Description
Added on the 08/10/2020 09:04:17 - Copyright : Euronews EN
Green supporters and their candidate Annalena Baerbock celebrate the exit poll announcements in their headquarters in Berlin. The polls showed the Greens, one-time favourites for the win, polling well behind the two leading parties on around 15 percent. While the chancellery may be out of reach for the party, it will likely have a role in Germany's next government. IMAGES
La Paz, Bolivia May 25 (EFE) (CAMERA: Yolanda Salazar) .- A contest of the National Chamber of Industry presented Tuesday encourages young Bolivians to expose their ideas or "green business" ventures that generate an impact on the reuse of resources and promote respect for the environment.
Zagreb, Feb 3 (EFE/EPA).- (Camera: Antonio Bat) Thousands of small business owners and workers in sectors that have been forced to close because of the coronavirus pandemic protested in the center of Zagreb on Wednesday to demand the reopening of their businesses.FOOTAGE OF PROTESTS IN ZAGREB.
Kyiv(Ukraine), Jan 28 (EFE / EPA), (Camera: Sergey Dolzhenko).- Small business owners gathered on Thursday in Kyiv to demand the derogation of the new law on the simplified tax system. FOOTAGE OF THE PROTEST IN KYIV.
Jordan Nabigon is the CEO of the content curation site Shared. He was a big Facebook customer, spending nearly $46 million in ads on the site. That is, until the platform booted him without warning or explanation. According to Business Insider, Facebook says Shared violated the site's terms and conditions. However, it wouldn't explain what the violations were. Nabigon says several of Shared's pages have been unpublished since October 26, taking 21 million of the company's followers with them. He added that Facebook gave him no warning that they could or would unpublish his pages, and that Facebook told him the decision was final. Business Insider reports Facebook has also locked Nabigon out of his personal account.
Angelina Murphy paid off $100,000 in debt in just a year by making very smart money moves in her business. She says her default setting is as an artist, not a businesswoman. However, using a budget for the first time reined in her spending. According to Business Insider, the Seattle-area resident had three keys to her success: a niche market, expertise, and location. Her specialty, high-end, business offers luxury hair extensions to women with thinning hair or hair that won't grow very long. She's also very good at her job and invests in her ongoing professional development. Finally, Murphy keeps her expenses low by using her own garage as her location, instead of a pricey retail salon!