GOV. SANWO-OLU IN LONDON SEEKS FOREIGN INVESTMENTS, PARTNERSHIPS.(PHOTOS). #PRESS RELEASE.

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SANWO-OLU IN LONDON SEEKS FOREIGN INVESTMENTS, PARTNERSHIPS   •Governor charges Commonwealth states to bring capital, technology, expertise to Lagos The Governor of Lagos State, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, on Monday charged the Commonwealth’s 56 member states to invest in Africa, particularly Lagos, by bringing their capital, technology and other expertise, promising that they will find not just market and opportunity but partner and relationship.   He said the Commonwealth's greatest advantage is not simply its shared language, shared laws or shared history but its people, noting that nowhere is that advantage more vivid, dynamic or consequential than in Africa.   Speaking as a Keynote Speaker at the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth Trade and Investment Summit held at Mansion House, London, on Monday, Governor Sanwo-Olu said Lagos is ready for partnerships and relationships with global investors.   The theme of the opening session is “The Commonwealth's Advantage". ...

JILL BIDEN 'DISAPPOINTED' WITH NANCY PELOSI FOR ROLE IN FORCING HUSBAND OUT: 'WE WERE FRIENDS FOR 50 YEARS'. (PHOTO).


 Jill Biden 'disappointed' with Nancy Pelosi for role in forcing husband out: ‘We were friends for 50 years’


First lady Jill Biden expressed her disappointment with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a new interview with The Washington Post, providing rare public comments about the fractured relationship between her husband, Joe Biden, and Pelosi following the president’s departure from the 2024 race.

“We were friends for 50 years,” the first lady said in an interview with The Washington Post published Wednesday. “It was disappointing.”

Pelosi was among the top Democrats to express reservations about Joe Biden’s ability to defeat Donald Trump in November after the president’s halting debate performance in June. As Biden remained adamant he would stay in the race, Pelosi made waves in an interview as she opened the door to the possibility he should end his campaign.


“It’s up to the president to decide if he is going to run. We’re all encouraging him to make that decision because time is running short,” Pelosi said on MSNBC in July.

In the extensive interview, the first lady also publicly disclosed her conversation with Trump when the two spoke at the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris last month.

“I had a good meeting with your husband in the Oval Office,” the president-elect said, according to the first lady. “Yes,” she replied, “because you’re both talkers.”

Asked why she would engage with Trump following the bitterness of the campaign, she replied, “Joe and I respect our institutions, our traditions.”


“It’s very important to me that they continue and we — ” she continued. “What would be the point of nastiness?”

The interview provides rare insight into how the first family is navigating the end of the Biden presidency, including the summer weeks during which Democrats privately and publicly pushed for her husband to step aside from the race.

“Let’s just say I was disappointed with how it unfolded,” Jill Biden said. “I learned a lot about human nature.”

Pelosi privately told President Biden in July that polling showed he could not defeat Trump and could upend Democrats’ chances of winning the House in November if he remained in the race, CNN previously reported. A source with direct knowledge described Biden as “seething” at Pelosi at the time.


After Trump’s victory in November, Pelosi placed blame for Democrats’ loss on Biden. “Had the president gotten out sooner, there may have been other candidates in the race,” the California Democrat said during an interview with a New York Times podcast.

It is unclear whether Joe Biden and Pelosi have spoken since July.

The first lady said she still believes her husband could have served another four years — even as he recently said that might not be the case.

“Sure,” she said “I mean, today, I think he has a full schedule. He started early with interviews and briefings, and it just keeps going.”

The first lady expressed concern that the president won’t receive credit for some of his accomplishments, including infrastructure investments. But she also acknowledged the complicated dynamics of her husband pardoning their son Hunter in the closing weeks of his presidency.


“Joe really wrestled with that decision,” Jill Biden said. “I mean, we started — he started at the point where he said he wasn’t going to pardon Hunter. But then I think things changed. Circumstances changed, and it became quite apparent and obvious that the Republicans weren’t going to stop.”

As her work at the White House winds down, the first lady said, “I hope that women see me as a reflection of themselves. You know, a mom, a grandmom, a working woman, a sister, a friend.”

“I hope that they remember Joe as a strong, empathetic president with integrity and character,” she said. “I mean, character really is everything, isn’t it?”

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