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検索対象: TIME 2017年10月9日号
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1. TIME 2017年10月9日号

0 0 0 TRUMP'S OFFENSIVE L BOOK A deliberately provocative President picks his latest fight 。 over free speech in sports By ALEX ALTMAN a 観 SEAN G GOR マ Nation

2. TIME 2017年10月9日号

ょ ' ドユ 5 ロ” from salary caps t0 franchise-player for peacefully using their constitutional John McCain and Jeff FIake, both tags—defy free-market principles. right t0 free speech, just five weeks Republicans, argued that the military Some Of this tension is built intO after defending the same rights for pageantry that has crept int0 professional the NFL's founding. The nation's first violent white nationalists marching sports is partly about profit. The study professional football teams were in once found that $ 6.8 million in Defense on Charlottesville, Va. 'Why didn't booming Rust Belt cities like Muncie, he condemn What was going on in Department contracts had been doled lnd. ; Rock lsland, III. ; and Akron, Ohio; Charlottesville? ” Denver Broncos out tO professional sports leagues tO and the league works hard to promote linebacker Brandon Marshall told showcase what the Senators called itS roots in America S manufacturing TIME hours after he and 31 teammates 'paid patriotism ”—from on-field color- base. The NFL Hall ofFame is in Canton, knelt on the field before a 26-16 loss guard performances and re-enlistment Ohio, and the names of iconic franchises to the Bills. "For him to condemn us ceremonies tO sponsorship deals for like the Steelers and Green Bay Packers for exercising our rights, that says a lOt performances Of "G0d Bless America. are living tributes to blue collar identity. about him as a President. ” Says a White But now the battle lines have been The deepening cultural divide between House offlcial: "The national anthem drawn by the President. "The venue is its athletes and its audience IS one and the American flag are symbols of not what it's about," says Representative reason the NFL studiously tries tO avoid the commitment Americans make tO our Brian Mast, a FlOrida Republican and country and its ideals. They serve as a Purple Heart recipient wh0 lost both legs controversy. ln one Of his many tweets about the humbling reminder of those who have in an IED explosion in Kandahar in 2010. player protests, Trump insisted "the fought and died tO ensure that we remain "lt's about disrespecting the flag and issue 0f kneeling has nothing t0 do with one nation, under GOd, indivisible— our country. They're using the national race. lt is about respect for our Country, something for which the President will anthem as an opp ortunity. Flag and National Anthem. NFL must always stand firm. ” According tO a senior White House respect this! ” But it escaped no one that ()ff ℃ ial, some Administration aides, Trump had uncorked his attack in a state including chief 0f staff John Kelly, were 、 VH WILL THE national-anthem with an ugly history of racial discord. controversy end? A 2015 jOint oversight peeved by the President's focus on "The people cheering; ” Seattle Seahawks report released by Arizona Senators the sideline behavior of professional defensive end Michael Bennett told athletes at a moment when challenges TIME, "was the most hurtful thing. like threats from North Korea and the Trump has a history 0f fanning tribal aftermath Of Hurricane Maria loom. But divisions, including comments about other Republicans saw a matchup tO the Central Park Five case in 1989 , exploit. the racially loaded ads he ran against As these strategists read it, so long potential Native American casino as the President could cast the debate competitors in 2000 and his campaign- as patriots against protesters, he would trail attacks. win. Polls bear out that view: in an lpsos/ For NFL players, it was hard to Reuters survey released on Sept. 26 , square the fact that the President had 58 % of respondents said athletes should called black athletes "sons of bitches ” be required tO stand during the national 34 TIME Oct0ber 9 , 2017 'TO CO 取臧 e ー取取 us for exercising 0 r rights says a 亡 about him as a re e 取 t よ —BRANDON MARSHALL, Denver Broncos

3. TIME 2017年10月9日号

THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL MAN picked a busy week t0 go t0 war with America's most popular sport. Donald Trump was navigating a nuclear stand- 0 仕 with North Korea when he touched down ⅲ Alabama for a political rally on Sept. 22. ln Puert0 RiC0, millions 0fAmer- lcans were without water or electricity in the wake Of Hurricane Maria. A plan t0 revamp the nation's he alth c are system faced a pivotal hurdle in the Senate. But the President had another matter on his mind: the squad of football play- ers whO had protested racial injustice and police brutality by kneeling, raising their fists or locking their arms during the na- tional anthem. "Wouldn't you love tO see one ofthese NFL owners, when somebody disrespects our flag, tO say, 'Get that son Of a bitch offthe field right now?' ” he asked the crowd Of supporters in Huntsville. Trump sprays outrage like a comedian testing material, and the thunderous ap- plause told the President he had struck gold. SO he pressed the attack. Some two dozen times over the next five days, he questioned the protesters' patriotism and labeled them 'privileged" millionaires who lacked respect or gratitude. lt was a remarkable thing for a Presi- dent tO devote s O much ene rgy tO attack- ing athletes for peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights. But the spat over sports wasn'tjust a diversion but a move 30 TIME October 9 , 2017 straight from Trump's political playbook. Confronted with crises, he creates new ones, picking fights that stir his support- ers and outrage his opponents. ln this case, he spotted a wedge issue that pits hiS rural, conservative white base against both wealthy black athletes and liberal elites who scold the NFL for everything from racist team logos to soft-pedaling the risks ofhead trauma. White House advis- ers were pleased that the president had found a way tO turn C01in Kaepernick— the unemployed quarterback wh0 pi0- neered the kneeling protest—into the new "Crooked Hillary. ” But quite apart from whether North Korea or Puerto RiCO was a better focus ofhis attention, why run the risk ofblow- back by taking on one of the few Ameri- can institutions that appeals across party lines, state lines, class and COlor lines? For this President, the words usually matter less than the music. The pointwas not that 'President Trump saying what a ー 0 亡 Of Americans are 亡 i 取 i 取 g よ —SENATOR 」 OHN KENNEDY he was attacking the actions ofblack foot- ball players; the point was thathe was tell- ing his supporters, once again, l'm one Of you, l'm on your side, and l'm willing t0 endure the ridicule Of the elites in order to say out loud what you are thinking. The descants about political correctness, ra- Cial grievance and class resentment tO- ward millionaire athletes all reminded his base why he was one of them. More important, it reminded Wash- ington Republicans that he was not one ofthem. So long as he has the fervent de- VOtion Of a core Republican cadre, he iS tO be feared. The same voters whO pre- ferred Alabama's Constitution-defying, anti—gay rights, Muslim-bashing judge Roy Moore tO Establishment opponent Luther Strange thre ate n eve ry main- stream Republican. And yes, Trump 0f- ficially supported Strange, but everyone knew that Moore was the true Trumpist in the race, and he prevailed by a wide mar- gin. ls it any wonder, in this climate, that one Ofthe Senate's most respected states- men, Tennessee Republican B0b Corker, announced that he would not seek re- election next year? SO began a Sunday 0f football when the spectacle on the sidelines outshone the action on the field. The Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonville Jaguars set the tone from London, in the first game on Sept. 24. Some players t00k a knee, while others linked arms in solidarity— including Jaguars owner Shahid Khan, a Pakistani immigrant WhO was among seven NFL owners tO donate $ 1 million or more tO Trump's lnauguration. Members ofthe Miami D01phins warmed up in #IMWITHKAP T-shirts. At the Atlanta Falcons—Detroit Lions game in Detroit, singer RiC0 LaVelle knelt while performing the anthem, joining 10 players. ln Nashville, every player on the Tennessee Titans and Seattle Seahawks chose tO remain in the lOCker r001 れ during the anthem. Titans wide rece iver Rishard Matthews took the field with the words WE ALL BLEED THE SAME and WE ARE ONE written on his cleats. Even New England Patri0ts owner RObert Kraft, a close Trump friend and generous donor, criticized the President's remarks. The movement spread beyond foot- ball. BasketbaII star LeBronJames called the President a "bum ” after Trump re- ミ scinded a White House invitation tO NBA

4. TIME 2017年10月9日号

第 or the Record $ 80 , 000 'IT'S 凵 KE A KIDNEY STO N 巳 PASS 川 PASS 川 PASS 圧 ' ~ ま「」第「 : 論ロ第 , 」朝、ロ物 TOtaI amount Of money won by three contestants spinning the wheel on The Price Right on its Sept. 22 episode, the most money given away by the game on the shOW 20 % Approximate percentage Of U. S. adolescents who 2P0 杙 being diagnosed with at least one concussion, according tO a new study that was one Of the first tO survey teens instead Of using ER data 'We expected 0 better res に . ' RAND PAUL, U. S. Senator from Kentucky, echoing U. S. Representative Thomas Massie in criticizinghisfellow Republicans' insistence on quickly repealingthe Affordable Care Act 'lf YOII d0 not Condemn ・ THERE /S divisive H/GH C 〇 ST Rhetoric ▽ TO BAD YOII are Condoning REPUTAT/ 〇Ⅳ ' RICHARD SHERMAN, Seattle Seahawks cornerback, reacting tO President Trump's tweets calling on the NFL to fire players whO don't stand during the national anthem ANGELA MERKEL, re-elected German ChanceIIor, vowing on Sept. 24 tO win back voters whO put the far イ ight, anti-immigration Alternative for Germany party intO ParIiament for the first time in about 60 years Jared Leto The actor stole the show at the Rock in Rio festivalin RiO de 」 aneiro when he madeadramatic entrance via zip line 286 G000 WEEK BAD WEEK Jared Kushner President Trump's son-in-law was found tO be using a private email account for White House business DARA KHOSROWSHAHI, CEO Of Uber, writing tO employees about the London transport authority's decision not tO renew the company's license tO operate in the U. K. capital over concerns Of a "lack Of corporate responsibility ” ; Khosrowshahi later published an apology for Uber's actions in a British newspaper Number of counts of mischief with which a baggage handler at a Singapore international airport was charged after he allegedly swapped hundreds Of baggage tags, sending luggage tO the wrong destination ILLUSTRATIONS BY BROWN BIRD DESIGN FOR TIME 'This clearly 0 declaration 可田 0 だ YONG HO, North Korean Foreign Minister, arguing that his government would be within its rights tO shOOt down U. S. warplanes whether or not they're in the country's airspace after President Trump threatened in a U. N. address tO "totally destroy ” North Korea 4 TIME October 9 , 2017 SOURCES: CBS; THE NEW YORKTIMES; 」 OURNAL OFTHE AMERICAN MEDICALASSOCIATION; METRO; PO 凵刊 CO : THE VERGE: REUTERS; THE GUARDIAN

5. TIME 2017年10月9日号

LightBox Kurds must now give up control Of their border crossings and airports, his government said, and the region's lucrative 0 il revenue S. Al-Abadi's aggressive response was matched by lraq's neighbors, many ofwhom are grappling with their own Kurdish s eparatist movements. ln lran, Where some Kurds celebrated in the streets in defiance Of Tehran's government, the authorities have closed the airspace to flights heading to the Kurdish region. Turkey staged j 0int military exercises With lraq in response tO the vote, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan issued a dark warning Of an "ethnic and se ctarian war. That may be an exaggeration aimed at Kurdish separatists in Tur- key, but a political crisis is certainly b rewing within lraq's borders , as the standoffbetween Kurdish President Masoud Barzani and al-Abadi deep- ens. The extraordinary success Ofthe yes vote among 3.3 million voters will surely embolden Barzani tO resist the economic pressure and saber rattling from B aghdad. Claiming victory on Sept. 26 , he said, "Negotiations are the right path t0 solve the problems, not threats or the language Offorce. ” The Kurdish separatists and the central government each have much t0 lose and gain in the dispute. At stake is more than 15 , 400 sq. mi. Of disputed territory, including the city of Kirkuk, now controlled by Kurdish militias after lraqi soldiers deserted it when lslamic state forces advanced in 2014. Tensions among the city's Kurds, Sunni and Shi'ite Arabs and ethnic Turkmen were already high before the vote. Now there is a virtual tinderbox sitting on top Of Oil reserves that produce up t0 400 , 000 barrels a day—an economic prize for whoever endS up controlling it. Whatever happens next, the unity that briefly held sway across this country as ISIS was driven out Of its mainstay in Mosul has gone, and lraq's future once again iS an open question. —JARED MALSIN For more ofour bestphotography, visittime.com/lightbox Police ho 旧 c た 0 crowd 可 peo 厄 waiting tO VOte 砒 0 〃 0 ″ⅲ g s ⅱ 0 れⅲ E 浦 0 れ Sept. 25

6. TIME 2017年10月9日号

0 ー ON a referendum on the President himself. anthem, compared with just 33 % wh0 NFL ownersjoined with their disagreed. From that vantage, picking the "The most frustrating thing is that teams,from ー : Shahid K れ可市 e fight was a shrewd survival tactic. people weren't kneeling because they c 愿 0 れ v 辺 e 扣 gu 肝 s け er ヮ 10 れ es 可市 e For the players and the league , the goal believe police brutality is too high or Dallas Cowboys; Daniel Snyder 可市 e is simpler. "We wanted tO shOW our fan because of racial inequality,' says Nate Washington Redskins base that we support each other, that we Boyer, a former Green Beret and NFL have each other's back, and we'll continue long snapper Whose conversations With The divide is a reminder of how Kaepernick helped coax the quarter- tO be champions for our communities, back tO kneel rather than sit in protest. says Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm differently people see the American condition. lt's also notable that few, if "They took a knee because they don't Jenkins, who raised his fist before the Sept. 24 game and has been a leader 0f any, prominent white NFL players, such like Donald Trump. We're now equating as Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers or JJ Watt, the American flag with a person—not the the protest movement. Trump's rhetoric also turned conser- have taken a knee, though Brady called 300 million diverse people it's supposed vative owners WhO support him intO SO- Trump 's remarks "divisive ” and all three tO represent. ” lt is a talent that Trump's foes have cial activists, if fleetingly. Many knelt, linked arms with teammates. Such a move come tO appreciate. "He does a good j0b locked arms or released statements in could send a powerful message t0 white 0f picking his opponents,: ” says Terry support 0f their players. Such displays America that black players are fighting for SuIIivan, a Republican consultant who of sideline strength could buy the NFL issues that matter tO everyone. managed Marco Rubi0's presidential some goodwill among the growing seg- "When somebody with that huge a campaign. "That is his gift: he has ment Ofits fan base turned Offby concerns name uses a platform tO fight for a cause, it a unique ability t0 bring down the about the CTE crisis and the le ague 's han- moves mountains; says Miami Dolphins discourse and drag down his opponents dling Of domestic-violence cases involv- safety Michael Thomas, a Stanford ing its players. While those owners may graduate who knelt during the anthem tO his level, SO that their arguments have recognized the value Ofthe gesture, seem even more ridiculous than hiS. ” AS throughout the 2016 season but has not another GOP strategist whose candidate none have been willing to risk the blow- been repeating the gesture this year. back ofsigning Kaepernick, who is widely "lt just can't be black players. If we get competed against Trump in the 2016 primary frames it: "We were playing on considered tO be more talented than many more of our NFL bothers who are white, other backup quarterbacks in the league. the narrative is going tO change. lt's that his stage the entire campaign. Or t0 put it in football parlance: Even on an extraordinary Sunday, how- simple. ” Trump's playbook is t0 turn every battle The prote sts , if they continue , should ever, the NFL was far from unified: over- intO an away game for his opponents. spark Other conversations, not only all, just 12 % 0f players knelt on Sept. 24 , UntiI they figure out how to win on about race, justice and inequality but according t0 an ESPN estimate. As his Trump's turf, each new provocation by teammates protested, Broncos defensive alSO about hOW tO respond tO a President the President is likely to end in a victory with a knack for choosing battles that end DerekWolfe told the network that he for the White House. —With reporting thought the display was disrespectful to benefit him, no matter hOW divisive. AS by BEN GOLDBERGER/NEW YORK; 0 れ d has Often been the case, Trump turned a military veterans. “ The greate st country PHILIP ELLIOTT れ d ZEKE J. MILLER/ protest with specific goals—from racial ⅲ the world, and you reside here,: ” Wolfe equality tO criminal-justice reform—into ロ said. "Why do you stay? ” WASHINGTON 35

7. TIME 2017年10月9日号

TheBrief a successful Goldman sachs veteran turned Hollywood producer with a nine-figure net worth. He entered Donald Trump's orbit in April 2016 as hiS national finance chairman and then, after Trump's victory, was nominated for the top spot at Treasury more for his personal ties with the president thanhis financial background. Thej0b ofTreasury Secretary is chiefly t0 be a Washington horse whisperer tO the financial markets, tO calm their nerves and guide their moves in accordance with Administration needs. At first things went well. Mnuchin won an early battle with Gary C0hn, a fellow ex-Goldman employee wh0 is the director ofthe National Economic Council, tO become the public face oftax reform. But that proved t0 be a mixed blessing. ln impromptu fashion on April 21 , Trump t01d the Associated Press that Mnuchin would announce details on tax reform the following week. The one-page plan hastily drawn up t0 meet Trump s surprise deadline proved tO be even more amorphous than his campaign pledges. Mnuchin's unforced errors would soon make matters worse. lnJune, Trump and much Ofthe west Wing and Cabinet attended Mnuchin's black- tie wedding tO Scottish actor Louise Linton. Senior Administration aides in attendance commented on the affair's opulence for days. That set the stage for increasing allegations by Administration critics and government watchdogs Of extravagance. The Treasury Department's inspector general is reviewing Mnuchin and his wife's Aug. 21 flight on an Air Forcejet t0 Fort Knox, Ky. , where they were photographed watching the total eclipse 0f the sun. lt iS alSO examining Mnuchin's request, later withdrawn, tO use an Air Force plane for his European honeymoon over the summer. (Mnuchin explained that he made the request tO ensure that he had secure communications with the White House. ) The job of selling a tax-reform package that would seem tO bust open the deficit tO provide massive corporate tax breaks isn't going tO get any easier. lt hardly resonates with Trump's populist promises, and while the President went on offense, touting the plan at a rally in lndiana the day it was released, behind the scenes he is adding to the workload. ln the days before the plan's release, Trump raised concerns that some Of the provisions—especially the corporate tax cut— didn't go far enough, according t0 a White House offcial. He continued pushing for a 15 % corporate tax rate after the so-called big six Republican negotiators had long ago set it aside for 20 %. AII ofwhich helps explain why RepubIicans on the HiII, starving for a legislative win, will soon take control oftax reform themselves through the committee process. Where that leaves Steven Mnuchin is unclear, but at this point, he shouldn't expect many tip s. TIME October 9 , 2017 6 ロ TICKER Weiner sentenced over sexts Former New York congressman Anthony Weiner was sentenced tO 21 months in prison for sending sexually explicit messages tO a 15- yea ト 0 girl. Past sexting scandals had already destroyed Weiner's cäreerin Washington and his campaign tO be mayor Of New York City. Macronpitchesfor stronger E. U,. French President Emmanuel Macron laid out a blueprintfor hOW tO reform the European Union in a speech seen as a challenge tO the regionalleadership Of Germany's Angela Merkel. Macron called fO 「 greater military and economic integration so thatthe 国 oc could compete with the U. S. and China. MCCain:. M リ cancer iS "very serious ” ln an interview on CBS's 60 Minutes, Arizona Senator 」 Ohn McCain said his brain cancer was very, very serious ” and added that his prognosis was very poor. " McCain revealed that he had glioblastoma in 」 u Ⅳ . Target tO raise れ um wage Target is raising its minimum hourly wage tO $ 11 per hour, up from $ 10. The discount retailer, which has 323 , 000 employees worldwide, a 0 committed tO raising the wage tO $ 15 by the end of 2020. TRANSPORTATION Saudi women in the driver's seat On Sept. 26 , Saudi Arabia's King Salman lifted a ban on female drivers, reversing a long-held tradition Of the patriarchy. —Tara 」 0 わ n GREEN LIGHT wives, sisters or daughters from dOing basic give male relatives the right tO prevent their restrictive dress code, and guardianship laws Of Other stringent rules. They are bound by a the kingdom still sub. 」 ects women tO plenty Licenses are a step in the right direction, but STUCK IN REVERSE interpretation Of SunniIslamic teachings. clerics, whO adhere tO a rigidly patriarchal gender equality risk riling conservative Saudi women is his ultimate goal. But moves toward reliant economy. Boosting the workforce with modernize and diversifythe kingdom's 0 ⅱ - Prince Mohammed bin SaIman attempts tO The change Of policy comes as Crown CHANGING GEARS demandingthe right tO drive. civil disobedience by female protesters The announcement follows decades Of need for permission from a male guardian. any woman whO applies fO 「 one, with no next summer, licenses Will be issued tO fined,jailed or even beaten. But beginning in Saudi Arabia for decades, with offenders Women have been forbidden from driving tasks like traveling, opening a bank account 0 「 300 DIGITS having certain medical procedures. Estimated number Of unpaid parking tickets that North Korea's diplomatic mission to the U. N. has in New York City, according tO reports; the fines date back to the 1990S and tOtaI about S156 , 000 催い、

8. TIME 2017年10月9日号

D LAND 第 A 蓚 THE PARADISE REFUGEES BELIEVE IT TO BE? IN THE SUMMER OF 2015 , A CURIOUS piece 0f world news brought a flicker of hope to the wretched Syrian city of Palmyra. lslamic State fighters had taken over the ancient town, toppling its monu- ments and executing anyone WhO resisted their draconian rules. And yet at one Of the City'S darkest moments, rumors Of a sanctuary far away began t0 filter ⅲ , gen- erating dreams among a populace that had already lost everything. On Aug. 31 ofthat year, German Chancellor Angela Merkel declared that her country was prepared to take in hundreds ofthousands ofrefu- gees fleeing war in the Middle East. "We can dO this; ” she said in a speech in Ber- lin, calling it a "national duty ” t0 support those in danger. Across Syria, preoccupa- tions with the civil war gave way tO fan- tasies 0f an unlikely new promised land: the Germany ofMama Merkel. The Chancellor suddenly became a positive punch line t0 dark jokes about Syrians' futures, says Yehiya M0ham- mad, a driver from Palmyra wh0 at the time had just been released from one 0f syrian president Bashar Assad's notori- ous prisons. "People would be talking t0 each other … One would suggest, Just go ・ ' 'Go where?' 'GO to Mama Merkel—she's accepting everyone. As the war eviscerated what was le 仕 0f Syria's schools and hospitals, many Syrians like M0hammad realized that they had no choice but t0 leave ifthey wanted their children to have a future. Taimaa Abazli, a 25-year-01d ethereal beauty from 第を ~ NourAltallaa,her husband us げ A r 〃 0 d their daughter Rahafexplore their new home ⅲ 0 camp Bad Berleburg, Germany, on 19

9. TIME 2017年10月9日号

THE 0 E す AFTER A STORM IS A REAL THING. Stillness is drenched in humidity and scorched by a sun blasting down from the clear skies that will eventually follow a hurricane. But on this island 0f 3.4 million people, the quiet after Hurricane Maria had a distinct feeling Of absence, an inattention bordering on obliviousnes S. The 6 代 h strongest storm ever tO strike the U. S. hit puerto Rico on Sept. 20 with stronger winds than lrma brought t0 Florida and the kind of rain that Hurricane Harvey dumped on Houston. lt made landfall on aWednesday, and in the digital age, its effects were well documented by Friday: parts 0f San Juan, the capital Of this U. S. territory, were underwater. The verdant island was stripped of its foliage. U. S. citizens lapped water from natural springs. But 0 Ⅱ the mainland, the topics 0f the day were a special election in Alabama, the latest GOP stab at repealing Obamacare and a fight President Donald Trump had picked with the NFL. "Puerto Rico, which is part Ofthe United States, can turn intO a humanitarian cr1Sis; 1tS governor, Ricard0 Rosse116, warned on Sept. 25. One day later, a poll showed that almost half ofAmericans did not know that Puerto Ricans are American citizens. we speak Of a catastrophe, everyone must be treated equally. ” After winning plaudits for their smooth, coordinated responses in Texas and Florida this past summer, the feds were not exactly caught flat-footed ⅲ the Caribbean. Two weeks before Maria hit PuertO Rico, which was preparing for Hurricane lrma tO hit, FEMA had about 124 staff members deployed there and in the Virgin lslands. Water, meals, cots and blankets were pre-positioned in San Juan. But the scale of the devastation—combined with the inattention ofthe White House— generated a tableau that critics described as evidence Of neglect or worse. Pushed ontO the defensive, the White House hastily arranged a 38 TIME October 9 , 2017 0 軽第

10. TIME 2017年10月9日号

TheBrief THE RISK REPORT Yes, MerkeI won again. But the fires Of European populism are still raging By lan Bre THE POPULISTWAVE OF 2017 MAYNOT HAVE DESTROYED the European order in the way some predicted, but there are still many Europeans whO want tO upend the status quo. L00k at what happened in Germany's elections on Sept. 24 : Angela Merkel, a leader best known for prudence and experience, won a fourth term as Chancellor. Butjust as anti-E. U. firebrands Geert WiIders and Marine Le Pen pushed past Establishment parties t0 finish second earlier this year in Holland and France, respectively, Germany's anti-immigrant, Euroskeptic party Alternative for Germany (AfD) became the first far-right party to win seats in the German Parliament since the Nazi surrender in 1945. ln Spain, meanwhile, a different sort ofanger is brewing. On Oct. 1 , Catalans will cast ballots in an independence referendum that has generated outrage across the country,. The constitutional court declared the vote illegal, but separatist leaders have defied orders from Madrid t0 call it 0 圧 Spanish police have raided regional government offlces, arrested more than a dozen separatist leaders and seized ln Spain, a millions ofballots—provoking different sort protests involving tens Of Of ange r iS thousands ofpeople in Barcelona brewing, at a and across Catalonia. Podemos, referendum a left-wing Spanish political party fueled by anger at E. U. - generating imposed austerity, has called on outrage the Socialist Party to join in a bid across the tO remove Spanish prime Minister c ountry Mariano Rajoy from Offce SO that a new government in Madrid can negotiate terms Ofa referendum with Catalan offcials. ln France, voters elected pro-E. U. centrist Emmanuel Macron as their President earlier this year, but this was no vote for the Establishment. The traditional parties 0f center right and center le 代 that have dominated French politics for decades were humbled in the election. Macron leads a party that he invented from scratch less than two years ago. Yet French voters are still discontented; Macron s approval rating fell from 62 % in May t0 just 40 % ⅲ August (although it has since risen t0 45 % ⅲ September), and tens ofthousands ofpeople tOOk tO the streets against the President's new labor reforms on Sept. 23. ln the U. K. , the Labour Party and its far-left leader, Jeremy Corbyn, picked up enough new seats in the June elections tO strip prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative party Of its parliamentary maJority,. But don't count on a strengthened opposition tO push for a softer Ca 厄 S are determined tO VOte ⅲ 0 independence referendum 0 Oct. 1 ⅲ defiance Ofthe Spanish government Poland, Hungary, the Brexit; maJorities in 162 Of the 262 constituencies Cze ch RepubIic and that Labour won voted Slovakia—have refused to last year t0 leave the E. し , take even modest numbers and there's no sign they've ofmigrants. Under an E. U. changed their minds. quota system, these four British working-class nations were expected voters have proved they tO accept about 11 , 000 refugee s. Slovakia and can reject bOth Europeans the Czech Republic have and their Prime Minister. taken 28 people. P01and and Hungary have taken THEN THERE'S ITALY. none. The European Court Currently locked in a ofJustice has rejected political stalemate, the appeals by Hungary and country will likely go to the polls again next year, Slovakia, and the E. U. has threatened tO reduce electing either another fragmented government subsidies ifthey don't comply. Angry people in that can't advance political Eastern Europe may be or economic reform, about tO become much or a government led by comedian Beppe Gri110 angner. and his virulently anti- Media attention has focused on the E. U. Five Star Movement. charismatic populists whO Anger here is fueled in part play leading roles in these by a migrant crisis that has stories: Le pen, Wilders, eased elsewhere in Europe but has grown more Grillo and Hungary's intense in ltaly. ln the first Viktor Orban. lnstead, it's the crowds cheering halfofthis year, 10 , 000 at their rallie s that are migrants reached Greece the real story. They want and 6 , 000 arrived in fundamental change , Spain, while ltaly accepted inside their countries and more than 80 , 000. across Europe. SO far, lt doesn't help that they're not getting it. ロ eastern E. U. members—