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All The International Politics!

@allthegeopolitics / allthegeopolitics.tumblr.com

Hello, everyone. This is a Left focused International News & Politics blog from the creator of the popular Canadian Politics blog: @Allthecanadianpolitics.
Legislation aimed at the LGBTQ+ community has become more “extreme” and is only getting worse under Donald Trump, a not-for-profit group has warned. There has been a dramatic rise in anti-LGBTQ+ bills across the US over the past few years, particularly those that target trans people’s rights. Since 2023, the American Civil Liberties Union has tracked at least 1,570 proposed bills, with 527 already in just the first three months of this year. The bills, mainly Republican-led, include efforts to ban gender-affirming care for transgender youngsters and censoring LGBTQ+ curriculum in state schools.
All bakeries in Gaza have been forced to close down due to Israel’s blockade on food and essentials.  Abdel Nasser al-Ajrami, the head of Gaza’s bakery owners’ association, announced on Tuesday that bakeries had shut as a result of lack of fuel and flour.  “The World Food Programme [WFP] informed us today that flour had run out in its warehouses,” Ajrami said.  “Bakeries will no longer operate until the [Israeli] occupation opens the crossings and allows the necessary supplies to enter.” The WFP supports the running of 18 bakeries in the enclave. Their closures will worsen a starvation and malnutrition crisis that has devastated Gaza’s two million residents. 
A group of US lawmakers has introduced legislation to block the Trump administration from proceeding with several major weapons sales to Israel, citing concerns over civilian casualties in Gaza and potential violations of international law, Anadolu Agency reports. Democrats Pramila Jayapal and Rashida Tlaib – the first Palestinian American woman to serve in Congress – are leading the effort with four joint resolutions of disapproval targeting specific arms transfers. The proposed measures would prohibit sales of weapons worth billions of dollars, including 35,529 powerful 2,000-pound bombs, various guidance systems for munitions, thousands of additional bombs, and armored bulldozers that have been used in demolishing Palestinian homes.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said Tuesday that she has directed prosecutors to seek the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, following through on the president's campaign promise to vigorously pursue capital punishment. It is the first time the Justice Department has sought to bring the death penalty since U.S. President Donald Trump returned to office in January with a vow to resume federal executions. Bondi's decision to do so in the high-profile case against Mangione, who has drawn a following of supporters upset with the health-care industry, underscores the attorney general's commitment to carrying out the president's push for new death penalty cases.
A French court on Monday convicted Marine Le Pen of embezzlement and barred her from seeking public office for five years — a hammer blow to the far-right leader’s presidential hopes and an earthquake for French politics. Le Pen’s lawyer said she would appeal the verdict — but she will remain ineligible while she does and so could be ruled out of the 2027 presidential race. She was also sentenced to two years under house arrest.
US President Donald Trump has threatened that Iran will be bombed if it doesn’t enter a deal to curb its nuclear programme with the US. "If they don’t make a deal, there will be bombing," Trump told NBC News in an interview late on Saturday. "It will be bombing the likes of which they have never seen before." Trump's language represented a sharpening of his comment a few days earlier, in which he said that if Tehran refused to negotiate a new nuclear agreement, "bad, bad things are going to happen to Iran". It was not clear whether Trump was threatening bombing by US planes alone or perhaps in an operation coordinated with Israel.

The move is a sign that the public health agency may be falling in line under RFK Jr.

Leaders at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ordered staff this week not to release their experts’ assessment that found the risk of catching measles is high in areas near outbreaks where vaccination rates are lagging, according to internal records reviewed by ProPublica.

In an aborted plan to roll out the news, the agency would have emphasized the importance of vaccinating people against the highly contagious and potentially deadly disease that has spread to 19 states, the records show.

A CDC spokesperson told ProPublica in a written statement that the agency decided against releasing the assessment “because it does not say anything that the public doesn’t already know.” She added that the CDC continues to recommend vaccines as “the best way to protect against measles.”

But what the nation’s top public health agency said next shows a shift in its long-standing messaging about vaccines, a sign that it may be falling in line under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime critic of vaccines:

“The decision to vaccinate is a personal one,” the statement said, echoing a line from a column Kennedy wrote for the Fox News website. “People should consult with their healthcare provider to understand their options to get a vaccine and should be informed about the potential risks and benefits associated with vaccines.”

ProPublica shared the new CDC statement about personal choice and risk with Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University School of Public Health. To her, the shift in messaging, and the squelching of this routine announcement, is alarming.

A British graduate student, suspended for his pro-Palestine activism at Cornell University, is suing US President Donald Trump to stop his attempt at deporting international students and scholars who support Palestine and protest against the war on Gaza. Momodou Taal, 31, has joined forces with a fellow graduate student, a scholar at Cornell University, and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee to file a lawsuit challenging Trump's executive orders, which Taal has described as a "threat to millions in the US and worldwide". "Today, on the advice of counsel, we have sought a national injunction against Trump's executive orders. This is because we cannot allow international students, faculty, immigrants and people with conscience to live in perpetual fear, with the threat of illegal detention hanging over our heads," Taal said in a statement. 
Disney shareholders have rejected an anti-DEI proposal put forward by a conservative think tank during the company’s annual meeting. Disney shareholders rejected the proposal, which would remove the company from participating in the Corporate Equality Index; a national benchmarking tool on corporate policies involving diversity, equity and inclusion, pertinent to LGBTQ+ employees, set up by the Human Rights Campaign. At Disney’s annual shareholder meeting, held Thursday (20 March), the conservative think tank National Center for Public Policy Research urged them to stop using the HRC’s CEI as a benchmark.
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