The Group of Seven meeting was notable for its lack of memorable moments.
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Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( It was a muted Joe Biden who showed up in the Bavarian Alps to what was an oddly low-key Group of Seven meeting notable for its lack of memorable moments. Whether that was by design or not is unclear. A US president is generally the star of the show, the man everyone wants to see with a packed schedule. Key reading: - [G-7 Leaders Just Made Success at COP27 Even Harder](
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- Following our coverage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine [here]( Instead the customary bilaterals were limited. He skipped dinner with an expanded group of leaders and left early for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in Madrid. Perhaps the most significant conversation he had wasn't one he had in person but over the phone with Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday, where he urged the Turkish president to seize the moment and stop blocking Sweden and Finland from joining the military alliance. By the time Biden landed in Spain heâd been informed already that the two historically non-aligned nations, alarmed by Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine, had hashed it out with Erdogan and reached agreement. Itâs a tangible win for Biden and a blow for Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has raged about NATO expansion. Biden had been involved for months behind the scenes but not as lead negotiator. It was a deliberate strategy not to muddy the waters, according to a senior US official. On the surface, there was no quid pro quo. When he and Erdogan sit down, the topic of military sales will come up. Ankara wants the Americans to sell it new F-16 fighter jets and says Washington is stalling. Nothing will come of it today, but in coming months, that could well be a different story. â [Flavia Krause-Jackson]( The signing ceremony yesterday between Turkey, Finland and Sweden. Source: NATO Click [here]( to sign up for our Equality Newsletter running tomorrow and share this newsletter with others. They can sign up [here](. Global Headlines New guests | For the first time, the leaders of Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand are attending the NATO [summit](, which is set to label China a âsystemic challenge.â The presence of four Asia-Pacific leaders will add to paranoia in Beijing that the US is seeking to set up a similar military alliance in the region to counter China, something Washington denies. Eroding autonomy | As Chinese President Xi Jinping prepares to visit Hong Kong this week, Beijingâs [tightening]( grip on the former British colony is apparent in almost every aspect of policy making. Lacking the autonomy it once enjoyed to ease Covid-19 restrictions, Hong Kongâs future as a financial center is in doubt as businesses shift workers to more accessible locations like Singapore. - Xi stressed that the [Covid Zero]( policy remained Chinaâs most effective approach after the country halved the length of quarantine for inbound travelers. Russia is receiving higher prices for its oil as large purchases from Asia [undermine]( Western powersâ efforts to curb revenues to Putinâs war machine. The G-7 agreed yesterday to urgently evaluate how to limit the proceeds, but underlying demand â mostly from countries that would have to enforce measures such as a price cap â has held up. Trump in focus | Vivid testimony by a former White House aide to the US congressional panel investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection described former President Donald Trump as indifferent to the unfolding [violence]( as rioters stormed the US Capitol. Cassidy Hutchinson said lawyers urged Trump to tone down the language in his speech to a rally because of legal concerns but ultimately he refused to do so. - The lawyer for Virginia âGinniâ Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, says there is âno sufficient basisâ yet for her to [testify]( to the committee about her alleged involvement in plans to overturn the 2020 election. Hutchinson being sworn in at yesterdayâs hearing. Photographer: Brandon Bell/Getty Images Â
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- [The Legal Obstacle to Post-Roe Abortion Efforts]( Falling short | The global agriculture sector wonât meet a United Nations pledge to [eradicate hunger]( by the end of the decade or achieve climate goals without a major overhaul, according to key agencies. Low-income nations struggle to afford better diets, while greenhouse-gas emissions from farming are seen continuing to rise on a business-as-usual path, the Food and Agriculture Organization said in a joint report with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Bloomberg TV and Radio air Balance of Power with [David Westin]( weekdays from 12 to 1 p.m. ET, with a second hour on Bloomberg Radio from 1 to 2 p.m. ET. You can watch and listen on Bloomberg channels and online [here]( or check out prior episodes and guest clips [here](. News to Note - Ecuador President Guillermo Lasso [survived]( an impeachment vote after a hard-left opposition party failed to rally enough support in congress to oust him as his government made concessions to defuse the crisis.
- President Emmanuel Macron faces his first [test]( in Franceâs parliament since losing his majority this month when the legislatureâs influential finance committee will pick a new chair, with far-right, far-left and center-right groups all set to be represented on it.
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- Philippine news website Rappler is again facing the possibility of a [shutdown](, after the Securities and Exchange Commission stood by its decision to revoke the siteâs license to operate. And finally ... The worst drought in 40 years is reversing decades of progress made in combating child marriage and female genital mutilation across swathes of Ethiopia, according to the UN Childrenâs Fund. Impoverished families desperate for food are exchanging female children for [dowries](, with girls as young as 12 being forced to marry men five times their age. Women at a well during a sand storm in the village of Adlale on April 6. Photographer: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Balance of Power newsletter.
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