Business news from Ukraine

Business news from Ukraine

Trump becomes official GOP presidential candidate

Former US President Donald Trump has won enough votes at the Republican Party convention to become a candidate for the presidency in the 2024 elections, the Associated Press reports.

“Donald Trump has become the official Republican presidential nominee after receiving a sufficient number of delegate votes at the Republican National Convention,” the agency reports.

“We declare him the Republican presidential nominee,” Trump’s son Eric said at the convention.

Earlier on Monday, Trump announced that if he wins the presidential election, Ohio Senator J.D. Vance would become his vice president.

“After much deliberation (…) I have decided that the person best suited to serve as Vice President of the United States is J.D. Vance, Senator from the great state of Ohio,” Trump wrote on his social network Truth Social.

US President Joe Biden and Trump actually won the internal party elections in the Democratic and Republican parties. Their candidacies must be approved at party conventions (congresses). The Republican Party convention is taking place on July 15-18 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Democratic Party convention will be held in August.

The US presidential election is scheduled for November 5, 2024.

Earlier, the Experts Club think tank presented an analytical material on the most important elections in the world in 2024, a more detailed video analysis is available here – https://youtu.be/73DB0GbJy4M?si=eGb95W02MgF6KzXU

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Turkish opposition fails to nominate single presidential candidate

Turkey’s Good Party (IP) leader Meral Akshener has announced that she is leaving the six-party opposition bloc over disagreement over a presidential candidate, the Daily Sabah reported Friday.
“We worked tirelessly to make the voice of the people heard in the opposition, to convey the expectations of the people to the opposition. At yesterday’s meeting, five parties nominated Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, while we proposed Mansur Yavas and Ekrem Imamoğlu. Unfortunately, our proposal was rejected,” Akshener said. According to her, in this way the bloc proved that it “does not reflect the will of the people in its decisions,” and therefore the IP is leaving it.
At the same time, Akshener noted that her party will continue to oppose the ruling Justice and Development Party, whose leader is Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
She also called on her candidates, Yavas and Imamoglu, who are mayors of Ankara and Istanbul respectively, “to continue to fulfill their tasks” and try to win the elections.
For his part, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, head of the Republican People’s Party, who was nominated by the majority in the bloc, said there was no cause for concern.
“Don’t worry, everything will fall into place,” he said.
In January, Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey’s presidential and parliamentary elections would be held on May 14.
The elections were originally scheduled for June 18, but Erdogan has repeatedly said the vote could take place earlier. His party has pointed out that the elections in June will coincide with the high tourist season, so it would be better to postpone them.
Pre-election polls show that the battle in both the presidential and parliamentary elections will be fierce.
Western media call the upcoming elections “the biggest test” for Erdogan in 20 years. At the same time, reports note that the opposition’s inability to decide on a single candidate could significantly weaken its position and give Erdoğan an additional chance of victory.

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VOLODYMYR ZELENSKY LEADS PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE RATING IN UKRAINE – POLL

The most popular presidential candidates are showman Volodymyr Zelensky, Batkivschyna Party leader Yulia Tymoshenko and incumbent President Petro Poroshenko, according to a poll conducted by the Sociological Monitoring Center, the Yaremenko Ukrainian Institute of Social Research, Info Sapiens and the Rating Group Ukraine.
According to the results of the survey presented in the Kyiv-based Interfax-Ukraine news agency, 81% of those polled said they would vote in the presidential elections, with 45% saying they would definitely vote, and 36% saying they would most likely vote.
Some 21.9% supported the candidacy of Zelensky, Tymoshenko – 19.2% and Poroshenko – 14.8%.
The poll was conducted from January 19 through January 30, 2019. Some 10,000 persons aged 18 and older were questioned in all regions of Ukraine, except occupied Crimea and occupied areas of Donetsk and Luhansk regions. The margin of error of the survey does not exceed 1%.

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