Canadians pull Reagan advertisement after furious Trump halts trade talks

The province of Ontario, which is currently US president Donald Trump, ordered to end all trade talks with Canada, announced it would pull an anti-tariff advertisement featuring former US President Ronald Reagan’s voice.

Trump made the announcement on Thursday on his Truth Social Network that he had “terminated” all negotiations with Canada over a “fake” advertising campaign that he claimed misrepresented Republican President Reagan.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

After speaking with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney about the escalating conflict with Washington, Ontario’s premier Doug Ford announced that he was suspending the advertisement less than 24 hours later.

Ontario will suspend its US advertising campaign effective Monday in order to resume trade talks, according to Ford in a post on X.

Ford added that he had informed his team to continue broadcasting the advertisement during the two baseball World Series games this weekend, when the Toronto Blue Jays take on the Los Angeles Dodgers in Canada.

Reagan issued a radio address on trade in 1987 that the advertisement used to highlight the effects of his warning about the impact of high tariffs on foreign imports.

Reagan is reportedly quoted as saying in the advertisement that “high tariffs inevitably lead to retaliation by foreign countries and the launching of fierce trade wars,” which matches a transcript of his speech on the website of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

The Ontario government’s use of “selective audio and video” and its legal options were being reviewed, according to the Ronald Reagan Foundation’s report on X on Thursday.

The advertisement, which spliced together various passages from Reagan’s 1987 speech together, also appeared sincere in the eyes of Al Jazeera’s analysis: that tariffs must only be used sparingly and briefly, or they could cause harm to Americans.

The Ontario premier’s decision to pull the advertisement was not immediately addressed by President Trump.

Trump’s “extreme displeasure” was made known by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who said he would respond to the announcement’s impending removal.

A senior US official predicted that Trump and Carney would likely meet at dinner on Wednesday during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in South Korea.

The official told the AFP news agency that “they will likely see each other.”

Ontario’s Ford declares, “We will never stop making our case against American tariffs on Canada,” in his original social media post announcing the launch of the advertising campaign featuring Reagan’s voice.

What military force has the US positioned off Venezuela’s coast?

The Caribbean has become a new battlefield as a result of US President Donald Trump’s campaign against “narcoterrorists.”

Since August, Washington has deployed thousands of troops, warships and aircraft across the region, and reopened military bases in Puerto Rico and conducted drills, in what analysts describe as the largest US presence in Latin America in decades.

Six people were killed on board the most recent attack, which the US launched on Venezuelan boats in September, claiming they were attempting to sell drugs to the US. Trump made it known last week that he had authorized covert CIA operations in Venezuela and that he was even considering launching a land attack.

However, on Thursday, Trump denied that all this amounts to a declaration of war on Venezuela.

He said, “Well, I don’t think we’re going to necessarily request a declaration of war.”

“I believe we will simply kill those who enter our country with drugs,” he said. OK? Trump declared, “We’re going to kill them.”

The US has attacked how many Venezuelan boats?

The US military has carried out at least ten deadly strikes on vessels off Venezuela’s coast, and in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean since September 2, marking the most intense American military activity in Latin America since the US invasion of Panama in 1989.

At least 43 people have died in the operations, which were carried out by US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), according to Trump and senior defense officials’ statements.

According to information collected by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED), the map below shows the approximate locations of at least six of these attacks. Most of these attacks occurred close to the Venezuelan coast and in international waters – raising questions about the legality of the US’s use of force, especially when no imminent threat was present.

Describe SOUTHCOM.

One of the 11 unified combatant commands of the US Department of War (renamed US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) from the Department of Defense, it is headquartered in Doral, Florida. It oversees operations in Central and South America and the Caribbean, including the defence of the Panama Canal.

Other than the other ten commands, North America (NORTHCOM), Europe (EUCOM), Africa (AFRICOM), the Middle East (CENTCOM), the Indo-Pacific (INDOPACOM), and other countries have global responsibilities like nuclear deterrence (STRATCOM), strategic logistics (TRANSCOM), and Special Operations forces worldwide (SOCOM).

SOUTHCOM’s stated goal is to stop drug trafficking into the US, but its growing presence near Venezuela has been viewed as a sign of Trump’s strategic interest in the area.

What military assets have been deployed?

The army’s size is significant, with ready-to-deploy expeditionary forces, US naval and air assets, and special operations units.

Alex Gatopoulos, Al Jazeera’s defense editor, stated: “This is already the biggest acquisition of US military assets in the area in decades.” The present force is oriented for land attack and not for counter-narcotics operations.

INTERACTIVE - US ships in the Carribean sea -OCTOBER 23, 2025-1761237901

Expeditionary forces

The US presence in the Caribbean is anchored in the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group (ARG). This group of Navy ships carrying marines, vehicles and helicopters, named after the famous World War II battle of Iwo Jima, is designed to land on a shore quickly, often in emergencies or combat situations.

4, 500 sailors and marines, including 2, 200 marines who have been trained for amphibious assault and rapid response missions, are housed in the expeditionary force, which includes the USS San Antonio (LPD 17) and the USS Fort Lauderdale (LPD 28).

Additionally, the group conducted live-fire drills on board the Iwo Jima and amphibious landing drills off St. Croix, the largest US Virgin Islands, a significant US forces training base.

Naval assets

Additionally, several naval assets are used to boost the fleet. In a significant increase in its military presence, the US announced late on Friday that it would send an aircraft carrier strike group to Latin America.

A spokesperson for the US military said that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth ordered the USS Gerald Ford and five destroyers in its accompanying strike group to deploy to the region.

10 major warships and several support vessels, more than the region’s typical assigned number, were present in the SOUTHCOM task force as of September 25. Four combatants on the ground and a submarine equipped with Tomahawk long-range missiles are among them.

The destroyers, USS Jason Dunham (DDG-109), USS Stockdale (DDG-106) and USS Gravely (DDG-107), are multi-role warships armed with Tomahawk land-attack missiles as well as advanced anti-air and anti-submarine systems. In order to halt Houthi attacks in the area, all three were reportedly deployed to the Red Sea in 2024.

The US Navy warship USS Sampson (DDG 102) docks at the Amador International Cruise Terminal in Panama City on September 02, 2025. [Martin Bernetti/AFP]
On September 2, 2025, the US Navy’s USS Sampson (DDG 102) makes its way to Panama City’s Amador International Cruise Terminal. ]Martin Bernetti/AFP]

A nuclear-powered fast attack submarine, the USS Newport News (SSN-750) complements them with capabilities for strikes, antiship and antisubmarine operations, intelligence, reconnaissance, and special operations.

Additionally, the US Coast Guard and a number of non-combatant support ships are present.

Air assets

Some of the most cutting-edge aircraft in the US Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force are deployed under SOUTHCOM.

According to Gatopoulos, “added to the various deployments” have been the intimidation strategies of flying strategic bombers close to Venezuelan airspace. “The B-52 is designed to destroy land-based targets, from a distance, usually using long-range cruise missiles.

These heavy bombers can fly at altitudes of up to 50, 000 feet (15, 000 metres) and carry cruise missiles or nuclear-capable weapons. They also monitor ocean waves, target ships, and lay mines in support of naval operations.

The B-1 strategic bomber’s goal is to launch 37 tons of weapons into its target’s airspace. Neither jet is in any way useful for stopping drug-smuggling. According to Gatopoulos, President Trump’s public announcement to the CIA to launch operations in Venezuela and this indicate that they have a very different goal in mind, which is to destabilize the Maduro government.

The most recent development, Gerald Ford Carrier Strike Group’s Caribbean order, further strengthens this theory. The Carrier group is immensely powerful, bringing with it 75+ fighter jets, helicopters and early warning aircraft. Three missile destroyers, each with a lot of firepower, will accompany the USS Ford as they attempt to attack targets deep inside Venezuela.

UNDISCLOSED LOCATION, SOUTH KOREA - APRIL 14: In this handout image released by the South Korean Defense Ministry, two U.S. Air Force B-52H strategic bombers (C) flying with South Korean Air Force F-35A (L) and U.S. Air Force F-16 (R) fighter jets during a joint air drill on April 14, 2023 at an undisclosed location in South Korea. South Korea and the United States held joint air drills, involving at least one B-52H strategic bomber, a day after North Korea test-fired a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). (Photo by South Korean Defense Ministry via Getty Images)
A joint air drill with the South Korean Defense Ministry via Getty Images on April 14, 2023 saw the flight of two US Air Force B-52H strategic bombers flying with the South Korean Air Force F-35A (L) and US Air Force F-16 fighter jets.

There are also at least 10 F-35 stealth fighters – highly versatile jets which can strike, fight and gather intelligence while remaining hard to detect by radar.

In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, a Air Force B-52H Stratofortress bomber flies with Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II aircraft in the U.S. Southern Command area of responsibility, Oct. 15, 2025. (U.S. Air Force via AP)
On October 15, 2025, an Air Force B-52H Stratofortress bomber and a Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II aircraft fly over the US Southern Command’s area of responsibility.

With a range of 1, 851 kilometers (1, 150 miles), and speeds up to 370 km/h (230 mph), MQ-9 Reaper drones are remotely piloted for precision strikes and surveillance. They can carry up to 16 Hellfire missiles, allowing them to strike multiple targets in a single mission.

The heavy-lift helicopter CH-53E Super Stallions move troops and other supplies from ship to shore. Before returning to the base, they can carry a cargo of 16 tons 80 kilometers (50 miles).

OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 18: Navy Landing Craft Air Cushion's (LCAC) unload equipment onto the beach as U.S. Marine Corps V-22 Ospreys and CH-53 Super Stallions fly overhead during the America's Marines 250 event at Camp Pendleton's Red Beach on October 18, 2025 in Oceanside, California. The U.S. Marines are marking their 250th anniversary with a live amphibious assault demonstration entitled
Navy Landing Craft Air Cushion’s (LCAC) unload equipment onto the beach as US Marine Corps V-22 Ospreys and CH-53 Super Stallions fly overhead during the America’s Marines 250 event at Camp Pendleton’s Red Beach on October 18, 2025, in Oceanside, California]Mario Tama/Getty Images via AFP]

P-8 Poseidon patrol and reconnaissance aircraft, MH-60 Seahawk helicopters, AC-130J gunships, and other types of air defense and support.

troops and special forces

SOUTHCOM’s special operations component consists of MH-60 Black Hawks and AH-MH-6 Little Bird helicopters for troop insertion and reconnaissance. The deployment’s MC Ocean Trader serves as these units’ mobile forward base.

APARRI, PHILIPPINES - MAY 03: Black Hawk helicopters fly in formation during a counter landing live fire exercise at a beach as part of U.S.-Philippines joint military exercises on May 03, 2025 in Aparri, Cagayan province, Philippines. More than 14,000 Filipino and U.S. troops are taking part in this year's Balikatan, or
As part of US-Philippines joint military exercises on May 3, 2025 in Aparri, Cagayan province, the Philippines [Ezra Acayan/Getty Images]

About 10, 000 troops have also been sent to the US territory of Puerto Rico, while the White House has authorised the CIA to carry out covert operations inside Venezuela.

Venezuela’s response: how?

In what Washington perceived as a highly provocative act, two Venezuelan F-16 fighter jets flew over the USS Jason Dunham on September 4. In response, the US deployed 10 F-35B fighters and two MQ-9 Reapers to Puerto Rico.

Venezuela held extensive naval and air exercises on September 17 while President Nicolas Maduro mandated the mobilization of the Bolivarian militia, a reserve force that makes up Venezuela’s armed forces, and demanded the donations of millions of volunteers to defend the nation’s sovereignty.

CARACAS, VENEZUELA - OCTOBER 12: President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela greets his supporters during a rally to commemorate Indigenous Resistance Day on October 12, 2025 in Caracas, Venezuela. (Photo by Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)
During a rally to mark Indigenous Resistance Day on October 12, 2025 in Caracas, Venezuela, Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro greets his supporters.

Trump open to meeting North Korea’s Kim on Asia trip but nothing scheduled

Kim Jong Un, a senior US official, confirmed that Donald Trump will not meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during a visit to South Korea next week despite rumors that the US president might have had the opportunity to do so while he is in Asia.

“The president has, of course, indicated that he is open to speaking with Kim Jong Un in the future. The senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters in a Friday call that it was against the schedule for this trip.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

President Trump stated to reporters before heading for Asia late on Friday night that he wanted to meet Kim, but he was unsure whether or not it would happen.

Trump reportedly made reference to the North Korean leader by saying, “He knows I’m going there.”

Trump stated in a later interview with Kim aboard Air Force One that he would be “always ready to go.” Kim Jong Un and I get along very well.

The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Forum minister in Gyeongju next week had earlier stated earlier on Friday that he thought there was a “considerable” chance that Trump would meet Kim.

Unification Minister Chung Dong-young told reporters, “North Korea appears to be paying attention to the United States, and various indicators (…) suggest a significant possibility of a meeting,” before urging the two leaders to refrain from allowing the opportunity to “slip away.”

Chung, whose ministry oversees Seoul’s tense relations with Pyongyang, said, “I don’t want to miss even a one-percent chance.”

He said, “They must make a decision.”

Trump and Kim’s meeting appears less likely now, but the White House confirmed on Thursday that he will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping before his multi-day trip to Southeast Asia returns to the US.

This weekend, Trump will begin his trip to Malaysia, where he will take part in the ASEAN summit.

In Malaysia, Sanae Takaichi, the new prime minister of Japan, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the president of South Africa, and Cyril Ramaphosa will be among the other prominent leaders from non-ASEAN nations.

“Favorable memories”

During Trump’s first term as president, the two leaders met three times, with both leaders saying they wanted to meet again in the future.

Kim stated last month that he was willing to talk with the US if Washington stops requesting that China give up its nuclear weapons program.

Trump’s comments were also made by the North Korean leader, who added, “Personally, I still have fond memories of US President Trump.”

Kim’s comments follow Trump’s and Lee Jae Myung’s statements that both their North Korean counterparts would like to meet at a White House meeting in August.

I’ll see him someday, I promise. I’m anxious to meet him. Trump claimed at the time that he knew Kim, whose family has ruled North Korea for three generations, “better than anyone, almost, except his sister.”

Lee, who has long expressed his support for the thawing of ties with his nation’s northern neighbor, stated at the same meeting that he hoped the US would “build a Trump Tower” in North Korea so that I can play golf there.

Zohran Mamdani defends his Muslim faith against ‘racist, baseless attacks’

A day before the race he is vying for will begin early voting, New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani delivered an emotional address about “racist, baseless attacks” from his rivals.

Mamdani criticized his opponents for bringing “hatred to the forefront” on Friday, pointing out that close to one million Muslims live in New York, and that their Islamophobia affects him as the Democratic nominee for mayor.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

“To expect indignity in New York is to be Muslim, but it does not distinguish us.” Many New Yorkers are confronted by it. Less than two weeks before the November 4 general election, Mamdani said in his speech that it is the tolerability of that injustice that does.

While Mamdani, a member of the New York State Assembly right now, tried to focus his campaign on his main point of affordability, his opponents have recently demonstrated that “Islamophobia has emerged as one of the few areas of agreement.”

His speech came a day after Sid Rosenberg, a former governor of New York State, joked that Mamdani “would be cheering” if another September 11 attack took place.

Cuomo, who lost to Mamdani in the Democratic Party’s primary election in June, agreed with Rosenberg, saying, “That’s another issue.”

CAIR Action’s executive director, Basim Elkarra, described Cuomo’s appearance on the radio program as “despicable, dangerous, and disqualifying.”

Cuomo has crossed a moral line, Elkarra claimed, by agreeing with a racist radio host who claimed a Muslim elected official would “applaud” another September 11.

Cuomo’s willingness to make this kind of hate speech, on this kind of platform, he said, exemplifies his personality as a leader who prefers to stoke fear than unite people, he said.

On Friday, Mamdani claimed that Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa had “slandered” him because he “supported global jihad” on the debate stage, and that he had also been “smoked” by Super Political Action Committee advertisements that “imply that I am a terrorist or mock the way I eat.”

He also shared his memories of his “aunt who stopped taking the subway after September 11 because she did not feel safe in her hijab,” a staff member who had the “word terrorist spray painted” on their garage, as well as the advice he had received that he “did not have to tell people” he was Muslim if he wanted to win elections.

On the eve of early voting, the top Democrat supports Mamdani.

Hakeem Jeffries, the representative of New York’s eighth congressional district, which includes East Flatbush, Coney Island, and Brownsville, the leader of the Democratic Party in the US House of Representatives, gave Mamdani a long-awaited endorsement earlier on Friday.

While Mamdani has gotten top Democrats’ endorsements, including those from New York Governor Kathy Hochul, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and independent Senator Bernie Sanders, she has struggled to win over other prominent New York Democrats, including Senator Chuck Schumer.

Mamdani resoundingly won the Democratic Party’s primary election to choose its candidate for the general election back in June despite some establishment figures’ reluctance.

After resigning from the race, Democrat incumbent mayor Eric Adams, who did not run in the primary after facing allegations of corruption, endorsed Cuomo this week.

With the support of 43.2 percent of voters, Mamdani is clearly ahead of his rivals, according to a recently released poll from AARP and Gotham Polling and Analytics.

Cuomo and Sliwa lead the pack, followed by him with 29% and Sliwa with 19%, while 8.4% said they were unsure of their choice or preferred a different candidate.

Ivory Coast presidential election: Who’s standing and what’s at stake?

In response to the country’s outcry over its decision to run for a fourth term, incumbent President Alassane Ouattara will go to the polls on Saturday, October 25 to cast their ballots. Under the constitution, presidents may only serve a maximum of two terms, however, Ouattara argues major constitutional change which was implemented in 2016 “reset” his limit.

The second-largest economy in West Africa and the world’s top cocoa and cashew nut producer is Ivory Coast. Perched along the coast of the western Atlantic, between Ghana and Liberia, it boasts vast swaths of rainforest and pristine beaches. The government’s headquarters are in Yamoussoukro, the inland capital city of Yamoussoukro, while the commercial hub of Abidjan is home to about one-third of the 32 million people. French is the official language in the former colony of France, while the main indigenous languages are Bete, Baoule, Dioula and Senufo.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

According to World Bank economic indicators, Ouattara’s economy has continued to grow, but residents complain about rising living costs and the ungleich playing field for political candidates.

Ivory Coast has historically experienced deadly pre- and post-electoral violence. More than 3, 000 people were killed in the second Ivorian civil war in 2011 after Laurent Gbagbo, the country’s then-president, refused to concede defeat to Ouattara. This time around, sporadic protests have already erupted in the weeks leading up to the election in response to a ban on key contenders from the polls, particularly Tidjane Thiam, the popular former head of Credit Suisse bank.

The government has stepped up against these demonstrations, imposing a ban on demonstrations, and detaining at least 237 members of the Common Front political movement, which fights for the exclusion of political candidates. By Tuesday this week, 58 people had been sentenced to 36 months in prison for protesting.

Analysts predict that there will be no end to the violence on election day, but more than 44 000 police and military personnel have been stationed throughout the nation to keep things calm while voters cast ballots.

Some 8.7 million registered citizens aged above 18 will be eligible to vote this time, but the country has a low average voter turnout. Only 53% of voters turned out for the 2020 elections.

The winning candidate must take an absolute majority of the votes, a second round will take place if no one clears a majority in the first.

Who is prohibited from running for president?

Tidjane Thiam

The Constitutional Council shocked Ivorians in June when it upheld a lower court ruling that Tidjane Thiam, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of the Ivory Coast (PDCI) and Ouattara’s biggest challenger, would be barred as a result of his erstwhile dual nationality.

The 63-year-old has widespread support from young people. Prior to joining Credit Suisse, he held positions in renowned financial institutions.

Thiam, a cousin of the first Ivorian president from 1960 to 1993, Felix Houphouet-Boigny, was born in the Ivory Coast but also received French nationality in 1987. The court determined that this was too late despite the fact that he had already renounced it in March.

Supporters of the Coalition for a Peaceful Alternation hold a political banner depicting PDCI leader Tidjane Thiam during their first meeting in Abidjan on May 31, 2025 [Sia Kambou/AFP]

Laurent Gbagbo

Also barred is former president and arch Ouattara rival Laurent Gbagbo of the African People’s Party of the Ivory Coast (PPA-CI), who was charged with crimes against humanity in connection with the 2011 election-related civil war, when he refused to step down for the declared winner, Ouattara.

Gbagbo, 80, was charged at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, Netherlands, but he was freed in 2021 after a lengthy trial and his verdict of innocence. He was still barred from standing as president because of a criminal conviction in an Ivorian court, also related to the war.

Guillaume Soro, Ouattara’s former prime minister, was found guilty in 2021 of plotting a coup, along with Gbagbo’s close ally Charles Ble Goude, who was also charged and acquitted alongside him at the ICC.

Critics say the exclusion of key candidates, particularly Gbagbo and Thiam, has given Ouattara an unfair head start and essentially cleared the way for his fourth term.

According to Beverly Ochieng, a political analyst in Senegal for consulting firm Control Risks, “the exclusion of Gbagbo and Thiam has diminished political competition and will continue to drive political grievances that underpin civil unrest and political violence, including on the election day.”

Ouattara
President Alassane Ouattara waves to supporters as he arrives at a campaign rally at the Felix Houphouët-Boigny Stadium in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, October 18, 2025]Diomande Ble Blonde/AP Photo]

Who is running, exactly?

Alassane Dramane ‘ ADO ‘ Ouattara

Ouattara, 83, is currently in office. He has been in charge since December 2010.

He is the leader of the ruling Rally of Houphouetistes for Democracy and Peace (RHDP), and his government has been praised by observers for its efforts to restore unity following the bitter civil war, which was fuelled by ethnic tensions or “Ivoirite” – claims that particular ethnic groups were more “Ivorian” than others. The contentious phrase pitted the predominantly Muslim north against the primarily Christian south. During his presidency, Gbagbo and his supporters had aimed to discredit Ouattara by calling him “non-Ivorian” because of rumours he has roots in neighbouring Burkina Faso.

Ouattara’s strong economic record is supported by significant infrastructure projects, including large-scale exports of cocoa and other agricultural products. Gross domestic product (GDP) rose by 8.2 percent on average each year in the first decade of Ouattara’s administration, according to the World Bank, and has continued to grow steadily since then, even during the COVID-19 crisis.

In a landslide victory, he won the second-term election to be president in 2015. However, support for him has slipped since he decided to run again in 2020, as many Ivorians say it violated the two-term constitution limit. Ouattara initially said he would not run, but he changed after the pandemic’s candidate for his party passed away.

Backed by the Constitutional Council, Ouattara’s supporters argue that the adoption of a new constitution in 2016, which removed age limits for presidential candidates and revised nationality requirements, automatically reset the clock on his terms. They claimed that Ouattara was actually qualified to serve two more terms starting with the election of 2020.

Violent protests broke out following the president’s decision to run in 2020, and opposition parties boycotted the election, handing Ouattara another landslide. Pre- and post-election riots left at least 85 people dead.

There is widespread hostility across the Francophone West African countries towards their former coloniser, and the president’s decision to run for a fourth term has prompted protests in Abidjan, partly because of his perceived closeness to France.

According to experts, the Ivorians’ government shut down French military installations that had been in operation for decades in the country in January 2025. This action was intended to acquaint the populace.

Still, Ouattara remains the clear favourite out of those who have been allowed to run, and he has promised to escalate infrastructure development and focus on education and health.

Analyst Ochieng noted that while the president is supported in the northern region, Ochieng’s party is also supporting the south, but is ultimately supported by state funding.

“With each electoral cycle, the playing field continues to be uneven due to strong institutional control and influence by the ruling camp over the political and security apparatus”, she said.

 Simone Gbagbo elections
On October 14, 2025, presidential candidate Simone Gbagbo and her team attend a rally in Guiberoua, Ivory Coast.

Simone Gbagbo

The head of the Movement of Capable Generations party, formed in 2022, Simone Gbagbo, 73, was widely known as the Ivory Coast’s “Iron Lady” during the turbulent administration of her then-husband, Laurent Gbagbo, who led the country during the first civil war between 2002 and 2007, and provoked a bloodbath in 2011 when he refused to concede to Ouattara.

Simone Gbagbo was widely viewed as a major orchestrator behind her husband’s decision. In a raid by regional forces to bring back peace and put an end to the war, the couple were detained together at their Abidjan residence in April 2011.

Although both Laurent and Simone Gbagbo were indicted by the ICC for alleged war crimes related to the conflict, Ouattara’s government did not extradite the former first lady. Instead, she went on trial in the country and was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2015 for crimes against the state. In 2018, Ouattara granted her amnesty. The couple divorced in 2023 following Laurent’s return from his trial at The Hague.

It is unclear why Simone has not been blocked from running for president despite her conviction. She has stated at her political rallies that she will address ongoing gaps in healthcare and employment opportunities while Ouattara’s government has led infrastructure projects. She has also spoken out against the use of force against protesters and alleged raids on the homes of some opposition leaders.

Jean-Louis Billon

Having resigned recently as trade minister, the 60-year-old is the candidate for the Democratic Congress (CODE), a new coalition of 18 parties and political movements. A right-leaning politician, Billillon has described himself as.

The businessman and parliament member previously tried and failed to become a candidate for the opposition PDCI party after Thiam was barred from running. Many of the PDCI’s supporters claim they were left with no choice but to support a new candidate because the organization has not yet submitted a new candidate.

Billon, who was a member of the cabinet until early this year, when he resigned to run for the elections, is promising “generational change” in leadership for Ivorians and has pledged to attract rapid private sector investment in the country. He is the son of Pierre Billon, the owner of the SIFCA Group, which is credited as the nation’s largest private employer with about 17, 000 employees.

Ahoua Don Mello

Mello, 67, is running as an independent after Gbagbo’s PPA-CI kicked him out because he refused to take any part in the elections at all. He is a former ally of Gbagbo, the former president, and his spokesperson during the 2011 crisis.

Mello, like other Gbagbo allies, has been subject to sanctions from the United States and the EU and was in self-exile from the Ivory Coast until 2021.

Henriette Lagou Adjoua

The 66-year-old leader of the centrist coalition, Group of Political Partners for Peace, is a campaigner for women in politics. One of the first women to run for president during the 2015 elections was the former minister of social affairs between October and December 2000.

Ouattara
People walk near a campaign billboard of Ivory Coast’s President Alassane Ouattara in Abidjan, October 12, 2025]Luc Gnago/Reuters]

What are the main concerns for this election?

Political freedom and election violence

The government’s ban on key political candidates, the government’s blocking of demonstrations, and the arrest of demonstrators have drawn strong criticism from Ouattara’s opponents, who also accuse the current president of backsliding against democratic principles. There are concerns that there will be violent clashes between demonstrators calling for a vote boycott and security officials during the voting process.

Due to the heavy presence of government forces, Ochieng, the analyst, noted that while violence may occur in the opposition’s strongholds of Abidjan and Yamoussoukro, it is unlikely to spread throughout the nation, as seen in the 2011 crisis.

“Despite political misgivings about Ouattara’s re-election bid, politicians do not want to appear as if they are encouraging acts of violence or vandalism that will likely lead to their prosecution”, Ochieng said, adding that there have so far been no signs of any sort of systematic mobilisation which could disrupt the polls.

Social disparities

Critics of Ouattara say his progress on the economy has been largely buoyed by International Monetary Fund-backed loans and, importantly, has not been equally experienced, with development centred on urban areas.

The IMF is currently responsible for delivering more than $4 billion to the nation, which is one of the eight most overburdened nations.

More than 39 percent of the population was living below the national poverty line in 2023, according to the World Bank.

According to the World Bank, the richest 20% of the population’s households consume about six times as much as the poorest 20% do.

There is also sharp economic disparity between urban areas, where the poverty rate is an already very high 31 percent, and rural areas, where it is 54.6 percent. The more deprived north and the wealthier south also have stark differences in terms of the availability and quality of crucial infrastructure like water, schools, and healthcare facilities.

Climate change is adding to inequality, with heatwaves disrupting cocoa production as well as the harvest of tomatoes, chillies and other food crops in poorer, rural areas. Food imports from neighboring nations like Burkinabe and Niger have been forced upon the nation.

Armed groups in the region

In addition, Ivory Coast is vulnerable to violence from its Sahel neighbors, Mali and Burkinabe, where armed groups like Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM) and the ISIL affiliate in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) have been brutally executing residents and military installations.

In March 2016, three armed men attacked a hotel at the beach resort of Grand Bassam, killing 19 people. Later, two organizations took responsibility for the attack, calling themselves al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and al-Mourabitoun. It marked the first such attack on Ivorian soil.

In a second incident in northern Kafolo, on the border with Burkinabe, in June 2020, armed men carried out a military outpost, killing 14 soldiers and injuring others.