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cover of episode Germany vote shock, Israel’s Gaza plan, Romania and the Met Gala

Germany vote shock, Israel’s Gaza plan, Romania and the Met Gala

2025/5/6
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Reuters World News

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Ben Kellerman
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James McKenzie
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Rachel Armstrong
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新闻播报员:德国保守党领导人默兹未能获得足够多数票当选总理,这是一个意外的挫折。以色列计划加强在加沙的军事行动,可能占领整个加沙地带,并可能将援助物资分发转移给私营公司。罗马尼亚极右翼领导人乔治·西蒙在总统选举第一轮投票中获胜,这引发了对其未来欧盟和北约成员国地位的担忧。Met Gala庆祝黑色剪裁风格。 James McKenzie:如果以色列接管整个加沙地带,那将是一个非常重大的事件,其具体影响尚不明确。以色列接管加沙的援助物资分发存在两方面困难:国际组织更有经验,以及以色列可能不愿分发足够的援助。 Rachel Armstrong:西蒙的政治立场难以界定,其对欧盟的态度不明朗。西蒙的胜选会对罗马尼亚对乌克兰的支持以及北约东翼产生影响。西蒙的胜选可能与特朗普效应有关,但欧洲的情况与澳大利亚和加拿大不同。 Ben Kellerman:今年Met Gala的主题是黑色时髦风格,服装设计相对保守,注重剪裁。今年Met Gala的男装主题改变了以往的关注点,即使是女装也融入了男装剪裁元素。

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Today, what an expanded Israeli operation could mean in Gaza. Far-right support in Romania raises questions about its NATO and EU future. And fashion's biggest night celebrates black dandyism at the Met Gala. It's Tuesday, May 6th. This is Reuters World News, bringing you everything you need to know from the front lines in 10 minutes every weekday. I'm Tara Oakes in Liverpool.

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First to Germany for some breaking news, where Conservative leader Friedrich Merz has fallen short of the majority he needs to become Chancellor in a vote in Parliament. It's an unexpected setback for his new coalition. The Bundestag now has two weeks to elect him or another candidate with an outright majority. More on the story as it develops on Reuters.com and the Reuters app.

After weeks of faltering efforts to agree a ceasefire with Hamas, Israel plans to intensify military operations in Gaza, possibly seizing the entire territory. Aid distribution, which has been handled by international aid groups and UN organisations, could be transferred to private companies.

Israel has faced growing international pressure to lift an aid blockade that it imposed two months ago, cutting off all supplies to the enclave. James McKenzie is in Jerusalem and lays out what such an operation could mean.

If they took over the whole of the Gaza Strip, that would be very dramatic development, obviously. It's not quite clear what that means. Would it be permanently occupied by Israeli soldiers? That seems to be what they're talking about. Would it include Israeli settlements or anything like that? That's what some of the hardline ministers would like, obviously. But it's just unclear whether or not Israel is really in a position to maintain this kind of long-term relationship

occupation of what would surely be just an extremely hostile area. So what happens if Israel takes over food and aid distribution and hires a company to handle it?

The difficulty about that is twofold. One is that the international organizations that have a long experience of distributing food in Gaza and in emergency conditions have the experience and the capacity to do this. It's not quite clear whether the civilian companies that Israeli officials are talking about have that same ability.

The second question is how much aid Israel would be willing to distribute. They say that Hamas seizes large parts of the aid and use it for itself, its own forces, instead of allowing it to get to the civilian population. And that's one of the justifications they have for imposing this blockade.

Multiple explosions and fires in the Sudanese city of Port Sudan early this morning, according to witnesses. The main fuel storage supplying the country has been destroyed. The Trump administration is pushing forward in defending rules easing access to the abortion drug Mifepristone. It's a legal challenge that began during the Biden administration. The drug is used in more than 60% of U.S. abortions.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered a 20% reduction in the number of four-star officers. Hegseth has long been vocal about how the senior-most ranks of the military are too big. A U.S. appeals court is rejecting President Donald Trump's bid to revoke the temporary legal status of thousands of migrants. Those affected are Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans living in the United States.

And all of the 133 cardinals expected to take part in the secret conclave to elect a new pope have arrived in Rome. The race to succeed Pope Francis is seen as wide open, and it starts tomorrow. Over to China now for markets. Chinese travellers' spending rose 8% year on year during the May Day holiday, but was still off pre-pandemic levels.

The holiday, one of a country's longest, is closely watched as a barometer of Chinese consumer confidence. China's tourism ministry recorded 314 million domestic trips during the holiday, an increase of 6.5%. But consumption in the world's second largest economy has suffered amid sputtering growth and a prolonged property crisis. And the fallout from the US-China trade war is set to deepen the pain.

Romania's centre-left prime minister has stepped down after far-right leader George Simeon won the first round of the presidential rerun. The Eurosceptic Trump admirer will face a centrist in a runoff for the presidency in just under two weeks.

Our European editor, Rachel Armstrong, is here to tell us what a Simeon win could mean. Simeon, he is quite hard to define. He's in fact part of the same bloc that Italy's Giorgia Maloney is in. And she is obviously taking a fairly soft, Eurosceptic approach to the bloc, that she wants to work within the EU to promote her interests. So there'll be a question mark about whether he will do that.

And whether he is cognizant of the fact that a lot of his support base comes from Romanians who are working across the EU, and whilst they are probably very disillusioned with their living standards and the cost of living crisis, they do also benefit from being in the EU, from being able to work in the way that they do. And how would a Simian overall victory impact NATO's eastern flank?

So Romania has been a really important logistical hub for Ukraine and for NATO during the war. Ukraine's President Vladimir Zelensky has already said that they will have to review whether they can continue to train F-16 pilots on fighter planes in Romania. That's been a major venue for that. Romania has also helped Ukraine transport an awful lot of grain to keep Ukraine's economy going during the war.

I think what people will want to see is whether Simeon is opposed to all of that logistical support or whether it's more a case of not wanting to send any more money to Ukraine. And in yesterday's pod, we were talking about the Trump effect in elections around the world. Is this another example of that?

So Europe is definitely not following the playbook that we've seen in Australia and Canada when it comes to Trump giving centrist, perhaps slightly left-leaning politicians a boost. Many far-right politicians in Europe are taking a lot of inspiration from Trump's campaigning style, and that certainly gave Simeon a boost in the Romanian election.

Rihanna revealed her third pregnancy. Pharrell Williams sported a jacket with 15,000 pearls. And musician Andre 3000 strapped a piano to his back. It was, of course, fashion's biggest night.

and celebrities celebrated black style and tailoring at the Met Gala fundraiser. Our reporter Ben Kellerman was there. Ben, what was the vibe this year? How did people interpret the theme? So dandyism is a style that's a statement in menswear about being impeccably dressed and groomed and wearing perfectly tailored clothes as a part of it. And this year's theme was

For the Met Gala and the exhibition that runs alongside it at the Metropolitan Museum focuses on the history of black dandyism, which takes that style and those principles as a way of resisting race and class barriers and is something that is associated with the Harlem Renaissance in New York City. So I think because of the focus on menswear and I think because designers and the celebrities who were on the red carpet, because they wanted to honor the

the history that was embedded in that theme, you didn't have quite as many outlandish outfits. You didn't have as many outfits that sort of felt like costumes. And so usually all the coverage is about the women's wear, right? But how did the menswear theme change that? How did they look? So even the outfits that might be considered women's wear, a lot of them incorporated

of men's tailoring. We saw a lot of dresses that were maybe styled and tailored to look like a suit jacket, but instead of coattails, the coattails would extend into a train like a traditional ball gown would. You

You also had dresses and gowns that sort of had a fun conceptual take on menswear. So, for example, Demi Moore wore a gown made to look like a necktie that sort of trailed behind her as if it was the train of a gown. Dark spots? Dullness? Meet Caudalie's Vino Perfect Serum.

This vitamin C alternative is clinically proven to visibly reduce dark spots by 63% after just one bottle. Available at Sephora and CodaLee.com. And for today's recommended read, an award-winning investigation. Reuters has won the Pulitzer Prize in investigative reporting for a series on the international fentanyl trade, the drug at the heart of a crisis which has killed more than 450,000 Americans.

Here on the podcast, we did a special episode highlighting the investigations. There's a link to the Fentanyl Express series and our pod special in today's description. For more on any of the stories from today, check out Reuters.com or the Reuters app. Don't forget to follow us on your favorite podcast player, and we'll be back tomorrow with our daily headline show.