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Today — 19 December 2025News

Democratic National Committee blocks release of its 2024 election autopsy

19 December 2025 at 00:00

The Democratic National Committee is refusing to release its autopsy of the party’s major 2024 losses it announced on Wednesday, breaking Chair Ken Martin’s public pledge to do so. The decision underscores the party’s challenges in grappling with its electoral setbacks as it heads into what is expected to be a stronger midterm year.

The DNC’s completed post-election review of the party’s melodramatic and botched campaign cycle is based on hundreds of interviews with operatives in all 50 states. During that process, some Democrats raised concerns about releasing the findings, according to a DNC official granted anonymity to describe the sensitive process.

The DNC wanted to avoid another public debate over how the party lost the White House to Donald Trump, and instead, turn its focus on its recent successes, according to this official. Democrats have overperformed in special elections across the country this year, and won handily in New Jersey and Virginia last month. The committee previewed some initial findings from the autopsy to top donors and other Democratic stakeholders in October.

Former President Joe Biden's decision to run for reelection, despite his advanced age — and his disastrous debate performance — were not mentioned in the some excerpts of the report's findings, which were shared with POLITICO. Democrats are still divided over what contributed to Kamala Harris' loss.

In a statement, Martin said the committee had “completed a comprehensive review of what happened in 2024” and they are “putting our learnings into motion,” noting the party’s off-year victories.

“In our conversations with stakeholders from across the Democratic ecosystem, we are aligned on what’s important, and that’s learning from the past and winning the future,” Martin continued. “Here’s our North Star: does this help us win? If the answer is no, it’s a distraction from the core mission.”

The decision marks an about-face for a coalition that’s at odds over what went wrong last year, and still registering record-low approval ratings even among its own voters. Several outside groups, from the progressive Way to Win to the center-left Welcome nonprofit, released their own in-depth audits of the party’s missteps with differing diagnoses for how to fix its problems. Just last week, some DNC members called on the committee to provide more answers.

The DNC official described some examples of the report’s findings, including the party’s organizing strategies, necessary technological upgrades and its youth voter problem — though the details shared with POLITICO were sparse and incomplete. Excerpts from the review broadly described Democrats as defensive on immigration and public safety — issues that generally favor Republicans — but didn’t name-check a campaign, candidate or entity for its role in this posture, at least not publicly.

On the party’s organizing efforts, the DNC’s review urged campaigns to incentivize engaging conversations with voters over just the number of doors knocked and phones called. It called for investing more into relational organizing and year-round field infrastructure, efforts Martin championed during his chair’s race last year. Of the party’s data infrastructure, the DNC’s report issued warnings that it was out-of-date and overwhelmed at key moments during the campaign and called for it to be modernized.

It described the party’s much-reported losses among young voters, citing Republicans’ advantages in communicating through the influencer ecosystem and pressing Democrats to do engage with non-traditional media sources. Back in February, Democrats conceded the GOP was “running circles” around them online, but in describing its findings, the DNC doesn’t go much further in clarifying its own public recommendations.

This fall, the DNC held briefings with donors and other Democratic stakeholders on its initial findings. At the time, one Democrat who attended an October donor event confirmed that Biden’s initial decision to run in spite of his advanced age was not mentioned by DNC officials as a part of the review. It’s not clear whether his decision to run for reelection is discussed in the private review.

Biden’s age was not mentioned in the excerpts of the review shared with POLITICO on Thursday, nor was it raised in other briefings on the report’s initial findings. Most Democrats cite the last-minute candidate switch as a core reason for the party’s sweeping losses.

Martin’s decision to withhold the report doubles back on a pledge he made just hours after he was elected to be the DNC’s chair in February. In comments to reporters, Martin committed to the public release of the 2024 report.

At the time, he also questioned why the DNC hadn’t released its 2016 autopsy, when he questioned, “what happened with that … was there any utility in doing that?”

“Of course it will be released,” Martin said in February, referring to a future review on the 2024 election. “There has to be some lessons that we glean on that so we can operationalize it, not just here in DC, but through all of the 57 state parties, and, of course, the county parties, so people have a sense of what we need to do.”

© Erin Hooley/AP

泽连斯基:本周五-六新一轮美乌会谈, 俄罗斯想占整个顿巴斯 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

19 December 2025 at 00:15
18/12/2025 - 17:01

泽连斯基表示,“我们都知道俄罗斯的立场:它想占领整个顿巴斯地区”。“我们不准备采取相应的(割地)措施”。

乌克兰总统泽连斯基周四宣布,乌克兰和美国将于本周五和周六在美国举行新一轮会谈,作为结束与俄罗斯战争计划的一部分。

乌克兰总统泽连斯基说,“周五和周六,我们的团队将在美国;他们已经在路上了,美国人正在等待他们的到来。我不知道还有哪些人会出席——也许会有一些欧洲人”。

他没有透露乌克兰代表团的人员组成。据一位白宫官员称,此次新一轮美乌会谈将在俄美两国特使就乌克兰战争问题举行会晤之前举行,该会晤定于本周末在佛罗里达州举行。

美国白宫尚未公布俄美代表团的具体组成。据Politico报道,特朗普的特使维特科夫和女婿库什纳将参与会谈,俄罗斯预计将派出克里姆林宫经济事务特使德米特里耶夫。

泽连斯基周四表示“我们都知道俄罗斯的立场:它想占领整个顿巴斯地区,现在它想让我们离开顿巴斯——这就是它的立场”。

泽连斯基补充道:“我们的立场也很明确:我们不准备采取相应的(割地)措施。美国正在寻求达成妥协”。

顿巴斯是乌克兰的工业中心地带,包括几乎完全由莫斯科控制的卢甘斯克州和由乌克兰军队控制近20%的顿涅茨克州。

俄罗斯总统普京周三表示,他在乌克兰的军事行动目标将毫无疑问地实现。

美国在柏林与乌克兰方面重新调整计划后的具体细节尚未公布,但基辅方面表示该计划涉及乌克兰在领土上的让步。

基辅和欧洲认为华盛顿最初的文件在很大程度上有利于克里姆林宫的立场。



使用被冻结俄罗斯资产为乌克兰提供赔偿贷款?欧盟峰会即将做出决定

19 December 2025 at 00:17
德正
2025-12-18T14:38:23.038Z
波兰总理图斯克表示,欧盟领导人周四在布鲁塞尔举行的峰会上同意,将研究在2026年和2027年期间,利用冻结的俄罗斯资产为乌克兰提供融资的方案。

(德国之声中文网)欧盟委员会提议向乌克兰提供在欧盟境内高达2100亿欧元的被冻结的俄罗斯资产作为赔偿贷款。其中900亿欧元将用于满足乌克兰2026年和2027年的财政和军事需求。

按照欧盟的设想,基辅只有在俄罗斯战后进行赔偿的情况下才需要偿还这笔贷款。不过很少有人认为俄罗斯总统普京会同意这一条件。

比利时对这一计划持反对意见,理由是存在法律和金融风险。这些资产的大部分存放在比利时,其中约1850亿欧元由总部位于布鲁塞尔的欧洲清算银行(Euroclear)持有。

比利时首相德韦弗(Bart De Wever)周四上午在比利时议会发言时再度重申了他的担忧。

比利时政府担心莫斯科可能会对欧洲公民和企业进行报复,例如在俄罗斯对欧洲资产强行征用。

比利时首相德韦弗一直要求其他欧盟国家提供具有法律约束力的无条件担保,涵盖贷款的全部金额,并保护比利时免受任何潜在的损害赔偿。

拉脱维亚总理西利尼亚(Evika Siliņa)表示,“任何政治决策都离不开法律层面。但我们是政治家,规则也是我们制定的。”

德新社分析指出,理论上,即使没有比利时的支持,这笔贷款也可以获得批准,因为它只需要获得多数成员国的同意即可通过,即欧盟27个成员国中至少15个成员国,且这些成员国的人口占欧盟总人口的65%。尽管人们普遍认为其他欧盟国家不太可能推翻比利时的决定,但一些领导人的不耐烦情绪正在加剧。

拉脱维亚总理西利尼亚(Evika Siliņa)表示,比利时“处境非常敏感”,“但这不仅是法律问题,也是政治意愿的问题。”她说:“任何政治决策都离不开法律层面。但我们是政治家,规则也是我们制定的。”

作为替代选项的欧盟联合举债计划缺乏广泛支持

德韦弗一直倡导欧盟共同举债为乌克兰提供资金。但根据欧盟规则,此举需要所有27个成员国一致同意。

德国总理梅尔茨是赔偿贷款的积极倡导者。他不支持欧盟共同举债的想法。

“我们实际上面临着两个选择:要么欧洲举债,要么用俄罗斯资产来援助乌克兰。我的立场很明确:我们必须使用俄罗斯资产,”梅尔茨说,“我认为没有比这更好的选择了。我理解一些成员国,特别是比利时政府的担忧,但我希望我们能够共同解决这些问题。”

匈牙利总理欧尔班表示,他反对向乌克兰提供任何形式的财政援助。

预计谈判将持续很长时间

关于向乌克兰提供财政援助的谈判预计将持续到深夜,欧盟领导人可能在布鲁塞尔停留至周五。

欧盟委员会主席冯德莱恩和欧洲理事会主席科斯塔坚持要在布鲁塞尔峰会上找到解决方案。

冯德莱恩表示:“我们必须找到解决方案。”

冯德莱恩表示:“我们必须找到解决方案。”

担任峰会主席的科斯塔表示,此次会议“只有在最终决定确保乌克兰2026年和2027年的财政需求得到满足后才会结束”。

波兰总理图斯克表示,欧盟领导人周四在布鲁塞尔举行的峰会上同意,将研究在2026年和2027年期间,利用冻结的俄罗斯资产为乌克兰提供融资的方案。

他对路透社记者说:“我们当然希望取得突破,而突破意味着所有人都同意值得一试,并且认为利用俄罗斯资产为乌克兰提供融资是合理的,对欧洲也有好处,但有些国家会斗争到最后一刻,以最大限度地为自己争取保障。”

他在欧盟峰会休会期间说:“我们都希望使用俄罗斯资产援助乌克兰,这一声明已经做出,我认为没有人会反悔。”

俄罗斯中央银行周四表示,将就欧洲试图利用冻结的俄罗斯资产为乌克兰提供融资一事,在俄罗斯法院提起诉讼。

DW中文有Instagram!欢迎搜寻dw.chinese,看更多深入浅出的图文与影音报道。

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

Mamdani Names Budget Director as He Prepares to Enact Costly Agenda

18 December 2025 at 23:49
Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani chose Sherif Soliman, a veteran of municipal government and the chief financial officer of the City University of New York, to lead the Office of Management and Budget.

© Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, left, announced Sherif Soliman’s appointment at a community center in Queens on Thursday

乌克兰高官赴北京与中方外交官举行会谈 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

18 December 2025 at 23:45
18/12/2025 - 16:32

乌克兰高官周四罕见访北京之际,欧盟正在布鲁塞尔就未来两年援乌资金举行峰会,美乌本周4-5将在美举行新一轮会谈。目前尚无乌克兰高官与中方会谈的内容披露出来。

乌克兰第一副外长周四抵达北京。法新社说,基辅和北京的代表举行这样的会晤实属罕见,尤其是在中国被指帮助俄罗斯在2022年2月对乌克兰发动大规模攻势的情况下。

乌克兰第一副外长谢尔盖·基斯利察(Serguiï Kyslytsia)周四在社交平台上写道:在“北京迎来忙碌的一天”,他补充说,已同美国驻华大使戴维·珀杜(David Perdue)会了面。

乌克兰外交部发言人向法新社证实,基斯利察将与中国外交官进行会谈。

法新社说,作为俄罗斯的主要贸易伙伴之一,中国声称在乌克兰冲突中保持中立的立场,但未谴责俄罗斯的侵略行为。

北京方面定期呼吁进行和平谈判,并表示尊重所有国家的领土完整。

但西方各国政府指责中国为俄罗斯的战争努力提供了关键经济支持,特别是提供了军事部件。

Yesterday — 18 December 2025News

They Thought They Had ‘Made It.’ Now They Can’t Afford Food.

18 December 2025 at 23:00
New Yorkers in the so-called “missing middle,” who may make too much for food benefits, say it’s still hard to find enough money for groceries.

© Jackie Molloy for The New York Times

Jessica Fuentes with her children at the Community Kitchen in West Harlem in December. Ms. Fuentes said she was struggling to keep up with the costs of all of her necessities, like food.

Zelensky gives stark warning as EU leaders start crunch talks on Russia's frozen assets

18 December 2025 at 19:25
Ukrinform/NurPhoto Two men - one in a three-piece suit in grey, the other in black stand in front of colourful flagsUkrinform/NurPhoto
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever is yet to be convinced that the money held in Belgium should be loaned to Ukraine (file pic)

European Union leaders begin two days of talks in Brussels with a momentous decision to be taken on whether to loan tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets to Ukraine to fund its military and economic needs.

Most of Russia's €210bn (£185bn; $245bn) worth of assets in the EU are held by Belgium-based organisation Euroclear, and so far Belgium and some other members of the bloc have said they are opposed to using the cash.

Without a boost in funding, Ukraine's finances are set to run dry in a matter of months.

One European government official described being "cautiously optimistic, not overly optimistic" that a deal would be agreed. Russia has warned the EU against using its money.

It has filed a lawsuit against Euroclear in a Moscow court in a bid to get its money back.

The Brussels summit comes at a pivotal moment.

US President Donald Trump has said a deal to end the war - which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 - is "closer now than we have been ever".

Although Russia has not responded to the latest peace proposals, the Kremlin has stressed that plans for a European-led multinational force for Ukraine supported by the US would not be acceptable.

President Vladimir Putin made his feelings towards Europe clear on Wednesday, when he said the continent was in a state of "total degradation" and "European piglets" - a derogatory description of Ukraine's European allies - were hoping to profit from Russia's collapse.

Alexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP A man with a glass stands on the right of two men in uniformAlexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP
Those in favour of loaning Ukraine the money believe it will help deter Putin from continuing the war

The European Commission - the EU's executive arm - has proposed loaning Kyiv about €90bn (£79bn) over the next two years - out of the €210bn of Russian assets sitting in Europe.

That is about two-thirds of the €137bn that Kyiv is thought to need to get through 2026 and 2027.

Until now the EU has handed Ukraine the interest generated by the cash but not the cash itself.

"This is a crunch time for Ukraine to keep fighting for the next year," a Finnish government official told the BBC. "There are of course peace negotiations but this gives Ukraine leverage to say 'we're not desperate and we have the funds to continue fighting'."

Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen says it will also ramp up the cost of war for Russia.

Russia's frozen assets are not the only option on the table for EU leaders. Another idea, backed by Belgium, is based on the EU borrowing the money on the international markets.

However, that would require a unanimous vote and Hungary's Viktor Orban has made it clear he will not allow any more EU money to help Ukraine.

For Ukraine, the hours ahead are significant and President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to attend the EU summit.

Ahead of the Brussels meeting, EU leaders were keen to stress the momentous nature of the decision.

"We know the urgency. It is acute. We all feel it. We all see it," von der Leyen told the European Parliament.

EPA European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate on 'Preparation of the European Council meeting of 18-19 DecemberEPA
Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that two choices were on the table for EU leaders

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has played a leading role in pushing for the Russian assets to be used, telling the Bundestag on the eve of the summit it was about sending a "clear signal" to Moscow that continuing the war was pointless.

EU officials are confident they have a sound legal basis to use the frozen Russian assets, but so far Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever remains unconvinced.

His Defence Minister Theo Francken warned ahead of the talks that it would be a big mistake to loan the Euroclear cash.

Hungary is seen as the biggest opponent of the move and, ahead of the summit, Prime Minister Orban and his entourage even suggested that the frozen assets plan had been removed from the summit agenda. A European Commission official stressed that was not the case and it would be a matter for the 27 member states at the summit.

Slovakia's Robert Fico has also opposed using the Russian assets, if it means the money being used to procure weapons rather than for reconstruction needs.

When the pivotal vote does finally take place, it will require a majority of about two-thirds of member states to go through. Whatever happens, European Council President António Costa has promised not to go over the heads of the Belgians.

"We're not going to vote against Belgium," he told Belgian public broadcaster RTBF. "We'll continue to work very intensively with the Belgian government because we don't want to approve something that might not be acceptable for Belgium."

Belgium will also be aware that ratings agency Fitch has placed Euroclear on a negative watch, partly because of "low" legal risks to its balance sheet from the European Commission's plans to use the Russian assets. Euroclear's chief executive has also warned against the plan.

"There are many hiccups and obstacles of course still on the way. We have to find a way to respond to Belgium's worries," the Finnish official added. "We are on the same side as Belgium. We will find a solution together to make sure all the risks are checked as much as they can be checked."

However, Belgium is not the only country to have doubts, and a majority is not guaranteed.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has told Italian MPs she will endorse the deal "if the legal basis is solid".

"If the legal basis for this initiative were not solid, we would be handing Russia its first real victory since the beginning of this conflict."

Malta, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic are also said to be unconvinced by the controversial proposals.

If the deal is passed and the Russian assets are given to Ukraine, the worst-case scenario for Belgium would be one in which a court would order it to hand the money back to Russia.

Some countries have said they would be prepared to provide billions of euros in financial guarantees, but Belgium will want to see the numbers add up.

At any rate, Commission officials are confident that the only way for Russia to get it back would be by paying reparations to Ukraine - at which point Ukraine would hand its "reparations loan" back to the EU.

How many flu cases are there in your local hospital? Use our tool to check

18 December 2025 at 20:37
PA Media A general view of staff on a NHS hospital ward.PA Media

Hospitals across the UK are seeing high levels of flu cases this winter.

The NHS in England has said it is on "on high alert" after seeing the highest ever number of flu cases in hospital for this time of year, in the week ending 14 December.

You can use our tool below to find out how many flu patients there are in hospitals near you.

About the data

Figures relating to flu cases in hospitals are collected in different ways in each UK nation.

In England it is the weekly number of beds occupied by patients with a laboratory confirmed flu case.

This data is provided at NHS Trust level. Trusts are organisations which include hospitals, community services and providers of other forms of patient care. You can find which trust your local hospital belongs to on the NHS England website.

In Scotland the figures relate to the number of patients admitted to hospital with a laboratory confirmed flu case taken between 14 days before the admission date and 48 hours after the admission date.

In Wales it is the weekly number of patients in hospital with a laboratory confirmed flu case taken from 28 days before the admission date if tested outside of hospital, or within two days after admission.

Figures for Scotland and Wales are provided at NHS Health Board level. Health boards are responsible for all frontline healthcare services. You can find which Health Board your local services belong to on the NHS Scotland or NHS Wales websites.

In Northern Ireland the figures show the number of new flu cases admitted to hospital that were acquired outside of hospital.

This data is provided at Health and Social Care Trust level. Trusts are responsible for providing local and regional health services. You can find which trust your local hospital belongs to on the NI direct website.

Farmers 'bewildered and frightened' over inheritance tax, report finds

18 December 2025 at 21:38
Getty Images A green and red tractor is pulling a cultivator and drill across a muddy field. On the hills in the background lie solar panels. A light mist sits in the sky.Getty Images

Farmers are "bewildered and frightened" with many questioning the future of their businesses because of the government's proposed changes to inheritance tax, an independent review of farm profitability has found.

The long-awaited government-commissioned report was published on Thursday with 57 recommendations designed to improve productivity, investment and resilience in agriculture.

But author Baroness Minette Batters, former president of the National Farmers' Union (NFU), warned there was "no silver bullet" to making farms in England profitable.

Environment secretary Emma Reynolds said the government and the farming and food industries would work much more closely together in the future.

Getty Images A close-up head-and-shoulders shot of Baroness Batters as she raise two fingers to illustrate a point while making a speech. The background is a soft-focus shot of the countrysideGetty Images
Baroness Batters said that farmers "don't want handouts from the state"

That would be done through a newly created farming and food partnership board made up of senior industry and government leaders that would "drive growth, productivity and long-term profitability across the sector", she explained.

"When farming thrives, the whole country benefits. British farmers are central to our food security, our rural economy and the stewardship of our countryside," the secretary of state added.

"This is about serious action to remove barriers, unlock investment and make the food system work better, so farm businesses can grow, invest and plan for the future with confidence."

Baroness Batters' review called for a "new deal for profitable farming" that would recognise the true cost of producing food and delivering for the environment.

The report did not look in detail at the government's proposed changes to inheritance tax, which are set to apply to farm businesses worth more than £1 million at a rate of 20% from April 2026.

But Baroness Batters said it was raised as the single biggest concern by almost everyone in the farming sector she talked to as part of the review.

'Questioning viability'

She said the sector had faced a sharp rise in costs and increasingly extreme weather, with severe drought this year.

Uncertainty surrounding the closure of applications to the sustainable farming incentive scheme - the post-Brexit agricultural payments scheme - and proposed changes to inheritance tax had created "significant" ongoing concern, with some farmers "questioning viability let alone profitability".

In the review, she said: "The farming sector is bewildered and frightened of what might lie ahead."

The report added that costs would be 30% higher in 2026 than they were in 2020, while the £2.4bn farming budget for England had been almost the same since 2007 - even as farmers and growers are asked to do more to comply with environmental legislation, with less funding and no certainty.

Baroness Batters added: "Farmers don't want handouts from the state, they want nothing more than to run thriving, profitable farming businesses, by earning a fair return for what they produce."

The NFU said it was "a thorough and complex report" which was "right to recognise reform is needed".

President Tom Bradshaw said that of the issues raised, fairness in the supply chain was a "top priority" alongside planning reforms and focus on growing exports.

"But alongside this, there are other immediate actions that are needed to boost British farming like providing much-needed clarity and certainty on the future of the sustainable farming incentive and doing the right thing on the pernicious inheritance tax changes," he added.

Gavin Lane, president of the Country Land and Business Association, which represents rural businesses and landowners, welcomed the review and said it was now time for "urgent action".

"As this report highlights, profitability across the sector is perilously slim, with farmers battling high input costs, low commodity prices and volatile weather conditions.

"Many farm businesses are marginal or loss-making, yet will soon be hit with unaffordable inheritance tax bills, which in many cases will dwarf their annual profit," he explained.

In response to the review, the government said it was also taking action on planning reform to make food production a clearer priority, speed up on-farm reservoirs, polytunnels and farm shops, and make it easier for farmers to invest.

The government is also stepping up action on supply chain fairness, tackling barriers to private finance and supporting exports and new markets, a spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said.

How will the interest rate cut affect my mortgage and savings?

18 December 2025 at 20:14
Getty Images A woman wearing a bright red coat walks over a bridge with other commuters during a snow storm in Manchester. Getty Images

The Bank of England has cut interest rates from 4% to 3.75%, the lowest level since February 2023.

Analysts are divided about whether further cuts will follow in 2026.

Interest rates affect mortgage, credit card and savings rates for millions of people.

What are interest rates and why do they change?

An interest rate tells you how much it costs to borrow money, or the reward for saving it.

The Bank of England's base rate is what it charges other banks and building societies to borrow money, which influences what they charge their own customers for mortgages as well as the interest rate they pay on savings.

The Bank moves interest rates up and down in order to keep UK inflation - the rate at which prices are increasing - at or near 2%.

When inflation is above that target, the Bank can decide to put rates up. The idea is that this encourages people to spend less, reducing demand for goods and services and limiting price rises.

How will the interest rate cut affect mortgages, loans and savings rates?

Mortgages

Just under a third of households have a mortgage, according to the government's English Housing Survey.

About 500,000 homeowners have a mortgage that "tracks" the Bank of England's rate. A 0.25 percentage point cut is likely to mean a reduction of £29 in the monthly repayments for the average outstanding loan.

For the additional 500,000 homeowners on standard variable (SVR) rates - assuming their lender passed on the benchmark rate cut - there would typically be a £14 a month fall in monthly payments for the average outstanding loan.

But the vast majority of mortgage customers have fixed-rate deals. While their monthly payments aren't immediately affected by a rate change, future deals are.

Mortgage rates have been falling recently, partly owing to the expectation the Bank would cut rates in December.

As of 18 December, the average two-year fixed residential mortgage rate was 4.82%, according to financial information company Moneyfacts. A five-year rate was 4.90%.

The average two-year tracker rate was 4.66%.

About 800,000 fixed-rate mortgages with an interest rate of 3% or below are expected to expire every year, on average, until the end of 2027. Borrowing costs for customers coming off those deals are expected to rise sharply.

You can see how your mortgage may be affected by future interest rate changes by using our calculator:

Credit cards and loans

Bank of England interest rates also influence the amount charged on credit cards, bank loans and car loans.

Lenders can decide to reduce their own interest rates if Bank cuts make borrowing costs cheaper.

However, this tends to happen very slowly.

Getty Images A woman in a leather jacket paying for her drinks by tapping a card machine with her phoneGetty Images

Savings

The Bank base rate also affects how much savers earn on their money.

A falling base rate is likely to mean a reduction in the returns offered to savers by banks and building societies.

The current average rate for an easy access savings account is 2.55%, according to Moneyfacts.

Any further cut in rates could particularly affect those who rely on the interest from their savings to top up their income.

Will interest rates fall further?

Most analysts had expected the December cut, but the vote among members of the nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC) was divided. Five were in favour of a cut.

The Bank said rates were likely to continue dropping in the future, but warned decisions on further cuts in 2026 would be contested.

"We still think rates are on a gradual path downward but with every cut we make, how much further we go becomes a closer call," said the Bank's governor Andrew Bailey.

The latest inflation data for November, published the day before the MPC meeting, showed a larger than expected drop to 3.2%.

Mr Bailey has also repeatedly warned about the unpredictable impact of US tariffs, and uncertainty around the world.

How have interest rates and inflation changed?

The Bank of England's base rate reached a recent high of 5.25% in 2023. It remained at that level until August 2024, when the Bank started cutting.

Five cuts brought rates down to 4%, before the Bank held rates at its meetings in September and November 2025 before the December cut.

A line chart showing interest rates and CPI inflation in the UK, from January 2021 to December 2025. Interest rates were at 0.1% in January 2021. They were increased from late-2021, reaching a peak of 5.25% in August 2023. They were then lowered slightly to 5% in August 2024, to 4.75% in November, to 4.5% on 6 February 2025, to 4.25% on 8 May 2025, and to 4% on 7 August. At the Bank of England's latest meeting on 18 December, rates were cut to 3.75%. The inflation rate was 0.7% in the year to January 2021. It then rose to a peak of 11.1% in October 2022, before falling again to a low of 1.7% in September 2024 and then starting to rise again. In the year to November 2025, it was 3.2%, down from 3.6% the previous month.

The main inflation measure, CPI, has dropped significantly since the high of 11.1% recorded in October 2022.

The 3.2% figure recorded for the year to November 2025 was down from the 3.6% rate recorded in October.

That means prices are still rising, but by less than seen in the summer.

What is happening to interest rates in other countries?

In recent years, the UK has had one of the highest interest rates in the G7 - the group representing the world's seven largest so-called "advanced" economies.

In June 2024, the European Central Bank (ECB) started to cut its main interest rate for the eurozone from an all-time high of 4%.

At its meeting in June 2025 the ECB cut rates by 0.25 percentage points to 2% where they have remained.

The US central bank - the Federal Reserve - has cut interest rates three times since September 2025, taking them to the current range of 3.5% to 3.75%, the lowest since 2022.

President Trump had repeatedly attacked the Fed for not cutting earlier.

79,600 criminal cases are still outstanding in England and Wales. How did we get here?

18 December 2025 at 19:16
Getty Images BBC Verify-branded image showing five barristers, both male and female, facing away from the camera wearing wigs and black robes.Getty Images

More than 79,600 criminal cases are now caught in the courts backlog in England and Wales, new figures show.

The Crown Court backlog has been at a record high since early 2023 and is projected to hit 100,000 by 2028, according to the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). The delays mean that for some serious crimes charged today the victims and suspects could be left waiting years for justice as they are unlikely to see the case come to trial before 2030.

This crisis has prompted the government to announce radical reforms to the criminal courts, including removing juries - a fundamental part of our criminal justice system - from a number of trials in England and Wales in an attempt to speed up justice and slash the backlog.

The latest MoJ figures show there has been a huge growth in cases taking two years or more to conclude, something that was a rarity before 2010 budget cuts began to bite, and which was later exacerbated by the pandemic and other factors.

About a quarter of violence and drug offences, many of which do not require the defendant to be detained pre-trial, have been in the backlog for at least a year. More than 30% of sexual offences have been in the system for at least that long. For context, in 2019 there were around 200 sexual offences that had been open for more than a year. Now there are more than 4,000.

It means the situation has become significantly worse for victims, defendants, witnesses and everyone else who works in the system, and shows the scale of the problem the government is now grappling with.

Violent and sexual offences make up almost half the crown court backlog
Cases outstanding in England and Wales September 2025
Violence: 24,703
Sexual offences: 14,180
Drug offences: 10,683
Miscellaneous crimes: 8,123
Theft offences: 5,567
Possession of weapons: 3,380
Public order: 3,311
Robbery: 2,688
Fraud offences: 1,914
Other: 5,070
Source: Ministry of Justice

So how did we get here? At the heart of this story is funding - and the lack of it - which started in 2010.

Back then the coalition government pledged to slash spending to balance the books - and the MoJ took a huge cut to its £9bn budget. It means its total spending today is £13bn, which is £4.5bn lower in real terms than it would have been had it kept pace with the average government department, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies.

Why did that cut happen?

When the coalition government began making austerity cuts, the MoJ took a bigger hit than some other departments such as health and defence. It delivered some of its cuts by shutting court rooms, and by 2022, eight crown court centres and more than 160 magistrates courts were gone, according to ministerial answers to parliamentary questions.

Ministers also introduced a cap on the number of days judges are paid to sit in court and hear cases, to help reduce spending.

In 2016-17 there were 107,863 of these "sitting days" recorded, but that had fallen to 81,899 by the eve of the pandemic. If there's no judge, there's no hearing, which meant individual courtrooms were left idle even if the rest of a court complex was still hearing cases.

Then the Covid pandemic happened, which left all Crown Courts closed for two months during the first lockdown other than for urgent and essential work. When they reopened, many individual courtrooms could not be used for trials because they were too small to comply with social distancing requirements. Everything slowed to a snail's pace and the backlog exploded.

This is when the unintended consequences of earlier closures began to bite harder. Take for example Blackfriars Crown Court in London. Its nine court rooms were once an important centre for serious organised crime cases, but ministers decided to close it in 2019 and hoped to sell the land.

Many of its cases were shifted to Snaresbrook in east London, but since the pandemic it has been overwhelmed. At the end of September 2019 it had 1,500 cases on its books, official figures show, but as of September this year it was juggling more than 4,200.

Before the pandemic, only 5% of outstanding cases for violence across England and Wales had been in the system for more than a year - now a quarter of cases have taken that long. There have been similar increases in the length of time taken for criminal damage, possession of weapons and drug offence cases.

Increase in cases in crown court backlog for at least a year
Outstanding cases, taking one year or more to conclude, England and Wales
Fraud offences: 2019: 16%, 2025: 39%
Sexual offences: 2019: 7%, 2025: 31%
Miscellaneous crimes: 2019: 9%, 2025: 29%
Possession of weapons: 2019: 5%, 2025: 27%
Drug offences: 2019: 7%, 2025: 25%
Criminal damage/arson: 2019:5 %, 2025: 25%
Violence: 2019: 5%, 2025: 25%
Public order: 2019: 5%, 2025: 24%
Theft offences: 2019: 4%, 2025: 20%
Robbery: 2019: 4%, 2025: 19%
Summary non-motoring: 2019: 7%, 2025: 17%
Summary motoring: 2019: 2%, 2025: 11%
Source: Ministry of Justice

During the Covid pandemic, temporary "Nightingale courts" were introduced to help alleviate pressure on the court system by keeping some cases moving, sitting for 10,000 days between July 2020 and 2024.

But they could not deal with serious crime involving custody because they were often in conference centres or hotels with no cells or appropriate security. Today there are still five Nightingale courts operating, all of which are due to close by March 2026.

Sometimes the MoJ re-opened a court it had closed. Chichester's Crown Court was shut down, despite local opposition, in 2018. It was temporarily re-opened to help deal with the overflow of cases from Guildford 40 miles away - and its future remains uncertain, despite the backlogs.

Getty Images David Lammy standing in front of a black van and smiling. He is holding a royal blue folder. Getty Images
David Lammy has announced radical reforms to the courts system

But there is another element that has made everything much harder to fix.

The national legal aid system pays for barristers and solicitors to act for a defendant who cannot afford to pay for their own lawyer. It both helps ensure a fair trial and keeps cases moving through the courts, but the funding for this system has been repeatedly cut or frozen over the past 25 years, which in turn has led to a fall in barristers taking criminal cases.

The National Audit Office found there has been a real term reduction in legal aid spending by the MoJ of £728m between 2012-13 and 2022-23.

And there has also been a 12% fall in the number of barristers doing criminal work between 2018-19 and 2024-25, according to the Criminal Bar Association.

In 2021, the government was advised to inject £135m extra funding into legal aid but it did not go far enough for many in the profession and triggered months-long strike action from defence barristers the following year. This created a second wave of chaos in the courts because, just like in the pandemic, cases could not progress through the system.

The shortages in judges and lawyers contrast sharply with what happened to policing. In 2019 former prime minister Boris Johnson promised to hire 20,000 extra police officers across England and Wales, reversing the fall that began during austerity cuts. That meant more suspects charged and sent to trial - but critics said there was no corresponding planning for how this would impact the courts.

Prosecutions can also take longer because of changes to how evidence is gathered by police, particularly involving our digital lives. Many cases today, especially those involving serious sexual offences, involve a huge amount of evidence taken from digital sources such as mobile phone chats, which can take months to comb through ahead of a trial and more time going through it with a jury.

More than 4,000 sexual offences in court system for at least a year
Cases outstanding at crown courts, England and Wales, 2016 to 2025 as of 30 September
A bar chart shows 5,783 outstanding under one year in 2016 with 569 at 1-2 years and 80 over two years.
This decreases until 2019 when there were 2,900 under one year, 163 1-2 years and 52 two years or more.
It then climbs year on year to 9,460 under one year in 2025, 3,151 1-2-years and 1,191 two years or more.

The backlog also has a knock-on effect on prisons. There are nearly 17,700 people on remand in England and Wales, almost double the number in 2019 . This includes people who have been convicted of a crime but have not yet been sentenced, and nearly 12,000 people who are waiting for a trial.

People held on remand accounts for around 20% of the prison population. The number of prisoners in England and Wales is already projected to top 100,000 by 2030 according to the MoJ.

Line chart showing prision population projected to rise to more than 100,000 by 2030. 
The chart has historical data from 2024 and 2025 sitting between 85-90,000 and a projection showing numbers rising steadily to 103,000

That crisis led Sir Keir Starmer's governent to introduce an early release scheme for some offenders last year and pledge wider justice reforms.

If people on remand don't have their cases completed then they can't be released or sent to serve a sentence, which means prisons will quickly fill up again. But while the courts try to prioritise remand cases at the expense of everyone else entering the system, the growing queue of cases has become ever longer.

加入俄军的一批肯尼亚人退出 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

18 December 2025 at 23:15
18/12/2025 - 15:55

肯尼亚官方宣布,该国一批被迫加入俄军的国民现已被遣返回国。肯尼亚总理宣布要采取措施管控招聘机构。打击人口贩卖的非政府组织(Trace Kenya)的一名负责人认为,已采取的措施仍然不够。

本台法广(RFI)非洲组(RFI Afrique)今天2025年12月18日星期四的最新法文消息之一是非洲国家肯尼亚打算停止招募其国民在俄罗斯参军。一批加入俄军的近二十名肯尼亚人从乌克兰前线被召回后,已经被遣返回国。

-- 肯尼亚承诺要打击助长不正当交易的招聘机构 --

据本台法广非洲通讯员卡艾乐(Gaëlle)发自内罗毕(Nairobi)的法文报道,肯尼亚内阁首席部长兼外长穆萨利亚·穆达瓦迪(Musalia Mudavadi)于昨天2025年12月17日星期三发表声明对外宣布了这一消息。

Waziri wa mambo ya kigeni wa Kenya
存档图片 / 非洲:肯尼亚政府内阁首席部长兼外长穆萨利亚·穆达瓦迪(Musalia Mudavadi) Image d'archive / Afrique - Kenya : Musalia Mudavadi, Premier secrétaire du Cabinet - Premier ministre du pays. (illustration) © Musalia Mudavadi

同一报道透露,肯尼亚媒体于本周公布了肯尼亚驻莫斯科大使馆的外交电文,并围绕为俄罗斯招募人员的欺诈行为,再次引发争议。(内罗毕)当局承诺将采取措施,打击助长这种不正当交易的招聘机构。

-- 肯尼亚部分公民联络其驻俄外交机构寻求帮助 --

本台法广非洲组的法文报道还提到,相当于总理(Premier ministre)的肯尼亚内阁首席部长兼外长穆萨利亚·穆达瓦迪(Musalia Mudavadi)在声明中指出,有200多名肯尼亚人被目前仍旧积极活动的网络所招募。多名处于“困境”中(en détresse)的肯尼亚公民从军营中联络了肯尼亚驻莫斯科大使馆。部分人已经受伤,有的甚至是重伤,并已纪录到被截肢的案例。

Naibu kiongozi wa chama cha ODM nchini Kenya  Musalia Mudavadi
Afrique / Musalia Mudavadi est le Premier secrétaire du Cabinet (équivalent du Premier ministre) du Kenya 非洲 / 肯尼亚内阁首席部长兼外长穆萨利亚·穆达瓦迪 © archive RFI

肯尼亚总理宣布采取措施,管控面向国外的招聘机构。尤其是这些机构原本应该向肯尼亚国家就业当局(l’Autorité nationale de l’emploi)进行注册登记:已有多达600个机构被注销。

Le Kenya rapatrie ses citoyens engagés de force dans l’armée russe sur le front ukrainien / 加入俄军的一批肯尼亚人退出
01:37

_Papier Desk Nicolas 18/12/2025 matin Afrique - Le Kenya rapatrie ses citoyens engagés de force dans l’armée russe sur le front ukrainien.

尼古拉

-- 肯尼亚非政府组织认为已采取的措施仍然不够 --

本台法广(RFI)非洲组(RFI Afrique)的同一报道说,打击人口贩卖非政府组织(Trace Kenya)的一名负责人认为,已采取的措施仍然不够。据介绍,除了战斗人员之外,还有女性被强迫招募进入军工厂的案例。美国国务院2025年的人口贩卖报告提到,有一些18至22岁的肯尼亚年轻女性在俄罗斯无人机工厂工作,而她们自以为是在接受职业培训。

RFI DATA
存档地图 / 非洲:肯尼亚及其首都内罗毕(Nairobi)。 carte archive / Afrique : Kenya et sa capitale: Nairobi. © FMM archive RFI

~. Fin.~

Trump Announces $1,776 ‘Warrior Dividend’ for Military

18 December 2025 at 22:46
President Trump promised active duty troops a $1,776 check from revenue raised by tariffs, without acknowledging that the Supreme Court is weighing the legality of the powers used to impose the levies.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

U.S. service members at Fort Bragg, N.C., in June.

山东莱州市发现亚洲最大海底巨型金矿

18 December 2025 at 22:09

据烟台市人民政府新闻办公室消息,山东省烟台莱州市发现亚洲最大海底巨型金矿。

综合“国是直通车”和每日经济新闻报道,烟台市人民政府新闻办公室星期二(12月16日)举行“回望‘十四五’ 奋楫启新程”主题系列第十六场新闻发布会,会上宣布,莱州市三山岛北部海域新发现中国国内唯一、亚洲最大的海底巨型金矿。

据介绍,莱州市全市累计探明金资源储量3900余吨,约占中国的26%,金矿资源储量和产量均居中国首位。

这也是在山东发现的又一大金矿。据山东省政府介绍,山东省地矿局2023年11月曾探明了中国四分之一的黄金储量,在胶东地区提交金矿资源3500余吨,使胶东地区成为世界第三大金矿区。

Zelensky gives stark warning as EU leaders start crunch talks on Russia's frozen cash

18 December 2025 at 19:25
Ukrinform/NurPhoto Two men - one in a three-piece suit in grey, the other in black stand in front of colourful flagsUkrinform/NurPhoto
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever is yet to be convinced that the money held in Belgium should be loaned to Ukraine (file pic)

European Union leaders begin two days of talks in Brussels with a momentous decision to be taken on whether to loan tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets to Ukraine to fund its military and economic needs.

Most of Russia's €210bn (£185bn; $245bn) worth of assets in the EU are held by Belgium-based organisation Euroclear, and so far Belgium and some other members of the bloc have said they are opposed to using the cash.

Without a boost in funding, Ukraine's finances are set to run dry in a matter of months.

One European government official described being "cautiously optimistic, not overly optimistic" that a deal would be agreed. Russia has warned the EU against using its money.

It has filed a lawsuit against Euroclear in a Moscow court in a bid to get its money back.

The Brussels summit comes at a pivotal moment.

US President Donald Trump has said a deal to end the war - which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 - is "closer now than we have been ever".

Although Russia has not responded to the latest peace proposals, the Kremlin has stressed that plans for a European-led multinational force for Ukraine supported by the US would not be acceptable.

President Vladimir Putin made his feelings towards Europe clear on Wednesday, when he said the continent was in a state of "total degradation" and "European piglets" - a derogatory description of Ukraine's European allies - were hoping to profit from Russia's collapse.

Alexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP A man with a glass stands on the right of two men in uniformAlexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP
Those in favour of loaning Ukraine the money believe it will help deter Putin from continuing the war

The European Commission - the EU's executive arm - has proposed loaning Kyiv about €90bn (£79bn) over the next two years - out of the €210bn of Russian assets sitting in Europe.

That is about two-thirds of the €137bn that Kyiv is thought to need to get through 2026 and 2027.

Until now the EU has handed Ukraine the interest generated by the cash but not the cash itself.

"This is a crunch time for Ukraine to keep fighting for the next year," a Finnish government official told the BBC. "There are of course peace negotiations but this gives Ukraine leverage to say 'we're not desperate and we have the funds to continue fighting'."

Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen says it will also ramp up the cost of war for Russia.

Russia's frozen assets are not the only option on the table for EU leaders. Another idea, backed by Belgium, is based on the EU borrowing the money on the international markets.

However, that would require a unanimous vote and Hungary's Viktor Orban has made it clear he will not allow any more EU money to help Ukraine.

For Ukraine, the hours ahead are significant and President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to attend the EU summit.

Ahead of the Brussels meeting, EU leaders were keen to stress the momentous nature of the decision.

"We know the urgency. It is acute. We all feel it. We all see it," von der Leyen told the European Parliament.

EPA European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate on 'Preparation of the European Council meeting of 18-19 DecemberEPA
Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that two choices were on the table for EU leaders

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has played a leading role in pushing for the Russian assets to be used, telling the Bundestag on the eve of the summit it was about sending a "clear signal" to Moscow that continuing the war was pointless.

EU officials are confident they have a sound legal basis to use the frozen Russian assets, but so far Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever remains unconvinced.

His Defence Minister Theo Francken warned ahead of the talks that it would be a big mistake to loan the Euroclear cash.

Hungary is seen as the biggest opponent of the move and, ahead of the summit, Prime Minister Orban and his entourage even suggested that the frozen assets plan had been removed from the summit agenda. A European Commission official stressed that was not the case and it would be a matter for the 27 member states at the summit.

Slovakia's Robert Fico has also opposed using the Russian assets, if it means the money being used to procure weapons rather than for reconstruction needs.

When the pivotal vote does finally take place, it will require a majority of about two-thirds of member states to go through. Whatever happens, European Council President António Costa has promised not to go over the heads of the Belgians.

"We're not going to vote against Belgium," he told Belgian public broadcaster RTBF. "We'll continue to work very intensively with the Belgian government because we don't want to approve something that might not be acceptable for Belgium."

Belgium will also be aware that ratings agency Fitch has placed Euroclear on a negative watch, partly because of "low" legal risks to its balance sheet from the European Commission's plans to use the Russian assets. Euroclear's chief executive has also warned against the plan.

"There are many hiccups and obstacles of course still on the way. We have to find a way to respond to Belgium's worries," the Finnish official added. "We are on the same side as Belgium. We will find a solution together to make sure all the risks are checked as much as they can be checked."

However, Belgium is not the only country to have doubts, and a majority is not guaranteed.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has told Italian MPs she will endorse the deal "if the legal basis is solid".

"If the legal basis for this initiative were not solid, we would be handing Russia its first real victory since the beginning of this conflict."

Malta, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic are also said to be unconvinced by the controversial proposals.

If the deal is passed and the Russian assets are given to Ukraine, the worst-case scenario for Belgium would be one in which a court would order it to hand the money back to Russia.

Some countries have said they would be prepared to provide billions of euros in financial guarantees, but Belgium will want to see the numbers add up.

At any rate, Commission officials are confident that the only way for Russia to get it back would be by paying reparations to Ukraine - at which point Ukraine would hand its "reparations loan" back to the EU.

Trump announces 'warriors dividend' for troops as he defends economic record

18 December 2025 at 19:25
Watch: Trump says service members will receive $1,776 "warrior dividend"

US President Donald Trump has announced a "warrior dividend" payment to US service members, in a speech in which he also defended his track record on the economy after 11 months back in office.

In a televised address to the nation on Wednesday, Trump said cheques for $1,776 (£1,329) for 1.45 million US service members were already on the way" and should arrive before Christmas. He said they would be paid for, in part, by his tariffs.

In the combative address, Trump also touted his achievements on immigration while railing against opposition Democrats.

Speaking loudly and quickly, he seemed determined to convince Americans that the US was doing well - and things would only get better.

He claimed prices were falling, at a time when polls show that many Americans are unhappy about the cost of housing, childcare and healthcare.

Democrats were critical of the speech. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said the president's words "showed he lives in a bubble completely disconnected from the reality everyday Americans are seeing and feeling".

Schumer added: "People are feeling squeezed harder and harder every day and tonight Donald Trump took a victory lap."

In the brief, 18-minute address, Trump said the "warrior dividend", which totals $2.57bn (£1.9bn), would be distributed "in honour of our nation's founding in 1776".

Trump added that the funds were drawn from his sweeping tariffs, as well as the "One Big, Beautiful Bill" that he signed into law on 4 July.

"Nobody deserves it more than our military," he said.

The president offered little new information in the speech, and some of his assertions were either exaggerated or unfounded.

Much of Trump's address focused on his economic record and the administration's efforts to bring down prices - which he blamed on former US President Joe Biden and the Democrats. Trump mentioned the former president seven times.

"Now, under our leadership, they [prices] are all coming down and coming down fast," he said. "Democrat politicians also sent the cost of groceries soaring, but we are solving that too."

While fuel and egg prices have indeed fallen, many other food items are more expensive.

Economic data from September shows the US inflation rate hit 3% for the first time since January, while consumer confidence fell to its lowest level since April due to concerns over the cost of living, jobs and the wider economy.

A line chart titled “US inflation at 3% in September”, showing US inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index, from January 2015 to September 2025. In the year to January 2015, prices fell by 0.2% on average. The annual rate then rose gradually to a peak of 2.9% in mid-2018, before starting to gradually fall again, hitting 0.2% in May 2020. From there, it rose sharply over the next two years, hitting 9.0% in the year to June 2022, before falling sharply back to 3.1% by June 2023. The latest figures show prices rose by 3.0% in the year to September 2025, up from 2.9% the previous month. The source is the US Bureau of Labor Statistics

Trump has previously acknowledged that concerns over rising prices have contributed to a lacklustre performance for candidates from his Republican Party during elections held in November - with the Democrats having success in Virginia, New Jersey and New York City, as well as more recently in Miami and Georgia.

He has also acknowledged that incumbent presidents and their parties often fare poorly in mid-term elections, which will take place next year.

The White House has since been wrestling with how to address voter concerns about the economy, while at the same time pushing back on repeated Democratic criticism over rising prices.

The political dilemma faced by the Trump administration has been highlighted by recent polling.

One poll, from Politico, showed that about half of overall voters - and 4 in 10 people who voted for Trump in 2024 - felt the cost of living was the worst it has been in their lives.

Another poll, released in November by CBS News/YouGov, suggested that Trump's approval on economic issues had dropped 15 points since March - with 36% of Americans approving his handling of the issue.

More broadly, other polls show that Trump is at or near the lowest approval ratings of his second term, with concerns about the economy playing a significant role.

While the president offered little in the way of empathy over prices, he did point to Republican efforts - such as tax reform legislation passed earlier this year - that he said would benefit many Americans in the coming year.

When he ran for re-election last year, Trump promised immediate results. And after 11 months in office, many Americans say they still haven't seen substantive change, and the president's speech might be unlikely to change their minds.

Trump, in part, focused his remarks on the promise of improvements during 250th birthday celebrations for American's founding next year.

"When the world looks at us next year, let them see a nation that is loyal to its citizens, faithful to its workers, confident to its identity, certain to its destiny, and the envy of the entire globe," he said.

"We are respected again, like we have never been respected before," he added.

Thailand bombs near Cambodia's Poipet border crossing

18 December 2025 at 21:08
Getty Images Thai and Cambodian workers ride motorcycles outside the Poipet Border Crossing, which is suspended due to the ongoing border conflict, in Poipet, Banteay Meanchey, Cambodia, on December 18, 2025.Getty Images
Poipet is known for being a major casino hub and the biggest land crossing between the two countries

Thailand says it has bombed a "logistics centre" near the Cambodian town of Poipet, known for being a major casino hub and the biggest land crossing between the two countries.

The bombings comes as renewed border clashes show no sign of abating.

Cambodia's defence ministry said Thai forces dropped two bombs, while the Thai side said that they targeted a facility storing rocket systems.

The renewed fighting this month has killed at least 21 people in Thailand and 17 in Cambodia, while displacing around 800,000, officials say.

In a statement, the Cambodian defence ministry said Thai forces dropped two bombs in the area of Poipet municipality at around 11:00 am (0400 GMT) Thursday.

Shortly after, Thai Air Force spokesman Air Marshal Jackkrit Thammavichai said that the Thai military had attacked the centre outside Poipet that had been used to store BM-21 rockets and that no civilians were harmed.

BM-21 rockets are weapons that are typically fired in volleys from the back of an armoured vehicle.

The bombings appear to be the first on Poipet, which is known for casinos popular with Thai gamblers and its international border checkpoint.

On Tuesday, Thailand said Tuesday that between 5,000 and 6,000 Thai nationals remained stranded in Poipet after Cambodia closed its land border crossings between the two countries.

Cambodia's interior ministry said the border closures were a "necessary measure" to reduce risks to civilians, adding that air travel remained an option for those seeking to leave.

The century-old border dispute between the South East Asian neighbours dramatically escalated on 24 July with a Cambodian rocket barrage into Thailand, followed by Thai air strikes. That set off five days of intense fighting, which left dozens of soldiers and civilians dead.

The two countries later agreed to an "immediate and unconditional ceasefire" brokered by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim and US President Donald Trump - who at the time threatened to stop tariff negotiations until the hostilities stopped.

But that ceasefire fell apart again last week, with both sides blaming each other for re-igniting the fighting, which has seen air strikes and exchanges of artillery fire.

Trump claimed last week that he could stop the fighting between Thai and Cambodian forces that broke out by just picking up the phone, but it has continued.

Earlier this week, Cambodia accused Thai forces of bombing Siem Reap province, home to the ancient Angkor temples - the country's top tourist draw - for the first time in the latest round of clashes.

Nigeria apologises over Burkina Faso military flight that saw 11 servicemen detained

18 December 2025 at 19:42
Nigeria’s foreign affairs ministry Nigeria’s foreign affairs minister dressed in traditional kaftan with 11 uniformed officers of his country Air force detained in Burkina FasoNigeria’s foreign affairs ministry
Nigeria’s Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar with the now released servicemen

Nigeria's Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar has formally apologised to Burkina Faso for the unauthorised entry of a Nigerian military jet into Burkinabè airspace, an incident that led to the detention of 11 Nigerian servicemen.

Tuggar's spokesperson told the BBC that the detained personnel had been released and were due to return to Nigeria, without saying when.

The plane was flying to Portugal when it developed a technical problem and had to land in Burkina Faso, according to the Nigerian Air Force.

The unauthorised landing sparked a diplomatic row with the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) made up of Burkina Faso and its neighbours, Mali, and Niger.

In a statement, AES characterised it as an "unfriendly act" and said member states‘ respective air forces had been put on maximum alert and authorised to "neutralise any aircraft" found to violate the confederation's airspace.

The three AES states, all run by the military, have withdrawn from the West African regional bloc, Ecowas, and moved closer to Russia, while most Ecowas members remain allied to the West.

Tuggar led a delegation to the Burkinabè capital, Ouagadougou, on Wednesday, to discuss the incident with military leader Captain Ibrahim Traoré.

"There were irregularities concerning the overflight authorisations, which was regrettable, and we apologise for this unfortunate incident," Tuggar said on national TV.

It remains unclear when the military personnel, said to be in "high spirits", and the aircraft will return to Nigeria.

According to Nigeria's foreign ministry, both sides agreed to "sustain regular consultations and pursue practical measures to deepen bilateral cooperation and regional integration".

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Rebels start to withdraw from key DR Congo city, leaders say

18 December 2025 at 20:23
Getty Images M23 rebel soldiers in military uniform holding rifles in Bukavu, eastern DR Congo in February 2025Getty Images
The US accuses Rwanda of backing the M23 rebels - which it denies

The rebel group which last week seized the Democratic Republic of Congo city of Uvira say they have begun withdrawing, promising to complete the pullout on Thursday, following pressure from the US.

The M23 group captured the strategic city near the border with Burundi, days after a "historic" US-brokered peace deal between Congolese and Rwandan governments aimed at ending the long-running conflict in eastern DR Congo.

However, DR Congo's government says the reported withdrawal is a "diversion" and needs verification.

On Thursday morning some Uvira residents told the BBC it was not clear if the M23 were leaving, with some of their trucks still moving around the city.

The capture of Uvira sparked US condemnation and warning of sanctions against Rwanda. The US accuses Rwanda of backing the rebels, which it denies.

M23 leader Bertrand Bisimwa said on Wednesday that the withdrawal was "under way," with spokesman Willy Ngoma adding that this was "for the sake of peace".

In a post on X, Bisimwa urged mediators and international partners to ensure the city was protected from "reprisals, violence and remilitarisation".

A local civil society member, who did not want to be named for his own safety, told the BBC that some M23 troops had started withdrawing. However, he said police officers from the same group were still moving in.

Another resident expressed doubts about the withdrawal.

"It seems they are still here. In fact, yesterday I saw them bringing in the police trucks," the resident told the BBC on Thursday morning.

DR Congo government spokesman Patrick Muyaya told the BBC Newsday programme that the M23's announcement was meant "to distract the American mediation team, which is preparing to take measures against Rwanda".

Muyaya described the M23's decision to leave Uvira as a "positive sign" but said the government needed to confirm the situation on the ground.

Earlier he had called for "vigilance" in response to the "alleged withdrawal".

"Who can verify it? Where are they going? How many were there? What are they leaving behind in the city? Mass graves? Soldiers disguised as civilians?" he said in a post on X.

The Uvira offensive left dozens dead, at least 100 wounded and more than 200,000 displaced, according to the UN. At least 30,000 civilians fled into Burundi.

It came despite the 4 December peace deal signed in Washington between Rwandan President Paul Kagame and his DR Congo counterpart, Felix Tshisekedi, at a ceremony in Washington hosted by President Donald Trump.

The rebels were not signatories to that peace deal but they have been part of a parallel peace process led by Qatar, a US ally that has strong ties with Rwanda.

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Ecuador defender Pineida killed in shooting

18 December 2025 at 18:17

Ecuador defender Pineida killed in shooting

Mario Pineida playing for Barcelona SCImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Mario Pineida played for Barcelona SC for nine years

  • Published

Ecuador defender Mario Pineida has died at the age of 33 after being shot in Guayaquil.

Local media reported that Pineida was shot on Wednesday by two people on motorbikes who opened fire on him, his mother and another woman outside a shop in the north of the city.

Ecuador's interior ministry said it has sent a special police unit to investigate.

Guayaquil has become a hotspot for gang violence and drug trafficking, with 1,900 murders recorded between January and September - the highest in Ecuador.

Three second-tier footballers were killed in September and a local player was wounded in a shooting in October.

Pineida won nine caps for Ecuador between 2014 and 2021.

He began his club career at Independiente DV before moving to Barcelona SC in Guayaquil in 2016.

He also spent time on loan at Fluminese and El Nacional.

Independiente and Fluminese paid tribute to Pineida on social media, while Barcelona SC said "this unfortunate news makes all of us who are part of this institution deeply dismayed".

In a statement, the Ecuadorian Football Federation condemned the violence and passed on condolences to Pineida's family.

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Iran’s President Says He Can’t Make ‘Miracles’ to Solve the Country’s Woes

Despite sky-high inflation, water and energy cuts and prospects for a deal with the U. S. dimming, President Masoud Pezeshkian has apparently thrown up his hands.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

President Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran attending a protest in Tehran in June after the U.S. attacks on nuclear sites in Iran.

Over 1,000 Were Killed in Attack on Camp in Darfur, Sudan, U.N. Says

18 December 2025 at 22:12
A paramilitary attack in April was one of the most brutal of Sudan’s civil war. Now, hunger is spreading as Western aid cuts have reduced U.N. rations.

© Reuters

People displaced in April after attacks by the Rapid Support Forces on the Zamzam camp in North Darfur, Sudan. A revised toll is over three times as great as earlier estimates.

海南全岛正式“封关”打造全球最大自由贸易港

18 December 2025 at 22:17
德才
2025-12-18T13:48:44.839Z
中国官方周四(12月18日)宣布,在全球面积最大的自由贸易港——海南自贸港(FTP)正式启动全岛特殊海关监管运作(资料图片)

(德国之声中文网) 中国官方周四(12月18日)宣布,在全球面积最大的自由贸易港——海南自贸港(FTP)正式启动全岛特殊海关监管运作。此举被广泛视为中国在应对全球保护主义升温、推动贸易自由化方面的里程碑式尝试。

根据新安排,海南岛被划定为“特殊海关监管区域”。其运作核心被概括为“一线放开、二线管住”。所谓“一线”,是指海南与境外(包括港澳台)之间的贸易往来将更加自由;“二线”则指从海南进入中国内地的货物,将实施标准的进口监管措施。

“零关税”范围大幅扩张

随着封关运作的启动,海南自贸港的零关税产品比例从原先的21%大幅提升至74%,相关免税项目从1900项扩充至6600项以上。

这意味着,诸如劳力士(Rolex)、路易威登(LV)等国际高端品牌有望逐步在岛内实现零关税销售。此外,一项关键政策规定:凡在海南加工的进口原材料,若加工增值达到或超过30%,其产品在销往中国内地时可免征进口关税。

封关对于每年冬季前往海南避寒的庞大游客群体而言,是一种利好消息

分析人士指出,尽管海南目前的物价水平相较于邻近的广东省更高,但封关带来的超低关税预计将显著带动当地线下实体消费的增长,特别是对于每年冬季前往海南避寒的庞大游客群体而言。

战略地位:再造“深圳特区”的野心

海南自贸港的建设目标是在本世纪中叶将其打造为具有全球影响力的贸易中心。北京方面对海南的期待往往被解读为试图再造一个“深圳特区”,甚至有观点认为其长远目标是取代香港,成为中国通往东南亚的出口枢纽。

然而,也有分析指出,考虑到目前中国对外汇监管的需求,香港作为国际金融中心的地位短期内仍难以被取代。同时,海南目前作为“社会主义前提下的特殊监管区”,其国际化进程仍面临一些实际挑战。

据包括《风传媒》在内的媒体报道,,虽然海南已为岛内企业开放了国际互联网接入服务,但部分初创企业反映,目前仍存在“费用高昂、流程复杂、访问受限”等问题,实际体验尚待优化。

特殊日期与区域竞争

值得注意的是,封关日期12月18日恰逢1978年中国开启改革开放路线的周年纪念日。

海南曾是中国最早的特区之一,如今则在医疗、教育等服务领域进一步放宽了外资准入。官方数据显示,自2020年总体方案发布以来,已有超过9600家外资企业在海南落户。

在南海局势不断升温的背景下,海南的战略地位也愈发凸显。将海南打造为免税区域,也被视为中国通过经济手段维护地区局势稳定、与邻国越南等东南亚国家进行贸易博弈的重要策略。

DW中文有Instagram!欢迎搜寻dw.chinese,看更多深入浅出的图文与影音报道。

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

New York City Set to Raise the Cap on Permits for Street Vendors

18 December 2025 at 22:05
The legislation, which would make thousands more permits available, is part of a package of City Council bills aimed at helping the city’s vendors get on the right side of the law.

© Marco Postigo Storel for The New York Times

Food carts and other street vendors are a ubiquitous sight in New York City, but an arcane permitting process means many cart operators are unlicensed.

City Council Introduces Bill to Create Mamdani’s Community Safety Agency

The proposed Department of Community Safety would send mental health teams to respond to 911 calls, rather than the police, according to Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s plans.

© Dave Sanders for The New York Times

The proposed Department of Public Safety would take over certain 911 calls from police officers that dealt with mental health issues.

欧盟峰会预计就俄资产援乌作艰难决定 比利时:要跳伞大家一起跳 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

18 December 2025 at 21:45
18/12/2025 - 14:20

欧洲领导人周四在布鲁塞尔举行高风险峰会,寻求为乌克兰的战争、军队和预算提供资金,但峰会结果仍不明朗。比利时继续拒绝“独自”承担这项欧洲前所未有行动的风险。但据报该决议合法多数通过即可,无需比利时投票。

欧盟外交事务负责人卡雅·卡拉斯抵达时表示:“普京正押注于我们的失败,我们绝不能让他得逞!”

欧盟委员会主席冯德莱恩也表示,27个成员国“不会在未就对乌克兰未来两年的资助达成协议的情况下离开会场”。

但能否达成协议尚无定论。以德国为首的大多数成员国希望动用俄罗斯央行在欧洲冻结的资产,为乌克兰提供900亿欧元的“赔偿贷款”。

“要跳伞大家一起跳”

但这些冻结资产的大部分(约2100亿欧元)位于比利时,而比利时首相巴特·德韦弗(Bart De Wever)仍不愿批准该计划。

他周四在比利时议会说,“明说吧,我从未见过能打动我,并获得比利时同意的文本”,“也许今天能看到,但我至今未见”。

比利时继续拒绝“独自”承担这项在欧洲前所未有行动的风险。

比利时首相巴特·德韦弗今天在该国议会强调:“在跳伞之前,我们需要一个降落伞。如果要求我们跳伞,那就大家一起跳”。

这位保守派首相担心比利时遭受俄罗斯的报复,甚至“永远”遭受报复,因此他要求对本国利益提供强有力的保护,包括保护其在俄罗斯境内的利益。

一位欧洲谈判代表解释说,合作伙伴认为他这一要求过高,他们愿意为乌克兰提供贷款担保,但不会签署“空白支票”。

法新社说,在特朗普决定关闭美国援助闸门后,欧洲各国承诺在未来两年内为基辅提供大部分财政和军事支持。

德国总理弗里德里希·默茨周四抵达布鲁塞尔时表示,“我认为没有比动用俄罗斯资产更好的选择”。

他本周早些时候曾警告说:“如果我们不这样做,欧盟的行动能力将在未来数年甚至更长时间内受到严重损害。”

比利时可以不投票!

动用被冻结的俄罗斯资产的决定可以由欧盟成员国的合格多数票通过,理论上比利时可以不参与,匈牙利也肯定不参,后者与克里姆林宫关系密切,完全反对这一选项。

在布鲁塞尔,今天,欧盟各国元首和政府首脑还可以考虑另一个选项。

那就是:欧盟可以借贷,但这样的决定需全体成员国一致同意。现在包括德国在内的几个国家对此非常犹豫,至少匈牙利完全反对。

如果无法达成协议,乌克兰最早可能在2026年第一季度就面临资金短缺的风险。

泽连斯基总统在前往布鲁塞尔参加峰会前对记者表示:“如果没有这项决定,乌克兰将面临大问题”。

就在他抵达布鲁塞尔前,他宣布将于周五和周六在美国举行新的美乌会谈。

据一位白宫官员透露,俄美两国特使也计划于本周末在佛罗里达州迈阿密举行会晤。

在莫斯科发动大规模进攻近四年后,泽连斯基仍然不相信克里姆林宫有实现和平的意愿,并表示,尽管和平谈判正在进行,他仍在为新的“战争之年”做准备。

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