泾阳县高一复读学校哪里好-【西安成才补习学校】,西安成才补习学校,鄠邑区提分学校专业提分快,泾阳县高考提分靠谱的效果好,灞桥区高二实力地方,蓝田县高一学校正规效果好,漯河民办高中实力有哪些,渭南补习机构专业升学率

VIETNAM — The stakes are high for Trump-Kim round two.While success for the Trump administration very much hinges on making progress in eliminating North Korea's nuclear weapons, what constitutes success for Pyongyang is much more nebulous.Here are three theories on what Kim Jong Un might consider a win for his country.Secure a political declaration to end the Korean WarThe biggest prizes for Kim will be diplomatic as well as economic.Kim, like Trump, craves a big dramatic and historic moment in which the two leaders, foes for seven decades, stand side by side to declare a political end to the Korean War. To be clear: Such a declaration would not serve as a peace treaty formally ending the war. But it would be enough for Kim to take home to his people as a propaganda victory.Ending the Korean War was a goal neither his father nor grandfather accomplished before dying; to accomplish that task would cement his authority inside North Korea as a master statesman and military strategist.Such a declaration would allow Kim to turn the country's focus away from war and toward the economy; it also would start the lengthy process of negotiating a formal peace treaty with China, the United Nations and the United States.More importantly, Kim will be seeking economic concessions in return for rapprochement and promises to give up elements of his nuclear program. A lifting of crippling UN sanctions imposed on North Korea is a priority for Kim. Once sanctions are eased, South Korea in particular is poised to restart joint economic projects that could serve as an economic lifeline to Pyongyang as well as to rebuild North Korea's decaying infrastructure. In addition, Seoul must wait for concrete nuclear concessions from North Korea to justify lifting its own bilateral sanctions in place since 2010.For Kim, a successful roadmap to denuclearization in Hanoi would pave the way for North Korea's return to the international fold, politically and economically, while delaying the complete relinquishing of his prized nuclear assets for many years to come.Show up for a modest winKim Jong Un has several paths to a win in Hanoi -- and unfortunately Trump seems determined to make it happen.Kim gains a modest win by just showing up and repeating his performance at Singapore -- being seen to engage the United States as a nuclear power, gaining new opportunities for diplomacy and trade and raising the chance of sanctions relief from Beijing and Seoul.And while he is sitting with Trump in Hanoi, his centrifuges continue to spin and missile factories continue to build. The negotiations help him navigate a precarious moment in his nuclear program, buying time to expand, conceal, and deploy his arsenal. Vague assurances and symbolic displays cost him nothing.On the other hand, Kim can win big if Trump ignores his advisers and impulsively offers a major concession for free, as he did in Singapore by halting military exercises. This is made more likely as Trump's advisers seem willing to help him conceal the events of the Singapore summit from 3074
Twitter will stop accepting political ads, the company's CEO, Jack Dorsey, announced Wednesday."We've made the decision to stop all political advertising on Twitter globally. We believe political message reach should be earned, not bought," 252

WESTERVILLE, Ohio - One stage. Twelve candidates. Tuesday’s CNN/New York Times Democratic Party Debate will feature the most candidates at any one time for a televised presidential debate in recent memory. Last month’s Democratic presidential debate featured 10 candidates who qualified based off DNC criteria. In two previous debates, 20 candidates qualified, with the presidential hopefuls being split between two nights. Democratic party leaders said they’re hopeful having the debate on one night, even with a large number of candidates, will mean better viewership. It also means that 12 candidates will divvy up three hours of time, although in past debates, the higher polling candidates generally received more talk time. Joe Biden has led the talk time in all three debates held so far this year.Also, viewership for the last debate, which was only on one night, was on par with the second debate, which was held over two nights. The September debate's viewership was also far below the viewership for the first debate.When: Tuesday, Oct. 15, 8-11 p.m.How to watch: CNN or CNN.comThe candidatesFormer Vice President Joe BidenNew Jersey Sen. Cory BookerSouth Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete ButtigiegFormer Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián CastroHawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (did not qualify for September’s debate)California Sen. Kamala HarrisMinnesota Sen. Amy KlobucharFormer Texas Rep. Beto O'RourkeVermont Sen. Bernie SandersEntrepreneur Tom Steyer (first debate)Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth WarrenEntrepreneur Andrew YangCandidates qualifying for the debate received at least 2 percent in four national or early primary state polls and raised money from 130,000 unique donors. Among the candidates who did not qualify for this month’s debate are Rep. Tim Ryan, Gov. Steve Bullock, author Marianne Williamson, Sen. Michael Bennet and Rep. John Delaney.And the road to qualifying for future debates will become even more challenging for lower and mid-tier candidates. The fundraising threshold for November’s debate will increase to 165,000 unique donors, and candidates will need to hit 3 percent nationally and/or 5 percent in early states in four different recognized polls. Moderating the debateCNN anchors Erin Burnett and Anderson Cooper and New York Times national editor Marc Lacey will moderate Tuesday’s debate. Cooper moderated two Democratic Party presidential debates in 2016, in addition to a general election debate. Previously, Cooper moderated a GOP presidential debate in 2012 and 2008 as well as a Democratic Party presidential debate in 2008. PollingThere has a rather significant shift in polling since the last debate on Sept. 12. Then, Biden was a clear frontrunner in the Democratic Party. Now, his lead has practically vanished in several national polls. A Quinnipiac University poll has Warren now leading Biden 30-27. But in a Fox News poll released last week, Biden leads 32-22. A recent CBS poll showed a tied race in Iowa, and Warren leading 32-24 in New Hampshire. Sanders has consistently stayed in third place in the polls in recent weeks. Buttigieg has gone into fourth place in many polls as Harris has seen a steady drop in support after she saw a spike following the first debate.Sanders on stageAlthough he has not been on the campaign trail in the last two weeks, Sanders plans on being on stage for three hours on Tuesday night after he had a heart attack in Las Vegas. Sanders is expected to resume campaign activities on Saturday. Impeachment as a topicTuesday’s debate marks the first since House Democrats announced a formal impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump’s phone call with Ukraine’s president requesting an investigation into the Biden family. Democrats, and even a handful of GOP leaders including Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, say the phone call was inappropriate. Biden will likely get the opportunity to address whether how he handled his relationship with Ukraine was appropriate given that his son was working for a Ukrainian company under investigation by that country’s government. Other candidates have focused their attacks on Trump’s conduct rather than Biden’s. Could that change at Tuesday’s debate? Also, whether the moderators will delve into Trump’s impeachment remains to be seen. An impeachment inquiry will be a moot point in 2021 if one of the candidates on stage becomes president. On SyriaThe United States’ role in the Middle East could get a lot of airplay on Tuesday, especially given that American troops are withdrawing from Syria. This decision by the Trump administration has drawn ire from Democrats and a number of Republicans. The U.S. leaving Syria has left Kurdish fighters vulnerable to attack from the Turkish military. Kurdish fighters were holding 11,000 Islamic State group prisoners on the United States’ behalf, according to the New York Times. On Monday, Trump tweeted that he believed that the Kurds were intentionally releasing prisoners to draw the U.S. back into the conflict. While the landscape of the Middle East could be altered by 2021 given recent events, candidates should be expected to expound on their views of Middle East policy, and whether the U.S. should keep troops permanently in the region. Justin Boggs is a writer for the E.W. Scripps National Desk. 5298
Welcome to CNN's fact check of the sixth Democratic presidential primary debate.Thursday's debate was hosted by PBS and Politico, and came a day after the House of Representatives impeached President Donald Trump. It also came the same day the House voted to approve Trump's US-Mexico-Canada Agreement.Just a month and a half before the Iowa caucuses, the three-hour debate offered candidates a chance to delve more deeply into their policy disagreements than they had in their five previous clashes.Only seven candidates met the party's thresholds for qualification this time: former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and businessmen Andrew Yang and Tom Steyer.Klobuchar on Hillary Clinton margin of victoryKlobuchar said, "If you look at the poll[s], at the state that knows me best, and that is the state of Minnesota, it showed in the state that Hillary had her lowest margin of victory, it showed that I beat Donald Trump by 18 points."Facts First: She's basically right about the polls, but she's wrong about the 2016 election results.In 2016, Hillary Clinton barely defeated Donald Trump in Minnesota, winning by 1.6 percentage points. It was extremely close, but it wasn't her tightest margin of victory, as Klobuchar claimed. That state was New Hampshire, where Clinton 1421
Twitter plans to place a disclaimer on future tweets from world leaders that break its rules but which Twitter decides are in the "public interest," the company said in a blog post Thursday.This policy change could face its most prominent test in President Trump. Trump has repeatedly 297
来源:资阳报