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Chinese President Xi Jinping is suddenly sitting pretty in Asia, thanks largely to missteps by two of his biggest rivals: U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Modi abruptly [pulled out]( of a 16-nation regional trade deal yesterday, removing a key counterbalance to China. Thatâs bad news for Japan, which [urged India to stay in](.
U.S. influence also took a hit from Trumpâs no-show at a regional summit in Bangkok. Southeast Asian leaders responded by [snubbing a meeting]( with National Security Adviser Robert OâBrien.
Whatâs more, Chinaâs asking price is becoming clear for Xi to head to the U.S. and sign a deal centered on agricultural purchases that Trump is seeking ahead of next yearâs election. You can read our report [here]( about how Beijing wants tariffs scrapped on as much as $360 billion of Chinese imports before Xi gets on the plane.
The Chinese leader [made a pledge]( to a trade expo today that the phase-one deal would lead to other measures to open Chinaâs markets. But investors are doubtful: The European Chamber said many agreements reached last year saw âno follow-through.â
Still, with Trump and Modi on the sidelines, Xi may not need to worry.
â [Daniel Ten Kate](
Beijing has retaliated against Trumpâs tariff barrage but has been careful not to escalate a conflict thatâs sapped confidence and weighed on manufacturers.
Photographer: Nicolas Asfouri/AFP
Global Headlines
[For the record]( | House Democrats will release closed-door testimony from two central players in Trumpâs back-channel effort to influence the Ukrainian government, a key step as the impeachment inquiry shifts to a new, public phase.
- [Already released](: Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. ambassador to Kyiv, told House investigators she felt threatened by the way Trump spoke about her on a July 25 call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, according to a transcript of her private deposition made public yesterday.
- How accurate is Trumpâs contention that there was something untoward about 2020 rival Joe Bidenâs diplomatic efforts at the time his son Hunter was on the board of a Ukrainian energy company? [Ryan Teague Beckwith]( takes [a closer look](.
[Ascendant Democrat]( | Exuding new confidence as a top-tier Democratic 2020 presidential candidate, Pete Buttigieg is seizing on Bidenâs stumbles in Iowa and questioning Senator Elizabeth Warrenâs electability to pitch himself as: a) the alternative to both; and b) the candidate best-positioned to lead the party against Trump.
- Trumpâs 2020 campaign [announced itâs creating]( âBlack Voices for Trump,â a coalition aimed at bolstering the president's support among African-Americans. Vice President Mike Pence will address the group Friday in Atlanta.
[Snatching power?]( | U.K. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn may be able to wrest control of the government from Prime Minister Boris Johnsonâs Conservatives in next monthâs election, thanks to support from the Scottish National Party after its leader, Nicola Sturgeon, hinted sheâd never help the Tories stay in power.
- Corbyn, who has avoided being pinned down on Brexit, [will attack Johnsonâs strategy]( head-on today after the prime minister wrote an open letter saying the Labour party offered more uncertainty and delay.
[Salvaging a legacy]( | Time is running out for 83-year-old Mahmoud Abbas. Foreign aid to Palestinians has dropped nearly 80% over the past decade, Israelâs half-century military occupation remains firmly in place, and the campaign for statehood has stalled. So the Palestinian Authority president has called for the first national elections since 2006. The tactic could backfire if the Islamist group Hamas wins again â or it could prove another sign of Abbasâs weakness if the vote doesnât go ahead.
[âEat the richâ]( | The graffiti scrawled on the wall in front of the upmarket Cumbres hotel in central Santiago, the Chilean capital, underscores the damage to the reputation of a country President Sebastian Pinera described as an âoasisâ of calm in Latin America only a month ago. As [Philip Sanders]( reports, three weeks of civil unrest over living costs and social services have forced the cancellation of two global conferences and rocked the tourism industry.
What to Watch:
Here are the highlights of todayâs off-year elections in the U.S., via [Bloomberg Government](.
- Two U.S. states that Trump won by large margins in 2016 â Kentucky and Mississippi â will elect governors. Both [races are competitive]( and winning either would be a coup for Democrats. Trump [has campaigned]( for the Republican contenders.
- Voters in Tucson, Arizona, which is about 60 miles from Mexico, will decide whether or not to become a â[sanctuary city](â that restricts interactions between local police and federal immigration enforcement.
- Uber has a stake in elections in its home town. San Francisco voters will decide whether to impose a [special rideshare tax]( to raise money for transit services and transportation-improvement projects.
- And Amazon has [donated an unprecedented]( $1.5 million to try to fill a Seattle council seat.
Tell us how weâre doing or what weâre missing at balancepower@bloomberg.net.
[And finally]( ... To Hindus, itâs the revered birthplace of the god Ram. To Muslims, itâs the site of a 16th-century mosque that was razed in 1992 by Hindu extremists. After a long legal fight â and much bloodshed â Indiaâs Supreme Court is set to rule on which of the countryâs biggest religions owns the site. Either way, the ruling on Ayodhya is likely to inflame tensions at a time when hardliners are feeling increasingly empowered under Prime Minister Modi.
A man points out Lord Ramâs birth place in an old map of Ayodhya. The court is due to rule before Nov. 17, and a verdict in favor of the Ram Temple would be seen as a victory for Modi. Photographer: Himanshu Vyas/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
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