World leaders are cranking into action. Each day brings a new (virtual) meeting. European leaders will chat Thursday over videoconference, the same day as the Group of 20.
The messaging is that coordinated action is here to support individuals and companies and economies.
Within their own borders, some leaders are still going their own way. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, having championed the idea of "herd immunity," has only just accepted the need for a full lockdown.
President Donald Trump argues the American economy can't be idled for long as the U.S. "was not built to be shut down," putting him at odds with state governors. Congress is still bickering about a stimulus package.
But in some corners of the world politics seems to be taking a back seat, at least for now.
Romanian lawmakers ended more than a month of wrangling to approve a new government led by Prime Minister Ludovic Orban, giving him the power to confront the coronavirus outbreak.
Belgium, without a full-time government since December 2018, saw opposition members back caretaker Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes to address the shocks from the pandemic.
In South Africa, a meeting on the virus between President Cyril Ramaphosa and the leaders of opposition parties saw them declare a truce in their nonstop fighting.
And in Israel, what currently counts for a government after three inconclusive elections is trying to find a way, despite the lack of an approved budget, to boost assistance by up to $3.8 billion for businesses and workers.
These may prove to be brief moments of unity. At least in some places though, the broader need seems to be trumping the competition of politics.
— Rosalind Mathieson
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