Former Defense Department official Graham Allison and columnists Walter Mead, Allison Schrager, and Ian Bremmer comment on the return of Donald Trump during a panel at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting: GRAHAM ALLISON,
President Donald Trump declared the end of state-sponsored censorship in the U.S. during remarks Thursday to the World Economic Forum in Davos: PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I'm pleased to report that America is also a free nation once again.
During a speech to the World Economic Forum on Thursday, President Donald Trump pressured the Saudi Crown Prince to increase his planned $600 billion investment in the U.S. "to a round $1 trillion" and to lower the global price of oil.
In 2017, weeks after Donald Trump’s first presidential election victory, Xi Jinping became the first Chinese head of state to address the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland — winning applause as he inveighed against protectionism and declared that a trade war would hurt both sides.
Graham Allison bucks a trend among analysts warning of worsening ties between the world’s biggest economies, and he does not see Donald Trump as a China hawk.
In Davos, the world’s financial elite is talking about one thing this year: the newly installed US President Donald Trump. “The elephant is in the room,” one participant said.
At Davos 2025, discussions are dominated by US President Donald Trump's inauguration and upcoming speech. Participants express mixed feelings of excitement and uncertainty over his unpredictable policies and their potential impact on global trade,
In Davos, the world’s financial elite is talking about one thing this year: America’s newly installed President Donald Trump. “The elephant is in the room,” one participant said. Surrounded by snowy mountain peaks in the Swiss Alps,
Donald Trump on Thursday will star in an eagerly-anticipated online appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos, addressing global elites whose annual gabfest has been consumed by the US president's days-old second term.
Potential meeting between American, Chinese presidents may take place in near future, though relations to stay fragile, confrontational, experts say - Anadolu Ajansı
“We have an epistemological crisis,” he declared, referring to the Greek words episteme (“knowledge”) and logos (“study of”). More specifically, different social tribes are now interpreting knowledge in such different ways that he fears “democracy is being undermined”.