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Opinion
Women who have powerful impact on British society

Women who have powerful impact on British society

Extraordinary women shape the world and inspire those around us. That’s why The Independent is once again marking International Women’s Day with our annual influence list, celebrating women who have had a powerful impact on

Opinion
Pacific Palisades paper stages comeback after fire

Pacific Palisades paper stages comeback after fire

Clara Harter, Tribune News ServiceAfter the loss of thousands of family homes and businesses to the Palisades fire, the subsequent closing of the community's nearly century-old newspaper felt like yet another a gut punch. But

Opinion
Creative idea

Creative idea

The creative idea of serving an ancient Roman-style pizza at Neverland Pizzeria in Budapest is both interesting and educational (“A Budapest pizzeria recreates ancient Roman-era pizza,” Feb.26, Gulf Today website).In a city famous for its

Opinion
The aftermath

The aftermath

The aftermath

Opinion
Humanity matters

Humanity matters

The world needs peace not war. War, even when it is far away, travels through headlines, messages, and sentiments. It touches people in subtle ways through apprehension, through rising costs, through the quiet questions about

Opinion
Too many Democrats in governor’s race

Too many Democrats in governor’s race

After months of fretting, California Democratic leaders are now truly freaking out about too many of their own running for governor, potentially allowing two MAGA Republicans to advance to the general election. Someone find me

Opinion
The Donald Trump guide to multi-national calamity

The Donald Trump guide to multi-national calamity

The last time an American president and his entourage of dissemblers face-planted into an international calamity, there was at least the courtesy of a meticulously produced pre-game show. George W. Bush, who was routinely blistered

Opinion
Getting some truckers out from behind the wheel

Getting some truckers out from behind the wheel

You may not recognize Karan Singh’s name, but you’ve likely heard of the problem his case exemplifies: workers who entered the US illegally and began driving massive trucks, even if they were clearly unqualified —

Opinion
It’s time to think

It’s time to think

There are a number of photos in the media of children climbing and having fun but the photos are horrifying.They are from near Qamishli, a Syrian city and show an unexploded missile with children climbing

Opinion
Hungary PM Orban’s battery bet turns into election headache

Hungary PM Orban’s battery bet turns into election headache

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s bet on a battery-driven economic upswing appears to have backfired, with the sector mired in a prolonged downturn ‌and environmental concerns coming to the fore shortly before a make-or-break national election.In power for 16 ​years, Orban has bet big since ‌2021 on EV batteries, attracting foreign investment worth some 26bn euros, based on a government tally, ‌mainly from South Korean and Chinese manufacturers, and making ‌Hungary a key hub in Europe.But with Orban, ‌a eurosceptic nationalist, already trailing his centre-right challenger Peter Magyar, according to most opinion polls, surveys show Hungary’s battery plants have become an electoral risk ahead of the April 12 ballot.Although battery demand is seen rising in the years ahead, the sector has proved unable so far to revive Hungary’s stagnant economy.Orban’s government has also been on the defensive since news website Telex published a report last month on the scale of health and safety violations at Samsung SDI’s battery plant in the northern town of God. Orban aide Gergely Gulyas said Samsung had been fined several times between 2022 and 2023 for exceeding emissions standards in the factory, although the government says there was no pollution ​outside the plant.However, last Friday police said they had launched four criminal procedures against Samsung since 2023, including a 2024 probe into environmental damage and occupational endangerment, and a 2026 inquiry into waste management violations.Samsung said last month its ‌Hungarian factory, which temporarily had its environmental licence suspended, strictly complied with environmental ​and safety regulations. Its press office did not respond to Reuters’ questions. “We will continue to ​consider the safety and health of our employees as our most important value in the future and continue to conduct responsible corporate activities based on trust with the local community,” it said on its website.Laszlo Toth, however, who rents a house near the factory, said he was concerned by what he described as large plumes of steam rising from the plant every night. “These battery plants were not supposed to be located next to human settlements but in deserts,” said Toth, 50, who works as a food courier.“We did not need them. We used to have farmlands.”When Orban won the 2022 election, he set out plans to turn Hungary into a battery “superpower” by luring Asian investors and making it the world’s fifth-largest exporter of batteries. But that was followed by a ‌three-year stretch of stagnation, including two years of ‌falling battery output.Saddled with the EU’s worst inflationary surge after Russia’s 2022 invasion of neighbouring Ukraine, Hungary’s economy has lagged even a weak EU growth average that Orban had sought to eclipse. Orban’s hopes of lifting growth towards 6% beyond 2026 now look out of reach. The International Monetary Fund projects annual expansion of 2% to 2.6% until 2030. His government has backed the EV sector with subsidies worth some 1.3bn euros ($1.51bn), including up to 344mn euros for Samsung’s capacity expansion last year.David Karas, senior researcher at CEU Democracy Institute, said the perception that Orban’s nationalist government was prioritising foreign capital over local interests was politically toxic.Orban’s bet could still pay long-term dividends, with the International Energy Agency projecting EV battery demand more than tripling by 2030 from 2024 levels. But a Median survey released last week showed nearly two-thirds of those polled believed the Samsung plant’s difficulties had harmed Orban’s re-election prospects. Opposition leader Magyar has pledged to tighten oversight of battery plants and curb subsidies for gigafactories if his Tisza Party unseats Orban’s Fidesz.God resident Istvan Takacs, 64, said he had still not decided how to vote but expressed concern about the rising cost of living. “When I started working, I could buy three loaves ‌of bread from an hourly wage,” ​said Takacs, who drove tractors for four decades. “Now, we haven’t got much further, though we’re not worse off either,” he said. “I think everything’s stagnating here.” - Reuters