The first 100 days of Rishi Sunak's premiership in the UK hasn't gone according to plan.
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One hundred days ago today, the UKâs ruling Conservative Party â and the financial markets â breathed a deep sigh of relief when Rishi Sunak became prime minister. After the chaotic whirlwind of Liz Truss, who became Britainâs shortest-serving premier after sending markets into freefall with a series of unfunded tax cuts, he was seen as the person to get the government back on track. Key reading: - [Sunakâs Rocky Premiership After 100 Days of Strikes and Scandal](
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- [Why the UKâs Wealth Gap Is Widening: Levelling Up Scorecard]( But the reality has been rather different, and far from the straightforward tenure his allies were hoping for. After multiple scandals involving senior ministers, Sunakâs now being compared to ex-Prime Minister John Major, who was swept out of office by Tony Blairâs Labour Party in 1997 after endless news stories of Tory âsleaze.â That feels all too real for Conservative veterans who worry the public is getting fed up of Tory rule after 13 years. With a general election due by January 2025 at the latest â and Keir Starmerâs Labour around 20 points ahead in most national polls â the stakes couldnât be higher. Public sentiment on the economy has barely shifted, while inflation remains sky-high. Anxious Tory MPs are demanding tax cuts just as Sunak tries to curb spending. Wait times for emergency hospital treatment are at record levels. Meanwhile swaths of workers stage walkouts over pay, from nurses and teachers to train drivers and airport border staff. Polls show that voters are largely supportive of the strikes. A deal to resolve the Brexit impasse in Northern Ireland could bring Sunak some much-needed respite. But as his polling guru Isaac Levido told ministers last month: What Sunakâs Tories most need is an extended period when theyâre seen to be governing well â without scandals or incompetence. â [Emily Ashton]( A protest in London yesterday. Photographer: Carlos Jasso/Bloomberg [Listen to our Twitter Space conversation]( for this week, which covered the fresh tensions across the Middle East, including in Israel and with Iran. And if youâre enjoying this newsletter, sign up[here](. Global Headlines Attack targets | Israeli warplanes bombed parts of the Gaza Strip today after a [bloody month]( in which animosity between Palestinians and Israel has soared. Several explosions were reported while residents of Gaza City could hear the roar of fighter jets, an apparent response to the firing of two rockets from the enclave, which Hamas controls, into southern Israel. The militants fired anti-aircraft weapons at the Israeli jets, according to eyewitnesses. - Iran [blamed]( Israel for a drone attack on an ammunition depot last weekend and said it has the right to respond. Not improving | Two months after US President Joe Biden met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Bali with a promise to arrest a slide in ties, the worldâs biggest economies have been unable or unwilling to halt a cycle of [suspicion]( and provocation. That makes for a tense environment when Secretary of State Antony Blinken visits China next week for the first high-level US encounter there since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. - The US secured access to more Philippine military [bases](, clearing the way for a greater presence in the Asia-Pacific region as tensions persist with Beijing over Taiwan and the South China Sea. Itâs been called a âcarbon bombâ and a caribou killer. Now, climate activists have one final, [brief window to quash]( ConocoPhillipsâs proposed $8 billion oil development in Alaska. In an unexpected twist, some opponents are quietly encouraging the US government to actually approve the project, but in such a scaled-back way it no longer makes economic sense. The Interior Department is set to issue its final ruling in about a month. Adani uproar | Pandemonium broke out in Indiaâs parliament after the upper house chair rejected opposition demands for a debate on tycoon Gautam Adaniâs tussle with a US short seller and public investments in his companies whose losses threaten the savings of millions. Expected calls for an inquiry indicate Adaniâs woes could become a [political test]( for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whoâs seeking reelection next year. - The $108 billion wipeout in Adani groupâs stocks has started [dragging down]( a broader range of assets tied to the worldâs fastest-growing major economy.
- The Reserve Bank of India asked lenders for details of [their exposure]( to the Adani group, sources say.
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- [Itâs a Matter of Who Attacks First in Ukraine: Leonid Bershidsky]( Team visit | European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen [arrived]( in Kyiv with 15 commissioners ahead of a Ukraine-European Union summit tomorrow. âWe are here together to show that the EU stands by Ukraine as firmly as ever,â she said on Twitter. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy warned Russiaâs attacks are intensifying as its invasion approaches the one-year mark on Feb. 24. Explainers you can use - [Swiss Stash of Leopard Tanks Spurs Debate on How to Help Ukraine](
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- [US Cities Are Thinking About Their Police Staffing All Wrong]( No discussion | North Korea said the door [remains shut]( for talks with the US on winding down its atomic arsenal, as it pledged to respond to what it saw as threats from Washington. Foreign ministry statements are among North Koreaâs highest form of communication â Pyongyang test-launched two short-range ballistic missiles about a day after the last one in December. Bloomberg TV and Radio air Balance of Power with [David Westin]( on weekdays from 12 to 1pm ET, with a second hour on Bloomberg Radio from 1 to 2pm ET. You can watch and listen on Bloomberg channels and online [here](. News to Note - Lawyers for Bidenâs son, Hunter Biden, asked federal and state prosecutors to [investigate]( people he accused of accessing and disseminating personal data, and also threatened Fox News host Tucker Carlson with a defamation suit.
- The EU needs to [prolong]( measures to curb natural gas demand to ensure it can make it through next winter, especially in the event of a full cutoff of Russian supplies, according to the Bruegel think tank. - Malaysian anti-graft authorities have [frozen]( the bank accounts of an opposition party led by former premier Muhyiddin Yassin amid an investigation that the pro-Malay group said was an attempt to destroy its credibility. - More than 13,500 Nigerians joined their communities in a [lawsuit]( against Shellâs holding company and its Nigerian unit over oil spills they say have devastated their land and waterways. - The US is beginning to [seize]( imports of aluminum products suspected of being made through forced labor, particularly from Chinaâs Xinjiang region, according to one of the worldâs biggest shipping firms. And finally ... Prime Minister Fumio Kishida says âextreme cautionâ is needed in giving same-sex marriage legal status amid calls in parliament to bring [Japan into line]( with the rest of the Group of Seven democracies as it prepares to host a summit in May. Businesses say the lack of recognition for such unions stymies their ability to compete for global talent. Polls show older voters who tend to support Kishidaâs Liberal Democratic Party have been slower than younger Japanese to embrace LGBTQ rights.
 A Tokyo Rainbow Pride parade in 2015. Photographer: Toru Yamanaka/AFP/Getty Images Follow Us 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 Bloomberg Politics newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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