Articles

  • 4 days ago | jp.reuters.com | Catarina Demony |Andrew Hofstetter

    5月4日、米東部ニューヨーク市郊外で暮らすインターレイシャル(異人種)レズビアンカップルのドリス・デービスさん(69)とスージー・バートレットさん(52)は、ドナルド・トランプ氏が大統領復帰を目指すことを決めた時点で、もしトランプ氏が選挙で勝利した場合は、海外に移住しようという決意を固めた。写真はロンドンに移住したウェンディ・ニューマンさん。3月撮影(2025年 ロイター/Hannah McKay) [ロンドン/ニューヨーク 4日 ロイター] - 米東部ニューヨーク市郊外で暮らすインターレイシャル(異人種)レズビアンカップルのドリス・デービスさん(69)とスージー・バートレットさん(52)は、ドナルド・トランプ氏が大統領復帰を目指すことを決めた時点で、もしトランプ氏が選挙で勝利した場合は、海外に移住しようという決意を固めた。 実際トランプ氏が2期目に就任し、早速人種間の平等や性的少数者LGBTQプラスの権利促進を目的とした一連の政策を撤廃したことに、2人は警戒の目を向けている。...

  • 5 days ago | thestar.com.my | Catarina Demony |Andrew Hofstetter

    WHEN President Donald Trump decided to seek a second term in the White House, Doris Davis and Susie Bartlett – a couple living in New York City – made a life-changing decision. If he won, they would move abroad. The couple says they had been willing to give Trump a go during his first term, but they’d watched in alarm as he returned to office and ended a range of policies aimed at promoting racial equity and rights for LGBTQ+ people. Already a subscriber? Log in.

  • 1 week ago | japantimes.co.jp | Catarina Demony

    When U.S. President Donald Trump decided to seek a second term in the White House, Doris Davis and Susie Bartlett — an interracial lesbian couple living in New York City — made a life-changing decision. If he won, they would move abroad. The couple said they had been willing to give Trump a go during his first term, but they'd watched in alarm as he returned to office and ended a range of policies aimed at promoting racial equity and rights for LGBTQ+ people.

  • 1 week ago | irishexaminer.com | Catarina Demony |Andrew Hofstetter |Conor Humphries

    US applications for Irish passports were at their highest level in a decade in the first two months of this year, as an increasing number of Americans consider moving to Europe in the wake of Donald Trump’s election as president. Average monthly passport applications in January and February of nearly 4,300 were up about 60% from last year, according to data from the Department of Foreign Affairs. It was a similar case for other European countries.

  • 1 week ago | thesun.ie | Catarina Demony

    US applications for Irish passports were at their highest level in a decade at the start of this year. The rush comes after Donald Trump was sworn in for a second term as president. The average monthly applications in January and February of nearly 4,300 are up 60 per cent from last year, according to data from the Department of Foreign Affairs. And it’s the same story elsewhere in Europe, as an increasing number of Americans consider a move to the continent in the wake of Trump’s election.

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