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Mueller, Mattis, Mnuchin and May - what a year

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From  If any single year marks the death of the 20th-century world order, it may well be 201

[Balance of Power]( From [Bloomberg Politics]( [FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]([Twitter Share]( [SUBSCRIBE [Subscribe]](  If any single year marks the death of the 20th-century world order, it may well be 2018, a point the events of the past week did little to dispel. The Balance of Power team went deeper on some of the biggest issues, from President Donald Trump’s [Syria withdrawal]( to his counterpart Xi Jinping’s [defiance]( in making China into a global power. Then there was the surprise announcement of U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s departure, which erased the [last line of defense]( to Trump’s “America First” doctrine, and the partial [government shutdown](. So in this Weekend Reads, we’d like to highlight some fantastic exclusives, as well as take a look back at some stories from earlier this year that help set the stage for what’s coming in 2019. You can also have a look at what U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May is cooking up to avoid a no-deal Brexit, why Latin Americans vote right but lean left, and the monumental elections approaching in India. The Bloomberg Balance of Power team will be taking a break before resuming our newsletters on Jan. 2. We wish you all the best for the holidays and a happy New Year! - [Michael Winfrey]( People in front of a billboard of China's former leader Deng Xiaoping. [Read more](about how, after China spent 40 years building a new global economy, President Xi Jinping has a new plan. Also, take a look at some of Bloomberg’s other best political images from the past seven days [here](. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg [Mueller Poised to Save Trump for Later as He Readies New Steps]( Special Counsel Robert Mueller will be cautious about implicating Trump – or even the thinly disguised “Individual-1” – directly in criminal activity in legal filings he’s expected to issue in the next few months. Capping a year of twists and tuns in the saga, [Chris Strohm]( reports that Mueller is planning to continue building his case brick-by-brick as he offers his most detailed narrative yet of Russia’s election interference. [Trump Said to Discuss Firing Fed's Powell After Latest Rate Hike]( Trump has discussed firing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell as his frustration with the central bank chief intensified following this week’s interest-rate increase and months of stock-market losses, [Jennifer Jacobs](, [Saleha Mohsin](, and [Margaret Talev]( report. Advisers close to Trump aren’t convinced he would move against Powell and are hoping that the president’s latest bout of anger will dissipate over the holidays. Some of his advisers have warned him that firing Powell would be a disastrous move. [U.K.'s May Is Hatching Secret Brexit Plan B to Avoid Armageddon]( Theresa May’s senior team are wrestling with the same question: What should she do if her deal is thrown out? This exclusive from [Tim Ross](, [Robert Hutton](, [Kitty Donaldson]( and [Alex Morales]( outlines the dramatic options that include postponing the divorce from the European Union, calling another referendum or even announcing early elections. You can also read [how some of Brexit's biggest advocates]( placed big bets against the pound. [If Only Leaders Meeting in Paris Could Agree on WWI’s Lessons]( A century after the end of World War I, the kind of nationalism that drove that conflict appears to be gaining strength again in Europe. In this story from November, [Marc Champion]( explains how the world's great powers took different lessons from the “Great War” that collapsed three empires, killed as many as 20 million people, ushered in the Soviet Union and set the stage for World War II. And [read here]( about Marc's list of global flashpoints for 2019. [How China Bought Up A Swath of Europe When Nobody Was Looking]( China has increasingly asserted itself via business deals in Asia, Africa, the U.S. and Latin America as the country emerges as a major world power. Less well known is its expanding footprint in Europe. Bloomberg's [Andre Tartar](, [Mira Rojanasakul]( and [Jeremy Scott Diamond]( crunched the numbers back in April to compile the most comprehensive audit to date of a presence that has dwarfed China's activity in the U.S. over the past decade. [Latin America Votes Right, But Its Citizens Still Lean Left]( With the swearing-in of Jair Bolsonaro as Brazil’s president on New Year’s Day, [right-leaning]( leaders will govern much of South America – in total, 85 percent of the continent’s 415 million citizens. But as [Raymond Colitt]( reports, many voters still need convincing that market-friendly governments are better than the protectionism and state subsidies that have propped up their economies for decades. [It’s All About Modi as India Prepares for Mammoth 2019 Election]( Rocked by regional [election defeats](, India’s ruling party is doubling down on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. [Iain Marlow](, [Bibhudatta Pradhan](, and [Archana Chaudhary]( report that, 4 1/2 years after crushing the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, Modi still cultivates his image as a diligent and incorruptible leader who strives to make India a prouder, more powerful country. [Russian Fugitive Runs From London to Putin. The Question Is Why?]( Sergei Kapchuk fled Russia to avoid prosecution for alleged fraud in 2005, but in March, he ran back into the arms of the countrymen he once feared. In this story from October,[Irina Reznik]( and [Henry Meyer]( tell the story of a man who now fits the Kremlin line that even former fugitives are safer at home these days than in the West, where Russian wealth is increasingly vulnerable to sanctions. [In Brexit Endgame, This Troublespot Will Take EU Presidency]( This story from November explains how an EU troublespot is actually going to take over the bloc's presidency at one of the most tumultuous moments of its existence. [Irnia Vilcu]( reports how ex-communist Romania, whose government is clashing with the EU over democratic standards, will take the reins just before Brexit and European Parliament elections in which nationalists hope to win seats to shatter the EU's decades-old political order. [And finally]( ... With U.S. stocks heading for their worst year since the start of the global economic crisis, the man leading America's Financial Stability Oversight Council blamed two culprits that have been around for at least half decade: high-frequency traders and the Volcker Rule. Speaking to [Saleha Mohsin](, [Jesse Hamilton]( and [Craig Torres]( in an interview in Bloomberg’s Washington D.C. bureau, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin didn't mention issues tied to the Trump administration – including comments on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy, the trade dispute with China, or the possibility of a government shutdown – that have roiled markets for much of 2018. Instead, he pledged to scrutinize market structure to figure out what’s going on. Mnuchin says stocks may be tumbling because of high-frequency traders and the Volcker Rule, which has prevented banks from using their own money to make speculative bets since 2013. Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg    Like Balance of Power? [Subscribe]( to Bloomberg All Access and get much, much more. You'll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close.   You received this message because you are subscribed to the Bloomberg Politics newsletter Balance of Power. You can tell your friends to [sign up here](.  [Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022

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