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Ukraine’s leader hopes for an Oval Office green light, India disputes a Trump assertion, and flaming͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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October 17, 2025
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The World Today

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  1. Zelenskyy hopes for missiles
  2. India disputes Trump on oil
  3. US prosecutors indict Bolton
  4. Microsoft pivots from China
  5. French PM survives, for now
  6. Spain courts migrants
  7. Latam’s rightward shift
  8. Whooping cough surges in US
  9. More elderly dying alone
  10. Flamingos return to Florida

The decline of British social housing, and a ‘powerfully evocative’ debut novel.

1

Zelenskyy hopes for Trump green light

Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy
Al Drago/File Photo/Reuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy hopes Oval Office talks with US President Donald Trump today will result in approval for the transfer of long-range missiles, a top aide said. Washington has appeared to grow more amenable to resuming military backing for Kyiv’s push to repel Russia’s invasion. Those hopes have likely been undermined, however, by Trump’s announcement that he will hold talks with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. “On multiple occasions this year,” The New York Times wrote, “Mr. Trump has come right to the edge of imposing penalties on Russia or giving powerful new military aid to Ukraine, only to speak with Mr. Putin and raise hopes for a diplomatic solution — so far with little to show for it.”

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2

US-India dispute on Russian oil

A chart showing Russian crude oil exports by destination country.

US President Donald Trump said Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had pledged to stop buying oil from Russia, but New Delhi said the two leaders haven’t communicated in recent days. The confusing back-and-forth — reminiscent of an episode earlier this year in which Trump said he spoke to Chinese leader Xi Jinping, an assertion denied by Beijing — underlined persistent tensions between the US and India. Their ties have been upended by Trump’s frustration with Indian purchases of oil from Russia, which Washington argues is helping Moscow fuel its war with Ukraine. “Once again, Donald Trump has made a claim that may not square with facts,” a leading Indian journalist said. Still, “New Delhi has little option but to tread with caution.”

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3

US prosecutors indict John Bolton

Former National Security Advisor John Bolton
Former National Security Advisor John Bolton. Brian Snyder/File Photo/Reuters.

US prosecutors indicted a former national security adviser for allegedly mishandling classified information, the latest critic of President Donald Trump to face legal pressure. The charges against John Bolton — who served in Trump’s first term but has turned against the president — related to his purported sharing of documents with relatives, allegations he denied. They come following prosecutions of two other Trump opponents, the New York attorney general and a former FBI director. Yet while the legal campaign “has no parallel in decades of American politics,” as CNN put it, the Bolton charges are less surprising: Trump did not openly call for them, they were brought by long-serving officials, and a judge previously warned that Bolton may have broken the law.

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4

Big Tech cuts China ties

A chart showing the countries with the highest share of global manufacturing output.

Microsoft reportedly wants to pivot the majority of its hardware manufacturing outside of China next year, a sign of the growing fracture between the Western and Chinese technology sectors. It is not alone among American Big Tech firms: Nikkei also said AWS is moving server production outside of China, while Google is trying to grow server-making capabilities in Thailand. The US-China AI race has served as a driver for major American tech companies to shift manufacturing, fearful of their production being curtailed by restrictions from either Washington or Beijing. Other powers, meanwhile, are resigning themselves to falling behind: Europe will be “No. 3 at best” when it comes to AI, Belgium’s central bank governor admitted at Semafor’s World Economy Summit.

For the latest in the world of AI, subscribe to Semafor’s Tech briefing. →

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5

French PM hangs on

A chart showing G7 countries’ budget deficit as a share of GDP.

French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu survived two no-confidence votes, but the budget battle that has driven his country to political crisis looked little closer to resolution. Motions by the far-left and far-right both failed, averting the possibility of snap parliamentary elections. “The immediate danger may have receded, but the core problem is still very much center stage,” the Associated Press said: Lecornu’s minority government must navigate fraught politics for any legislation, including the passage of a budget that has torpedoed successive governments for over a year. The impasse has driven French bond yields higher, and threatens to hit the country’s economy, with many of its neighbors watching nervously. “The dilemma France faces isn’t unique,” an ING economist warned.

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6

Spain courts Africa

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez. Juan Medina/File Photo/Reuters.

A Spanish government-sponsored event this week showcased how its center-left government is bucking a Western trend of cracking down on foreign arrivals and cutting international aid. The AfroMadrid2025 conference was the latest in a series of efforts by the country to deepen its ties with African nations: Madrid has widened a seasonal migration program, is aiming to open a raft of new embassies across the continent, and wants to expand business and education ties. The push is not limited solely to Africa: In part to address an aging population, Spain has aggressively expanded migration more broadly, with the number of Latin Americans now calling Madrid home having grown more than tenfold over the last quarter-century to more than a million.

For more from the continent, subscribe to Semafor’s Africa briefing. →

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7

Latam’s reversing ‘pink tide’

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (l) and Chile’s President Gabriel Boric (r).
Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (l) and Chile’s President Gabriel Boric (r). Pablo Sanhueza/Reuters.

South America looks set for a rightward shift in upcoming elections, reversing the course of a leftist “pink tide” that swept the region in recent years. Conservative candidates are topping polls in Brazil, Chile, and Colombia, with all due to hold elections soon. The three countries have been mired by worsening inequality, rising criminality, and allegations of corruption, while pressure from the Trump administration has worsened economic growth prospects. Among those whose successors face dim prospects is Chilean President Gabriel Boric, who has warned of a democratic recession in the region: “When democracy is not able to deliver… it withdraws,” he told The Washington Post.

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Mixed Signals
Mixed Signals promotion poster

Chicago is either a war zone quickly spiraling out of control, or a peaceful city under siege by an overreaching federal government. It all depends on who you ask — and which channel you watch. This week, Ben and Max bring on Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to talk about how he’s fighting a messaging battle against the Trump White House. They also talk about how conservative media is shaping the situation on the ground, what he thinks of California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s trolling approach to Trump, and whether we should bet on the Chicago Bears.

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8

Whooping cough surges in Florida

A chart showing the vaccination rates of US children by school year.

Whooping cough diagnoses in the US state of Florida rose 81% from 2024 to 2025, driven by a collapse in immunization. Kindergarten vaccination rates fell in 2024 to the lowest in over a decade, The Tallahassee Democrat reported, and below what is needed for herd immunity. Vaccine skepticism is up in much of the US, with a sharp partisan divide: Republican voters, led by the party leadership, have become much less willing to vaccinate their children, while Democrats have become slightly more pro-vaccine. The result is that some previously well-controlled diseases have returned: There have been more than 1,500 measles cases nationwide and three deaths. Scientists warned that the virus could become endemic again within 20 years.

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9

Demographics drive loneliness

A chart showing who Americans spend their time with, by age and daily hours.

A growing number of US citizens are dying alone, as demographic changes mean that families are smaller and more dispersed. There are no recorded statistics on who is present at death, but other numbers can offer clues: More than 15 million people aged 55 or older have no spouse or biological children; nearly 2 million have no family members at all. Other older adults become isolated through ill health, and up to 25% are not in regular contact with others. “We’ve always seen patients who were essentially by themselves” at the end of life, one hospice worker told The Washington Post. “But they weren’t as common as they are now.”

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10

Flamingos return home

 Flamingos in Türkiye.
Alper Tuydes/Anadolu via Getty Images

Flamingos may be returning to Florida, a century after being hunted to extinction. The flamboyant pink waders were wiped out in the late 1800s across the Caribbean, thanks to the fashion trend of feathered hats: Their feathers “were literally worth their weight in gold,” a scientist wrote in The Conversation. Hunting has stopped, but flamingos’ slow breeding cycle means that they, unlike other species, have never returned. In recent years, however, it appears that some wild flamingos may once again have made Florida their home — a flock of 125 was seen this year — thanks to efforts to restore coastal ecosystems, which were collapsing in the late 20th century but have “vastly improved.”

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  • French President Emmanuel Macron will meet with the European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen in Paris.
  • Col. Michael Randrianirina is due to be sworn in as Madagascar’s new president following a coup.
  • London’s Royal Albert Hall hosts the Grand Sumo Tournament, which includes more than 40 of Japan’s elite wrestlers.
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Semafor Stat
76

The number of movies that were licensed to be shot on a particular high-rise apartment block in south London between 2007 and 2010. Government-built housing in Britain, often constructed in the post-war years, were originally a symbol of social progress, but have become emblems of decay and neglect, hence their use as “a gritty backdrop for dramas of poverty and crime,” John Flint, an expert on town planning, wrote in The Conversation. High-profile disasters such as a 2017 fire which killed 72 people have added to their stigma, but the bleak image doesn’t always chime with the experience of those who live in them, Flint argued.

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Semafor Recommends
Good and Evil and Other Stories by Samanta Schweblin.

Good and Evil and Other Stories by Samanta Schweblin, translated by Megan McDowell. This is the debut novel by the Argentine author, who won the 2022 US National Book Award for Translated Literature for her short fiction. Joyce Carol Oates writes in The New York Times that “in prose that shimmers with a sort of menacing lyricism, the stories of Good and Evil are powerfully evocative and unsettling.” Buy Good and Evil and Other Stories from your local bookstore.

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Semafor Spotlight
Semafor Spotlight

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