Vladimir Putin will visit Xi Jinping in China just days after Donald Trump’s high‑profile trip to Beijing — a tight diplomatic cadence that underscores how Beijing is positioning itself as a central stage for U.S.–China–Russia signaling in a moment of war and energy tension [1].
Information disorder watch: CNN’s Michael Smerconish digs into why so many Americans believe attempts on Trump’s life were “staged,” a case study in how virality, motivated reasoning and institutional distrust can fuse into durable narratives — and why inoculating audiences with context and transparency remains essential in a fevered campaign season [2].

In Europe, the Financial Times argues leaders must stop self‑censoring — a pointed call to speak plainly about security, economic trade‑offs and democratic resilience amid mounting geopolitical shocks [4].
Markets angle: FT’s Chart of the Week suggests UK gilts may not be as grim as headlines imply — a reminder that duration, inflation paths and supply overhangs can produce counterintuitive pockets of resilience even as global risk premia stay jumpy [5].
Local governance strain: Birmingham is bracing for administrative turbulence after a multi‑party vote left the city council without clear leadership, a microcosm of fragmentation pressures playing out across European politics [7].
Mobility shift: China’s electric two‑wheelers are riding the EV wave into Europe, accelerating last‑mile electrification — and likely setting up fresh debates over standards, subsidies and urban infrastructure as adoption scales [8].
References
- Putin to visit Chinese leader Xi Jinping days after Trump’s trip to Beijing – AP News
- Smerconish investigates why so many believe Trump assassination attempts were staged – CNN
- Europe’s leaders must stop self-censoring – Financial Times
- Chart of the Week: Gilts, not so bad – Financial Times
- Birmingham braces for chaos as multi-party vote leaves council rudderless – Financial Times
- China’s two-wheelers ride EV wave into Europe – Financial Times

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