Alec Russell from the Financial Times expressed his deep concerns about
Alec Russell from the Financial Times expressed his deep concerns about the shifting international landscape shaped by the policies of former U.S. President Donald Trump in a sit-down interview with the Chief Editor of TO BHMA International Edition Odin Linardatou (tovima.com) at the Delphi Economic Forum X.
Alec Russell, journalist and head of foreign correspondents at the Financial Times, described Trump as a “master of unpredictability.”
“We have to hope we’re not entering a new Weimar phase,” Russell said when asked about global political instability, referencing the historical period that paved the way for the rise of the Nazis.
He voiced strong concern over the rise of the far-right in Europe, stating, “Am I worried about it? I’m definitely very concerned about it.” He added that the world is currently facing multiple crises without any form of global leadership.
“This is a massive, massive problem. We’re seeing it in my own country, in Britain, where a populist movement which is doing very well in the opinion polls. We’ve seen it in the United States. The United States has been overtaken by a very right-wing, very nationalist, very populist movement,” he warned, emphasizing the potentially destabilizing consequences for everyone.
When asked if
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