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Ecuador: Lasso’s political movement will not present candidates for elections

Ecuador: Lasso's political movement will not present candidates for elections
Photo: Reuters

June 7 |

The political movement of Ecuador’s President Guillermo Lasso said on Tuesday that it will not run candidates for the country’s presidency or the National Assembly in the early elections, nor will it support other candidates or parties at the national level.

The announcement by the CREO Movement, Creando Oportunidades, comes days after Lasso, a conservative former banker, declined to participate as a candidate for the country’s presidency after he dissolved the National Assembly and brought forward the country’s general elections.

Ecuadorians will go to the polls on August 20 to elect a presidential candidate and 137 members of the National Assembly for the remainder of the term until May 2025. In the event, a presidential runoff would be held on October 15.

“This is a compass of waiting where we will redouble efforts in the governmental sphere, but we are preparing with nobility, with ideological, intellectual and above all principled solvency to return in 2025,” Esteban Bernal, president of the CREO movement, told reporters.

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Lasso dissolved the legislature on May 17, under a constitutional peculiarity known as the “cross death”, in the midst of an impeachment process after lawmakers accused him of embezzlement in an oil contract, something the president has always denied.

Lasso has ruled by decree since dissolving the National Assembly.

Bernal said that members of the CREO movement are free to vote for the candidate of their preference, but cannot support those who “did not respect the Constitution and the laws”.

Political parties have until June 13 to officially register their candidates.

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International

Trump directs ICE to focus deportation efforts on democratic-led states

On Sunday, U.S. President Donald Trump ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to prioritize raids, deportations, and immigration enforcement in states governed by the Democratic Party, according to the news outlet Univision.

The U.S. president posted on his social media channels directing agents to “do everything possible to achieve the very important goal of delivering the largest mass deportation program in history,” the report said.

Trump further explained that efforts should be expanded to apprehend and deport illegal immigrants in the largest U.S. cities, such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, where millions of undocumented immigrants reside.

Previously, Stephen Miller, the White House Deputy Chief of Staff, informally stated that the agency aims to arrest 3,000 immigrants per day. He also demanded that agents actively seek out and detain undocumented immigrants, according to the American media outlet.

In recent weeks, ICE operations have faced criticism for the use of masked agents who do not identify themselves or present warrants during arrests.

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International

Judge to rule next week on injunction against Trump’s student visa restrictions

A Boston (Massachusetts) federal judge postponed on Monday her decision on whether to maintain the injunction blocking President Donald Trump’s ban on foreign students at Harvard University.

District Judge Allison D. Burroughs announced after a hearing that she would decide next week whether to uphold or lift the temporary restraining order she issued in May against the policy.

The order will remain in effect until her ruling next week, according to local media reports.

Last month, the Trump administration barred Harvard from enrolling new foreign students and warned current international students that they must transfer to other universities or risk losing their immigration status.

Harvard, one of the most prestigious U.S. universities, filed a lawsuit arguing that its authorization to accept foreign students is “essential” for them to remain legally in the country.

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In its legal challenge, the university stated that revoking this authorization has already “disrupted countless academic programs, research labs, and courses.”

Following Harvard’s lawsuit, Judge Burroughs issued a temporary restraining order against the government’s ban, which affects about a quarter of the university’s student body.

Despite the judge’s order, Harvard reported in court documents that several students who arrived in Boston on June 5 were sent to “secondary inspection” and “were detained for many hours without being able to contact anyone.”

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International

Netanyahu: Israel is ‘changing the face of the Middle East’ amid Iran strikes

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared on Monday that Israel is “changing the face of the Middle East” with its unprecedented attack on Iran, now in the fourth day of escalating military tensions between the two countries.

Netanyahu made these remarks during a televised press conference, just hours after an airstrike targeted the Iranian state television building in Tehran, forcing a brief interruption of its broadcast.

At the time of the attack, cameras captured a state TV presenter, who had been criticizing Israel’s offensive, hastily leaving the studio amid thick dust and falling debris from the ceiling, according to videos circulated by Iranian media.

The channel resumed live programming minutes later, while Tehran condemned the strike as a “war crime.” Netanyahu stated that Iranians are now seeing that “the regime is much weaker” than previously thought, highlighting that since Friday, Israel has systematically eliminated Iran’s military leadership. “We take them out one by one,” he said.

Killing the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, “would end the conflict” between Israel and Iran, Netanyahu told ABC News.

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Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly opposed an Israeli plan to assassinate Khamenei, a senior U.S. official revealed on Sunday.

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