated food and through contact with an infected person.
Parts of Kerala are said to be the most at-risk globally for the virus. An investigation published by Reuters last year found that Kerala, which is a tropical state and is witnessing rapid urbanisation and rapid tree loss, created “ideal conditions for a virus like Nipah to emerge”.
Experts say that due to habitat loss, animals are living in closer proximity to humans and this helps the virus jump from animals to humans.
The state government recently announced that it was creating an action plan to prevent a Nipah outbreak.
Last year, authorities in Kerala state closed schools and offices after confirming five cases.
World leaders show respect and support for Biden
Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the 2024 Presidential race has sent ripples around the world, with a number of global leaders reacting to the news.
He also endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris and said he would “focus all my energies on my duties as President” for the rest of his term.
Many of his allies paid tribute to his foreign policy achievements and acknowledged the difficulty of his decision.
“Thanks to [Biden], transatlantic cooperation is close, Nato is strong and the USA is a good and reliable partner for us. His decision not to run again deserves recognition,” Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz posted on X.
The United Kingdom’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he “respects” Mr Biden’s decision and “looks forward” to working together for the rest of his presidency.
“I know that, as he has done throughout his remarkable career, President Biden will have made his decision based on what he believes is in the best interests of the American people,” Mr Starmer added.
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thanked Mr Biden and US First Lady Jill Biden, calling the president a “true friend” to Canadians. “He’s a great man, and everything he does is guided by his love for his country,” Mr Trudeau said.
Some noted the difficulty of Mr Biden’s decision to step away from power.
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Mr Biden had “made difficult decisions” throughout his political career that have “kept the world safer, and democracy and freedom stronger”.
“I know that you were guided by the same principles when announcing your latest decision. Perhaps the most difficult one in your life,” he said.
Mr Biden has faced intense pressure from recent weeks from fellow Democrats to step aside, after a faltering debate performance against Donald Trump in June.
But even up until last week, Mr Biden has said that he planned to stay in the race. At 81, he is the oldest person ever to have occupied the Oval Office.
Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida noted that Biden’s announcement is one the US president considers “the best political decision he can make”.
“The Japan-US alliance is the cornerstone of our country’s diplomacy and security, so we will monitor the situation closely,” Mr Kishida said.
Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, Petr Fiala, described Mr Biden’s decision to withdraw as “responsible and personally difficult… but all the more valuable”.
But Mr Fiala also acknowledged growing political uncertainty in the US.
“I am keeping my fingers crossed for the USA that a good president emerges from the democratic competition of two strong and equal candidates,” he said.
Italy’s foreign minister and deputy PM Antonio Tajani said his country “must look with great serenity to the US”. “We will work well with whoever the next president is, whether Trump or Harris,” he said.
Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky said he respects Mr Biden’s “tough but strong decision” and thanked him for his “unwavering support for Ukraine’s fight for freedom.”
“We sincerely hope that America’s continued strong leadership will prevent Russian evil from succeeding or making its aggression pay off,” Mr Zelensky said.
Some countries at odds with the US have also reacted to Mr Biden’s decision.
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro called it “the most sensible and correct decision”.
“[Mr Biden] realized that at that age and with weakened health he could not assume the reins of his country, let alone a presidential candidacy,” Mr Maduro said at a campaign event for his own re-election.
And the Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s priority will still be on its war in Ukraine. “A lot can change” before the US presidential vote in November, he added.
“We need to be patient and carefully monitor what happens,” he said.
Bangladesh court scraps job quotas after deadly unrest
Bangladesh’s top court has scrapped most of the quotas on government jobs that had sparked violent clashes across the country that have killed more than 100 people.
A third of public sector jobs had been reserved for the relatives of veterans from the country’s war for independence from Pakistan in 1971.
But now the court has ruled just 5% of the roles can be reserved for veterans’ relatives.
Law Minister Anisul Huq said the government would implement the ruling within days. Some student leaders have vowed to continue protesting.
Speaking to the BBC, Mr Huq also denied that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina – who has been in power since 2009 – was losing her grip on Bangladesh.
“In that case you would have seen the mass population of the country to revolt. They have actually supported the government in this turmoil and they have said yes, the government should act to bring the violence to an end,” he said.
He blamed opposition forces for joining the protests and destroying “the symbols of Bangladesh’s development”.
Several protest movement coordinators have told the BBC that action would continue until the government took action.
“We applaud the court’s verdict,” said one coordinator, Nusrat Tabassum. “But our main demand is with the executive department. Until those demands are implemented, the ongoing nationwide complete shutdown program will continue.”
The students’ demands also include justice for protesters killed in recent days, the release of detained protest leaders, the restoration of internet services and resignations of government ministers.
Streets in the capital Dhaka are deserted as a second day of curfew is in force, but sporadic clashes continued even after the supreme court ruling.
About 115 people are known to have died but local media report a much higher casualty figure. At least 50 people were killed on Friday alone.
The Supreme Court ruling orders that 93% of public sector jobs should be recruited on merit, leaving 5% for the family members of the veterans of the country’s independence war.
A remaining 2% is reserved for people from ethnic minorities or with disabilities.
Scrapped in 2018 by Ms Hasina’s government, the quota system was reinstated by a lower court last month, sparking the protests.
- Why is Bangladesh in turmoil?
The government responded with a harsh crackdown, including a curfew and a communications blackout.
Protest coordinators say police and the student wing of the governing Awami League – known as the Bangladesh Chhatra League – have been using brutal force against peaceful demonstrators. The government denies this.
Many people have been detained by the authorities.
Nahid Islam, a coordinators of the quota reform movement, alleged that he had been subjected to physical and mental torture.
He told the BBC he had been picked up by people who said they were detectives, handcuffed and transferred to a private car.
“After some time I was taken out of the car and taken to a room in a house. I was interrogated and subsequently subjected to torture. At one point I fainted. After that I have no memory,” Mr Islam said.
He says he regained consciousness on the street in an area of Dhaka in the early hours of Sunday morning. “I still have blood clots on both shoulders and left leg,” he said.
The police have not commented.
The unrest has also seen arson attacks on government buildings, police check posts and the capital’s metro system, which the interior minister said had been left inoperable. Burnt out vehicles can be seen in most Dhaka neighbourhoods.
Clashes have been reported in other parts of the country. More than 800 prisoners escaped from a prison near Dhaka with 85 weapons and 10,000 ammunition rounds. Police say they have so far recaptured 58 of the prisoners.
UK-based analyst Kamal Ahmed told the BBC that the re-introduced job quota system had been exploited by the ruling Awami League party.
“The quota system was nothing but the governing Awami League rewarding their supporters and a ploy for entrenching the party’s influence in the future administration,” he said.
The ensuing protests were of “unprecedented intensity” and have expanded to become a “much wider people’s movement” against a backdrop of allegations of corruption, lack of accountability and the escalating cost of living, he said.
Law Minister Anisul Huq denied the quota system was benefiting the Awami League.
“I would say that actually 95% of the members of the ruling party have been either freedom fighters or have been supporters of the freedom fighters. It’s quite natural that they would be benefitting out of it,” he told the BBC.
Bangladesh is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, but that growth has not translated into jobs for university graduates.
Estimates suggest that around 18 million young Bangladeshis are looking for jobs. University graduates face higher rates of unemployment than their less-educated peers.
Clashes and demonstrations in UK and US
The tensions in Bangladesh have also seen demonstrations take place outside the country.
In the US there was a demonstration outside the White House, mainly involving Bangladeshi students studying in the country. In Times Square in New York, participants displayed banners demanding justice for the students killed over the past few days.
There were also disturbances in east London on Thursday evening as pro- and anti-government groups clashed.
Police said they found two large groups of men fighting among a wider demonstration of several hundred people in Whitechapel, which has a large ethnic Bangladeshi population.
Objects were then thrown at police, injuring two, and cars were damaged.
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On the final day of an intense Open Championship, played out in a glorious amalgam of wind and rain and sunshine from first thing on Thursday, Xander Schauffele carried himself with the kind of zen that could make Buddha look fretful.
The American said he got “chills” en route to the final green on Sunday, but it didn’t show. To the watching world he was impossibly cool and improbably collected.
He displayed a steely focus and a precision that laid waste to a pack that spent much of the day tightly bunched together, like a peloton awaiting a sprint finish.
There was no sprint, though. There was a breakaway and nobody could go with it.
“It’s an honour,” he said, looking at his Claret Jug. “I’ve always dreamt of doing it.
“That walk up 18 truly is the coolest with the yellow leaderboards and the fans and the standing ovation. It really is one of the coolest feelings I’ve ever had in my life.”
He talked of “super stressful moments” but that was part of Schauffele’s brilliance. Whatever emotion he was feeling, he never gave any hint of it.
Where did this round rate in the thousands he has played? “At the very tip top.”
He called the back nine at Royal Troon the hardest nine holes he’s ever played and yet he mastered them in 31 shots. Four birdies and no bogeys on a stretch of holes that found out the greatest players on the planet all week.
When Schauffele won his first major championship, the US PGA at Valhalla in May, his parents and, you sense, his greatest influences were far away from Louisville.
When he won his second on Sunday they were right by his side.
His dad, Stefan, was in the media centre when his son did the winners’ news conference, standing away to the side and in a blindspot to the stage, so much so that Schauffele needed telling that his dad was present.
Another major, but a different vibe.
When Schauffele won at Valhalla, his folks were at their place on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, a cargo container that doubles as their oasis from life in San Diego. No running water, no air conditioning. Splendid isolation.
Not an ideal spot to be when your boy has just fulfilled his life’s dream of winning a major, though. They followed it on their phone, which presented its own challenges, but it was emotional all the same.
“Once he made that putt [to win the PGA],” said Stefan, “I started to melt like a piece of butter in a skillet.”
This time, there would be no long-distance celebrations. Stefan and Ping Yi were here, as large as life.
‘Everyone on notice’ as Schauffele eyes slam
Americans love their father-son stories in sport and the Schauffele yarn is up there with the best of them.
Stefan, who grew up in Germany, was a decathlete back in the day, an aspiring Olympian who had his own dream crushed when hit by a drunk driver at the age of 20. He lost the sight in an eye and experienced trauma in his life.
“There was some depression and alcoholism,” he said in a recent interview. “That’s what led me to moving to America.”
He had a son and from the age of nine, Xander was a player. Stefan coached him and, from time to time, argued with him. Madly, on occasion.
Everything paid off. A golfing machine was forged and we saw it in all its formidable glory at Royal Troon this past week.
“Now he’s got this first major,” said Stefan after Valhalla, “it’s the first one of the four [nobody in Team Schauffele is shying away from the target of a Grand Slam].
“I’ve got a good feeling he’ll get the second one of the four this year. With him being as consistent as he is now, everybody is on notice.”
Prescient words. For a number of years, Schauffele was deemed golf’s nearly man, a supremely talented player who couldn’t back up his excellence with titles.
This is his time now. Two majors in a single year is an other-worldly achievement in this era of the game, a period so full of established winners and thrusting young things who are utterly unafraid of winning.
Schauffele said he had a chip on his shoulder about some of the negativity thrown at him. He used it as fuel.
What’s he going to use for motivation now that he’s an acclaimed double major winner? “If you look hard enough, you can always find it,” he said.
“It’s something, when you feel like you need an extra kick in the butt, there’s several easy ways to motivate yourself.
“There’s still a lot of things that I’d like to do in my career, and this is a very big leap towards that. The fire is still burning, maybe brighter than ever.”
He has the Olympics in Paris next, a gold medal to defend from his glory in Tokyo, another dream to chase before returning to the majors circuit next year.
That is terrain he will travel as a two-time champion and an increasing force to be reckoned with in the ferocious environment of elite golf.
Small in stature, for sure. But Schauffele is a colossus now.
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Second Rothesay Test (day four of five), Trent Bridge
England 416 (Pope 121; A Joseph 3-98) & 425 (Root 122, Brook 109; Seales 4-97)
West Indies 457 (Hodge 120; Woakes 4-84) & 143 (Bashir 5-41)
Scorecard
England surged to a series win by blowing away West Indies in a single session on the fourth day of the second Test at Trent Bridge.
Set 385 to win or four sessions to save the game, West Indies disintegrated from 61-0 to 82-5 in a manic blur of five wickets in six overs.
Chris Woakes twice found the edge to remove openers Mikyle Louis and Kraigg Brathwaite, and off-spinner Shoaib Bashir bowled a magical spell to claim 3-8 in 15 deliveries.
From there, the only question was whether the game would last until Monday. Mark Wood bounced out Kevin Sinclair, Gus Atkinson struck twice in three balls and Bashir took the final two wickets to end with 5-41. West Indies were 143 all out and beaten by 241 runs.
All this came after Joe Root and Harry Brook each made centuries to lay the platform for England’s victory push.
Root’s 122 was his 32nd Test hundred, one short of Sir Alastair Cook’s England record, while Brook added 109 for his first Test ton in this country.
West Indies’ target might have been larger had England not lost 7-96, but the regular fall of home wickets also gave Ben Stokes’ side enough time to wrap up the game with a day to spare.
It gives England their first series win since the tour of Pakistan in 2022. They will look for a 3-0 clean sweep when the final Test begins at Edgbaston on Friday, and have named an unchanged squad.
Swift end to superb contest
The rapid way this match unravelled in the final session of the fourth day was at odds with everything that came before, when these teams had wrestled for control.
Even with the runs Root and Brook scored in the morning session, there was still a ray of light for West Indies, who clung on by taking 3-19 just before lunch.
In the end, the target always felt likely to be well beyond them, despite the great spirit they have shown in responding to a heavy first Test defeat at Lord’s and the fact the pitch showed no huge sign of deteriorating until West Indies began their chase.
Suddenly, England were getting the ball to shoot and spit, particularly from the new Stuart Broad End. Woakes exploited some uncertain footwork, while Bashir hinted at why England have chosen him ahead of Somerset team-mate Jack Leach.
By this point, free entry for the fifth day had been offered to spectators, much like the last men’s Test at this ground, when England thrillingly beat New Zealand in 2022 on the day their Bazball style was born.
The fifth day was not required, but the outcome is the same: an England win and an unassailable 2-0 series lead.
Awesome England dismantle West Indies
Given the conditions, England might have been expecting a similar slog to the first innings, when they needed almost 112 overs to dismiss West Indies for 457.
Instead, this was a collective display of brilliance by the home attack, who dismantled the Windies in 36.1 overs of mayhem after tea.
Brathwaite in particular had looked in solid touch for 47 in his opening stand of 61 with Louis, but once Louis was drawn into an edge by Woakes, the implosion was swift and dramatic.
Kirk McKenzie somehow edged a Bashir half-tracker to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith, while Brathwaite’s edge off was almost a replay of Louis’ dismissal to really expose the tourists. Kavem Hodge was lbw playing back to Bashir, who then found gorgeous turn to draw the edge of left-hander Alick Athanaze. West Indies had lost 5-21.
The four-day finish was a possibility, made a reality when fleeting resistance from Sinclair was ended by a brutal bouncer in another terrifying spell from Wood.
Atkinson pinned Joshua da Silva lbw and scuttled one through Alzarri Joseph before Bashir produced his best, one that turned to end Jason Holder’s defiance on 37.
When last man Shamar Joseph was bowled having a swipe, 20-year-old Bashir became the youngest England bowler to take a five-wicket haul in a home Test and the first spinner to take five in an innings at Trent Bridge since 2006.
Root and Brook set England on course
Root and Brook, a master-and-apprentice pairing at four and five, had guided England from danger on the third evening and resumed on 248-3, leading by 207.
Neither of the Yorkshiremen were troubled as they blunted any possibility of the early wickets that would have got West Indies back in the game.
Brook, appearing to have so much time, either waited for the ball and guided it through third man, or played beautiful straight drives. This was the 25-year-old’s fifth Test hundred and first in 17 months.
Root accumulated in trademark fashion with pushes, deflections and clips. The seven fours in his hundred is the second-fewest in all of his Test tons. A fifth hundred in Nottingham is his joint-most at any venue and equals the record for centuries on this ground, shared by Michael Atherton and Denis Compton. He celebrated by reverse-scooping Shamar Joseph for four.
Just as England were set to accelerate, Brook flapped an edge off Jayden Seales to end a stand of 189. Captain Stokes pulled the same bowler to long leg and Smith edged off-spinner Sinclair.
The home side never fully regained the momentum, but in reaching 425 to go with their first-innings 416 this was the first time England have passed 400 twice in the same Test.
‘It’s not good enough’ – what they said
West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite, speaking to BBC Test Match Special: “It’s a tough loss, we pretty much lost 10 wickets in a session. It’s not good enough.
“It was obviously better than Lord’s but with the ball we weren’t as consistent as we should have been.”
England captain Ben Stokes talking to TMS: “I didn’t see it happening that quickly after the opening partnership. You could see at the end of our innings the wicket started misbehaving, I thought the way we fought back after that first wicket was impressive.
“I think we can get better, really looking forward to the next four matches.”
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Luke Humphries added the World Matchplay title to his World Championship crown with a thrilling 18-15 defeat of Michael van Gerwen.
The 29-year-old Englishman stayed composed to see off a fightback from his Dutch rival at Blackpool’s Winter Gardens.
Humphries sealed victory by hitting double 20 twice in a 100 checkout as Van Gerwen threatened to reel him in.
He is only the fourth man to win both events in the same year after Van Gerwen, Peter Wright and Phil Taylor.
“Honestly, I’ve felt more emotion than when I won the worlds. I am going to watch back that double tops 100 times tonight. I feel so blessed to have my name on that trophy,” said Humphries after clinching a fifth major title in the space of nine months.
“I am absolutely over the moon. I am emotional, it really means the world to me.”
World number one Humphries continued his record of ton-plus averages throughout the tournament as he clocked 100.94, including 12 180s, to clinch a £200,000 payday.
Despite losing their past seven encounters, three-time champion Van Gerwen had vowed to “teach a lesson” to his opponent.
Humphries, in his first World Matchplay final, averaged more than 104 – 11 better than his opponent – in the opening five legs but still went to the first break 3-2 down.
He made his scoring power count with four consecutive legs to take control of the match and when Van Gerwen broke his throw, Humphries immediately hit back with a superb 141 checkout to take the 12th leg.
The Dutchman upped his game, closed on the averages and finishes of 106 and 110 saw him level the contest at 12-12.
Humphries fought back and took out 131 to go 16-13 ahead before Van Gerwen hit 160 and 108 checkouts to cut the deficit, but he missed four darts at the double when poised to level.
He had three more chances again to take the next leg but Humphries finished in style with double double tops to clinch victory.
“I made mistakes and I still feel I was the better player. Luke is a fantastic player and we know what he is capable of. I think I deserved a little bit more today,” said world number two Van Gerwen.
Earlier, Beau Greaves beat Fallon Sherrock 6-3 to successfully defend her women’s title.
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Captain Ben Stokes said Shoaib Bashir had “shown the world what he can do” after the off-spinner bowled England to victory in the second Test against West Indies at Trent Bridge.
Bashir took 5-41 as the home side dismissed the tourists for 143 in the final session of the fourth day to win the match by 241 runs and claim an unassailable 2-0 series lead.
At 20 years and 282 days, Bashir became the youngest England bowler to take a five-wicket haul in a home Test and the first spinner to take five in an innings at Trent Bridge since 2006.
“He has got so much talent and he’s got an unbelievable desire to get better,” said Stokes.
“It’s really good for a young guy to put in a performance that wins England a Test. He was pretty emotional at the end. It’s a pretty cool day for him.”
Bashir was a surprise choice for England’s winter tour of India – called up after playing only six first-class matches.
However, he has now taken three five-wicket hauls in five Tests, and in one of those matches – the heavy defeat of West Indies in the first Test at Lord’s last week – he was not required to bowl.
“He has shown the world what he can do,” added Stokes. “His intent is to always take wickets and never just to hold an end up.”
England have opted for Bashir over Jack Leach, despite the latter being first-choice for their county Somerset. Bashir even had to spend time on loan with Worcestershire earlier this summer in order to play in the County Championship.
Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum have identified Bashir’s height as one of his key attributes. At 6ft 4in, Bashir says he is “still growing”.
His release point of 2.35m is third-highest recorded by a spinner, meaning he is likely to gain more of a slow bowler’s key weapon: bounce.
All-rounder Stokes continued: “The decisions we make are all based around not only how far we think talent can take a player, but if we think they’re good enough for international cricket straight away.
“‘Bash’ showed what he could do in India with conditions in his favour, but the pitch this week didn’t really offer much for spin and he has taken seven wickets in the match. I don’t want to sound like it’s an ‘I told you so’ kind of thing, but it sort of is.”
Stokes first spotted Bashir in a video posted on X, formerly Twitter, bowling in his first-class debut in June of last year to England’s all-time leading run-scorer, Sir Alastair Cook. Stokes then shared the video in a WhatsApp group with McCullum and England managing director Rob Key.
“The ceiling for Bashir is so high,” Cook told Test Match Special. “You’ve got to bowl to learn your craft, but what we’re seeing is him learning on the job and still delivering the goods.
“He’s nowhere near the finished article, and what will be funny is in 10 years’ time, if he’s still playing, he’ll look back and think ‘cor, I wasn’t very good then’, and yet he’s still doing the job for England.”
Bashir’s 24-wicket haul is the third-most in the first five Tests by an England spinner since World War Two, behind Nick Cook and Graeme Swann.
Bashir himself had not been to Trent Bridge before he played for England in Nottingham.
After England set West Indies 385 to win or four sessions to bat for a draw, Bashir spearheaded the tear through the tourists, who were bowled out in 36.1 overs after tea on Sunday.
“It was the first time I have bowled for England in England and it was so special to finish it in a session,” Bashir told Test Match Special.
“I’m the youngest in the group, everyone gets around me. I’m still trying to soak everything in, that innings went so quickly.”
England have named an unchanged squad for Friday’s third Test at Edgbaston, where they will aim for a 3-0 clean sweep.
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Lando Norris agonised over whether to hand victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix back to team-mate Oscar Piastri but said it was the “fair” and “honest” thing to do.
The Briton spent 20 laps debating the move with his team, as the drivers raced to McLaren’s first one-two for nearly three years, but said that he was “always quite confident” he was going to do it.
“I didn’t deserve to win the race,” Norris said. “Simple as that. The fact I was in that position was incorrect.
“If Oscar’s led the whole race, it’s not fair, and I don’t think that’s how it should work, that he should just let me pass for me to win because I’m fighting for a championship.”
“I didn’t give up the race win. I lost it off the line.”
Both drivers admitted after the race that McLaren had made their lives harder than would be ideal.
Norris was ahead of Piastri – for whom this was a maiden win – only because the team had chosen to make the Briton’s second and final pit stop early to protect against Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes, who had recently made his own and fitted fresh tyres.
McLaren were cautious in the timing – excessively so, some said – because Norris still had five seconds to play with.
But team principal Andrea Stella said that he preferred to reduce the impact of a potential delay at a pit stop and handle the situation within the team than risk losing track position.
The decision to pit Norris first from just over a second behind inevitably – because of the extra pace provided by fresh tyres – put Norris ahead of Piastri when the Australian made his own final stop a couple of laps later. And the situation did indeed appear to take some handling.
Time and again, Norris’ engineer Will Joseph went on the radio to urge Norris to follow instructions; time and again Norris pushed back, or sometimes did not respond at all. At one point, Joseph had to say: “Radio check” to ensure Norris was getting the messages. “Loud and clear,” came the reply.
Why did he not reassure the team, Norris was asked.
“I don’t need to,” he said. “I know what I’m going to do and not going to do.
“Of course I’m going to question and challenge it. And that’s what I did. I was going to wait until the last corner, last lap. But they said if there was a safety car all of a sudden, then I couldn’t let Oscar go through and it would have made me look like a bit of an idiot and I was like, fair point, so I let him go two laps to go.
“You can make of it what you will, of what you hear and what you think you know, but I know I was always going to give it back unless they changed their mind and they didn’t, so all good.”
Is Norris a title contender?
The result – combined with a difficult race for championship leader Max Verstappen, who collided with Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes and finished fifth – allowed Norris to close his deficit in the drivers’ championship to the Dutchman to 76 points. McLaren are now just 51 points behind Red Bull in the constructors’ with 11 races to go.
And Norris admitted it was the championship that had made him doubt his decision most.
“It’s always going to go through your mind,” he said. “You have to be selfish in this sport at times. That’s priority number one to think of yourself.
“I’m also a team player. My mind was going pretty crazy at the time. I know what we’ve done in the past. Oscar’s helped me plenty of times. But this isn’t that. I was put into a position and we were undoing it.
“I know a lot of people are going to say the gap between me and Max is pretty big but if Red Bull and Max make the mistakes they did today and we continue to improve and have weekends like this, we can turn it around.
“It is still optimistic and a big goal to say I can close 70 points in half a season, and seven points I give away… it crosses your mind. So it was not easy.
“But I also understood the situation I was in and I was quite confident that by the last lap I would have done it.”
A non-negotiable for McLaren
Before the race, it looked like Norris’ to lose. He had started on pole, on the racing line, and normally the drivers on the inside make slower starts at the Hungaroring because of the lack of grip off line.
But Norris’ start was not good, and Piastri got alongside him as they went three-wide into the first corner with Verstappen. Norris briefly dropped behind Verstappen – who was ordered to give the place back because he had gained it by going off the track.
Once back in second place, on a track where overtaking is difficult – partly because of the circuit’s twisty nature and partly because of the hot weather that means cars behind others overheat their tyres even more than normal – Norris was never going to pass a car from the same team with such similar pace.
“I boxed first and naturally you will always undercut. The team gave me this position and I gave it back, nothing more than that,” he said.
“Something we always talk about before every race is our trust in one another, our honesty we have as a group. I think that’s something that’s allowed us to catch others so quickly, to perform and outperform others so quickly to develop the car quicker.”
Despite Norris’ arguments with the pit wall, team principal Stella, who has masterminded McLaren’s revival over the past 18 months, said he had no doubts his driver would do what was asked.
“I know Lando enough,” Stella said. “Sometimes you have to communicate to all the sides that exist inside a race driver.
“But I know him well enough to know that inside Lando we have a race driver and a team player. These two elements came along perfectly today to generate what was the right thing to do for the team, for Oscar and Lando.
“I know for the media and watching on TV this becomes a story. But for us internally this becomes part of the way we go racing, and that’s why we invest so much in culture, values and mindset. We want to be able to manage the situation if we want to be in the championship with Lando, Oscar and McLaren.”
Stella is an intelligent and eloquent man, but also a tough one. A driver who did not accede to such a policy, he said, could find somewhere else to race.
“Interests of the team come first,” Stella said. “If you mess up on this matter, you cannot be part of the McLaren F1 team. That’s the principle.”
But he said he had no concerns Norris would eventually do what was right.
Asked why it had taken Norris so long, Stella replied: “Because he’s a race driver. Mention me a race driver who would have not done (the same thing). Actually you can mention to me many who would have not done it until lap 70, and I would be extremely concerned in that case if Lando had not demonstrated I am a race driver because that’s the ethos you need to fight hard with Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and more and Oscar himself.
“It is entertaining to talk about the controversial aspects, but it would be unfair not to talk about the resolution which happened according to our way of going racing.”
A dream comes true
It was hard to argue with the idea Piastri deserved to win – a result that has looked only a matter of time since he made his debut with McLaren last year.
The Australian led the race confidently after winning the start. The only blot on his copybook an off at Turn 11 that allowed Norris to get back in range before that crucial final stop.
It was not his first F1 win – he won the sprint in Qatar last year – but it was his first grand prix victory. It will surely not be the last.
“An incredible moment that I’ve been dreaming of for a very long time,” Piastri said. “My first dream in my career was reaching F1. The second one is winning a race. Yeah, I’m very, very happy and proud and not just of myself, but everybody that’s helped me get to this position.
“Going back to my family, firstly, of course. You know, it took a lot of big decisions at a young age to chase the F1 dream.
“It’s very difficult to become an F1 driver by staying in Australia, so it meant some big decisions early in life. And, yeah, just very, very proud that, you know, those decisions have paid off and we’ve managed to make it worth it.”
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Final leaderboard
-9 Schauffele (US); -7 Rose (Eng), Horschel (US); -6 Lawrence (SA)
Selected: -5 Henley (US); -4 Lowry (Ire); -1 Rahm (Spa), Im (Kor), Scheffler (US); Level Jordan (Eng), Brown (Eng)
Full leaderboard
Xander Schauffele held off the challenge of Justin Rose to win the 152nd Open Championship at the end of a captivating week at Royal Troon.
It is a second major title in three months for 30-year-old Schauffele, who becomes the first player to win The Open and US PGA Championship in the same year since Rory McIlroy in 2014.
The American hit a stunning bogey-free six-under 65 to finish on nine under, two clear of his playing partner Rose, who shot a 67 in a fascinating duel in breezy conditions.
“Hearing your name called with Open champion after it is something I’ve dreamed of for a very long time,” said the Champion Golfer of the Year.
For Rose, whose sole major remains his 2013 US Open triumph, it has been the closest he has come to lifting the Claret Jug, 26 years after he finished joint fourth as a 17-year-old to win the Silver Medal as low amateur.
“The dream’s been alive all week and I did an awesome job,” the 43-year-old, who came through a qualifying event in Somerset, told BBC Sport.
“This will be a tough one but a great one. I played in some of the hardest weather all week. I played some of the best golf but it didn’t quite add up to the trophy.”
Three birdies in his opening seven holes had put Rose briefly in the lead on six under, but Schauffele surged three clear of his fellow Olympic gold medallist with an electrifying run of five birdies in nine holes from the sixth.
He took just 31 shots to compete the back nine, which has been routinely referred to this week as the hardest in championship golf.
Overnight leader Billy Horschel, who faded after a fast start, birded the final three holes to join Rose in joint second.
‘My caddie was about to puke on 18th tee’
Victory for Schauffele caps a remarkable season in the majors, recording top-10 finishes in all four, with two wins.
And his win here means all four men’s majors have been won by American players for the first time since 1982, with Scottie Scheffler claiming his second Masters in April, and Bryson DeChambeau the US Open in June.
“I thought [winning the US PGA Championship] would help me and it actually did,” said Schauffele.
“I had this sense of calm, a calm I didn’t have when I played earlier at the PGA.
“For some reason, I was calm and collected. I was telling my caddie Austin that I felt pretty calm coming down the stretch and he said he was about to puke on the 18th tee!
“I just told myself to just hit it down there and keep moving along.”
How the final round unfolded
With six players tied for second at the start of play, the most going into the final round of a major for 30 years, there was bound to be drama.
And it began before the leaders teed off.
Spain’s Jon Rahm, who resumed on two over par, opened with three successive birdies and added another on the seventh to get to two under, just two behind overnight leader Horschel.
But while there were birdies to be had on the front nine, Rahm also showed how tough the back nine would be as he had eight pars and a bogey to finish on one under.
Shane Lowry, who started at one under, was the first of the serious contenders to charge, with four birdies in five holes as the 2019 champion reached the turn at four under, his eventual finishing total.
But those behind him were also making headway.
World number one Scheffler briefly flickered, reaching four under after eight but a three-putt double bogey from eight feet on the ninth stalled his challenge and he closed with another six at the last to post a 72 and one-under total.
Rose was three under for his front nine as he briefly led on six under. Schauffele picked up shots at the sixth and seventh holes, and then had the only birdie of the day on the par-four 11th to join Rose.
By this point, South African Thriston Lawrence, out in the final group with Horschel, had gone one clear on seven under after four birdies on his front nine.
Horschel was hanging in there. The overnight leader birdied three of his opening five holes to get to six under but bogeys on the eighth and 10th holes looked to have ended his hopes. Three successive birdies to finish joint second came with the pressure of winning off.
While others faded at the start of the back nine – Sam Burns, who was among those in second place at the start of day, dropped six shots on the 10th, 11th and 12th holes as he posted an 80 – Schauffele stomped on the accelerator.
He followed his birdie on 11 with two more on the 13th and 14th holes to reach eight under.
It was the turning point. Schauffele was suddenly two clear of Lawrence and three clear of Rose, who both bogeyed the 12th.
Schauffele and Rose both birdied the long 16th and the American knew at that point he was almost home. Two pars were enough, while Rose saluted the crowd after rounding off his championship with a birdie at the last before warmly embracing the victor.
Rose at least has the comfort of knowing that he has already qualified for next year’s Open at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland.
Also qualified for 2025 are fellow Englishmen Dan Brown and Matthew Jordan, who ended level par and joint 10th.
Brown, the world number 272, led after round one and continued to defy expectation throughout the week but finally faded on Sunday.
Like Rose, he too began the final round one off the lead but, playing with Scheffler, he had four bogeys in his opening six holes and he closed with a 74.
It means England’s hopes of a first winner of The Open extend to a 33rd year, with Sir Nick Faldo’s triumph at Muirfield in 1992 still the last.
Scotland’s Calum Scott scooped the Silver Medal as low amateur. His closing 76 won him that title on eight over par.
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Tadej Pogacar sealed a sensational Tour de France-Giro d’Italia double by winning the stage 21 time trial into Nice.
The UAE Team Emirates rider finished the Tour with a sixth stage victory and became the first man to win cycling’s two biggest races in the same year since Italian Marco Pantani in 1998.
The Tour’s finale was held outside of Paris for the first time since 1903 as the French capital prepares to host the Olympics.
Wearing the yellow jersey Slovenia’s Pogacar, 25, finished the stage 63 seconds clear of second-placed Jonas Vingegaard.
The win secured his third Tour de France title, extending his lead over nearest rival and two-time winner Vingegaard, of Visma–Lease a Bike, to six minutes and 17 seconds.
“I cannot describe how happy I am,” said Pogacar.
“After two hard years in the Tour de France, this year everything went to perfection.”
Tour debutant Remco Evenepoel, riding for Soudal–Quick-Step, finished third on the stage and completed the general classification podium, nine minutes and 18 seconds behind Pogacar.
The 2024 edition will also be remembered for Mark Cavendish’s record 35th stage victory in Saint Vulbas in the opening week.
After completing the final stage, the legendary British sprinter said this year’s Tour is likely to have been his last race.
How the 2024 Tour de France was won
Pogacar dominated this year’s Tour de France – becoming the first rider to win six stages in a single edition since Cavendish in 2009.
He also spent 19 days in the yellow jersey, holding it exclusively from stage four.
This year’s Tour was arguably won on stage 15 where, already ahead by almost two minutes, Pogacar stormed to victory on a gruelling climb up to Plateau de Beille to extend his lead over Vingegaard by another 69 seconds.
Four days later he had overall victory wrapped up, ascending to Isola 2000 where he put a further one minute and 42 seconds into his nearest rivals.
The Slovenian looked a level above Vingegaard, who he finished second behind at the last two editions, with the Dane still recovering from a broken collarbone and ribs suffered in April.
But even a fully fit Vingegaard would have struggled to match Pogacar’s pace.
His Tour de France dominance matches his performance at this year’s Giro d’Italia, where he blew away the competition to win by nine minutes and 56 seconds.
“Already it would have been an incredible year, but to win the Tour de France is another level,” added Pogacar.
“To win both together is another level above that level.”
In July Pogacar said he was “99% sure” he would not compete at this year’s Vuelta a Espana, where he could become the first ever rider to win all three Grand Tours in the same calendar year.
He will represent Slovenia in the men’s road race at the Olympics in Paris on 3 August.
Girmay takes historic green jersey
By finishing safely in Nice, sprinter Biniam Girmay made history – becoming the first black African winner of the Tour de France points classification.
He had a sensational race. On day three he became the first Eritrean to win a stage at the Tour, and he went on to record two more victories – on stage eight and stage 12.
The green jersey winner, 24, was one of only six black African riders in the top-level WorldTour peloton of 534 in 2023, the year he made his Tour de France debut.
The ‘African king’ has battled through visa issues and loneliness since he moved to Europe six years ago.
The King of the Mountains classification was won by Richard Carapaz while Belgian Evenepoel, 24, claimed the white jersey as the best rider in the general classification under the age of 25.
Stage 21 results
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Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 45mins 24secs
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Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Visma-Lease a Bike) +1min 03secs
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Remco Evenepoel (Bel/Soudal- Quick Step) +1min 14secs
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Matteo Jorgenson (USA/Visma-Lease a Bike) +2mins 08secs
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Joao Almeida (Por/UAE Team Emirates) +2mins 18secs
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Derek Gee (Can/Israel- Premier Tech) +2mins 31secs
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Mikel Landa (Spa/Soudal-Quick Step) +2mins 41 secs
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Harold Tejada (Col/Astana Qazaqstan Team) +2mins 50 secs
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Santiago Buitrago (Bahrain – Victorious) +2mins 53secs
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Adam Yates (GB/UAE Team Emirates) +2mins 56secs
Final general classification standings
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Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 83hrs 38mins 56secs
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Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Visma-Lease a Bike) +6mins 17secs
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Remco Evenepoel (Bel/Soudal- Quick Step) +9mins 18secs
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Joao Almeida (Por/UAE Team Emirates) +19mins 03secs
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Mikel Landa (Spa/Soudal-Quick Step) +20mins 06secs
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Adam Yates (GB/UAE Team Emirates) +24mins 07secs
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Carlos Rodriguez (Spa/Ineos Grenadiers) +25mins 04secs
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Matteo Jorgenson (USA/Visma-Lease a Bike) +26mins 34secs
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Derek Gee (Can/Israel- Premier Tech) +27mins 21secs
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Santiago Buitrago (Bahrain – Victorious) +29mins 03secs