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What We're Watching: Johnson faces moment of truth, Russia hits Kyiv, Summit of the Americas kicks off
British PM Boris Johnson looking frazzled.
Reuters
Conservative lawmakers on Monday dealt a massive blow to British PM Boris Johnson by triggering a no-confidence vote that could remove him from the top job after nearly three years in office. Johnson’s popularity, both among the British electorate and within his own Conservative Party, has been waning for months, in large part because of the ongoing Partygate saga, which saw Downing Street repeatedly host rowdy parties in violation of COVID lockdown rules while Brits were often hit with fines for minor indiscretions. Earlier this year, Johnson became the first-ever British PM to be fined for breaking the law. The growing cost-of-living crisis has also hurt him: Johnson’s approval rating has plunged to a dismal 26% – a remarkable drop from the 66% he enjoyed at the beginning of the pandemic. In a sign of growing public disdain for the PM, he and his wife Carrie were booed at a recent event marking the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. So, what happens now? On Monday evening, Conservative legislators in the House of Commons will vote on whether to remove the PM from office. A simple majority – 180 Tory MPs – will need to back the motion to end his tenure as PM. But even if he prevails, Johnson will emerge a diminished figure in British politics. Will the perennial comeback kid survive again?
Hours after President Vladimir Putin warned that Russia would hit new targets in Ukraine if the West continued to arm Kyiv with long-range armaments, Moscow appeared to make good on its threat. Kyiv was targeted by missiles on Sunday, the first time the capital has seen airstrikes since April. The strikes appeared to be aimed at tanks Russia claimed were donated by the West, and at railways and other transport infrastructure that might be used to ship western weapons to Ukrainian fighters stationed in the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, the current flashpoint of the war. This escalation comes just days after the US pledged an additional $700 million in military aid to Ukraine, including precision-guided, medium-range rocket systems, helicopters, and Javelin anti-tank missiles. As heavy fighting continued in the industrial city of Sievierodonetsk, the last Ukrainian-held enclave in the eastern Luhansk region, both sides claimed they were making gains, but the UK military said that Ukrainian fighters are “likely blunting the operational momentum” of Russian forces. Meanwhile, far from the battlefield, Ukraine’s spirited soccer team lost a heartbreaker to Wales, 1-0, in a World Cup qualifier in Cardiff. In a strange twist of fate, it was an own goal that sealed their loss.
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Egyptians are voting this month in parliamentary elections that aren’t expected to change who’s in charge, but could allow President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to rule beyond 2030.
Thailand and Cambodia’s ceasefire is on the verge of collapse. Strikes were launched across their disputed border today, following clashes over the weekend that resulted in the death of a Thai soldier.