Good morning. You’re halfway through the workweek. Benjamin Netanyahu may retake power in Israel. In Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro will allow for a transition of power. |
| Voter turnout was at its highest this century.Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times |
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Israel votes in yet another election |
Netanyahu’s opponents see the vote as a litmus test for Israel’s liberal democracy: They feel he should stay out of office until the end of his trial. Many also worry that he and his allies could whittle away at democracy, particularly through a sweeping judicial overhaul that would reduce checks and balances on lawmakers. |
Netanyahu’s allies see his trial as a politically motivated sham and portrayed the vote as a chance to underscore the country’s Jewish character. His coalition partners include ultra-Orthodox lawmakers who oppose teaching math and English to their children, and far-right settlers who frequently antagonize Israel’s Arab minority. |
Analysis: A Netanyahu victory would reassure certain right-wing Israelis who argue that the unprecedented involvement of an Arab party in the government threatened the country’s Jewish identity and made the government less able to take action against militants. |
| Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s president, has approved a transition of power.Dado Galdieri for The New York Times |
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Bolsonaro agrees to step down |
Bolsonaro did not concede the loss in his own words. After the president made a brief public address that criticized the left, his chief of staff said that the government would hand over power to the incoming administration. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a former president, will again take power. |
Bolsonaro’s move eased fears that there might not have been a peaceful transition of power in one of the world’s largest democracies. He has attacked Brazil’s election system as rife with fraud and said repeatedly in recent months that he would only accept an election that he believed was “clean.” |
What’s next: The question now remains how his comments will be received by his thousands of supporters who have blocked hundreds of highways across Brazil in a bid to “paralyze” the country and somehow overturn the election. |
| Search operations continued in India, two days after a bridge collapsed.Ajit Solanki/Associated Press |
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Arrests in India’s bridge collapse |
Ajanta Manufacturing, the company operating the bridge, has become a key target. On Monday, two managers and seven low-ranking workers were arrested on charges including causing death by negligence. A police complaint said that the company opened the bridge without government approval four days before it collapsed. |
Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, and the Bharatiya Janata Party are also trying to manage public frustration. Modi detoured from a busy campaign schedule to visit a hospital. But some families said that the hospital focused on his visit in lieu of helping survivors. “The hospital is busy painting their walls for the P.M.,” one man said. “This is the state of our country.” |
Toll: Many victims were migrant workers. Cash compensation for their families will do little to make up for their lives, or the money they had sent home. “Our dreams are crushed,” one victim’s father said. “He was our only hope.” |
| South Korean police are collecting belongings lost in the Halloween crowd crush. Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters |
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| People boarding a ferry during the evacuation of Kherson residents.Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters |
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- Ukraine said local officials installed by Russia were evicting Ukrainians from their homes in Kherson ahead of a possible battle for control of the critical southern region.
- Grain ships left Ukraine yesterday despite Russia’s withdrawal from a safe passage deal, but the U.N. said no ships would leave today.
- The commander of a Ukrainian reconnaissance unit spearheading the counterattack in Kherson spoke to The Times. “For every one of us they have 30,” he said of Russian forces.
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| Suella Braverman, Britain’s home secretary, is under pressure over the conditions at a facility for asylum seekers.Neil Hall/EPA, via Shutterstock |
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- Rishi Sunak faces his first major test as Britain’s leader: Suella Braverman, who he reappointed after she resigned from Liz Truss’s cabinet, is still in hot water.
- The inquiry into a mass disappearance in Mexico continues to collapse. On Monday, investigators said that key evidence could not be verified.
- Scientists are making progress on vaccines and treatments for respiratory syncytial virus, or R.S.V., a leading cause of infant mortality globally.
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| The afternoon surfing scene this month on Croyde Beach in England.Mary Turner for The New York Times |
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Surfing in Britain? It’s certainly chilly, but more people — especially women and girls — are riding the waves near breathtaking cliffs along the North Devon coast. |
| Hiroyuki Murase holds a scarf made with shibori.Ksenia Kuleshova for The New York Times |
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Tie-dye has gotten celebrity attention again this season: The actor Jared Leto’s multicolor tie-dye sweater tracksuit made tabloid headlines last month, and Seventeen heaped praise on Bella Hadid’s red-and-yellow tie-dye tank top, worn at New York Fashion Week. |
For Hiroyuki Murase, a fashion executive and fifth-generation shibori artisan, the appeal lies in the technique’s unpredictability. “You always have to wait until you see the result,” he said. “It’s always trial and error.” |
| Kate Sears for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Hadas Smirnoff. |
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Cho Nam-Joo, the Korean author who wrote “Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982,” is out with the dystopian fable “Saha.” |
The newest men’s wear trend: Lace. |
Play the Mini Crossword, and a clue: Beelzebub, by another name (five letters). |
That’s it for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Amelia |
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