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From  In a presidency defined by chaos and controversy, last week was still a rough one for Donald

[Balance of Power]( From [Bloomberg Politics]( [FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]( [Twitter Share]( [SUBSCRIBE [Subscribe]](  In a presidency defined by chaos and controversy, last week was still a rough one for Donald Trump. Beset with an impeachment inquiry that polls show is resonating with voters, Trump struggled to gain traction via a partial trade deal with China and a U.S.-brokered cease-fire in northern Syria. Now he needs to [turn the corner]( after one of the most calamitous stretches of his presidency where he’s been weakened by self-inflicted missteps. The cease-fire hasn’t quelled criticism from fellow Republicans — whose support he’ll need as he fights impeachment — that his decision to withdraw U.S. troops from northern Syria abandoned Kurdish allies. The Chinese, meanwhile, suggested Trump was prematurely touting a trade deal, the status of which remains unclear. Then there was his weekend [reversal of the decision]( to hold next year’s Group of Seven summit at his Doral golf resort in Miami — a move that led even some die-hard Trump fans in Congress to say [he’d gone too far](. The president has an opportunity to set the tone for the week at a late-morning Cabinet meeting. In the past, they’ve morphed into contests where officials vie to offer the most effusive praise for Trump. This latest one could be a more somber affair. — [Justin Sink]( and [Kathleen Hunter]( Trump speaks during a Feb. 12 Cabinet meeting. In a potential sign of more turmoil to come, some of Trump’s closest associates [are assembling a roster]( of possible replacements in case he decides to replace Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, [Jennifer Jacobs]( and [Saleha Mohsin]( report. Photographer: T.J. Kirkpatrick/Bloomberg Global Headlines [Brexit push]( | With 10 days before the U.K.’s scheduled departure from the European Union, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government will try to put its Brexit deal to the House of Commons, undeterred after lawmakers on Saturday forced him to write to the EU asking for a three-month extension. Today’s gambit puts him on a possible collision course with Speaker John Bercow, who could say asking lawmakers to decide on the same question twice in the same session breaches parliamentary rules. - Read about [what happens next]( and see [our special edition]( from yesterday. - U.K. businesses [are increasingly frustrated]( with the Brexit impasse. [Clock ticking]( | Turkey set a deadline of 10 p.m. local time tomorrow for Kurdish militants to leave northern Syria, threatening fresh action against them otherwise. Still, a senior defense official also said the buffer zone was now a 120 kilometer frontier strip between towns on the border, narrower than the 444 kilometers Turkey has said it eventually wants the Kurds to withdraw from. - Turkey’s move against the Kurds has exposed the EU’s near irrelevance in events that shape security in its own back yard. [Click here to read how](. [High-profile advice]( | Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has privately recommended several potential hires to U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg’s campaign, [Tyler Pager]( and [Kurt Wagner]( exclusively report. It’s a rare example of direct political involvement from one of tech’s most powerful executives. - Zuckerberg [testifies Wednesday before]( the House Financial Services Committee, which is examining Facebook’s plans to create a crypto-currency. - In another 2020 development, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez [said her move]( to formally endorse Bernie Sanders on Saturday, weeks after the Democratic candidate suffered a heart attack, was an “authentic decision.” [Stiff test]( | Bolivian President Evo Morales’s bid for a fourth term stumbled unexpectedly, with early results from yesterday’s election showing he may face a run-off against former president Carlos Mesa in December. While South America’s longest-serving leader has presided over more than a decade of economic growth, his democratic commitment has been questioned since he ignored the result of a 2016 referendum on presidential term limits. Morales at an Oct. 16 rally. Photographer: Marcelo Perez del Carpio/Bloomberg [Heavy hitters]( | Indonesian President Joko Widodo asked the nation's opposition leader as well as the founder of its biggest startup to join a revamped cabinet as he puts the Southeast Asian nation on a path to become a $7 trillion economy. What to Watch This Week - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appears [set to retain power]( in a close election today, but the expected loss of his parliamentary majority may force him to rely on a left-leaning party. - Japan enthrones its first emperor in 30 years, Emperor Naruhito, before a crowd of dignitaries from 180 countries tomorrow, including Britain’s Prince Charles and Hong Kong’s Carrie Lam, who left her protest-racked city to attended the ceremonies in Tokyo. - Australia’s fiercely competitive newspaper industry shelved rivalries today and published front pages with most of the text redacted to protest what they say is a government campaign to [restrict media freedom](. - Switzerland’s [two main environmentalist parties]( captured about a quarter of the lower house of parliament in yesterday’s election, while the euro-skeptic Swiss People’s Party suffered a setback. - Thailand’s government used its slim majority to get the annual budget bill through an initial parliamentary vote, but there’s [no guarantee]( the coalition will survive future tests. Thanks to all who responded to our pop quiz Friday and congrats to reader Owais ur Rehman Maan, who was the first to correctly name Zimbabwe as the country cashing in on prison security by planting industrial hemp on the grounds of the main penitentiary in its capital. Tell us how we’re doing or what we’re missing at balancepower@bloomberg.net. [And finally]( ... Tens of thousands flooded the streets of Lebanon last weekend, demanding the removal of a political elite they say has lined its pockets at the nation’s expense. Many took the opportunity to express themselves in unique ways — some celebrated their weddings on the streets, while others held on-the-road parties. Check out more scenes under the hashtag “Lebanon Rises Up!” A rally in downtown Beirut yesterday. Lebanese officials [are scrambling to finalize]( an economic plan to avert a financial meltdown and quell the demonstrations. Photographer: IIbrahim Amro/AFP via Getty Images   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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