The United Nations is a convenient political scapegoat for many U.S. Republicans who have already ramped up electoral attacks on the world body.

Also in today’s edition: The Danes backtrack to beef up their development bona fides, and Africa CDC institutes a hiring quota.

 On Jan. 10, join us for our first Devex Pro event of the year, an “ask me anything” session with Devex President Raj Kumar, and get exclusive insights into the key trends in global development to watch out for in 2024. Save your spot now.


Political boogeyman
U.S. Republicans and the United Nations get along like oil and water. The world body is a perennial punching bag for conservatives — and the hits are about to keep on coming as the United States enters election season.

Republicans such as presidential candidates Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley have plucked the liberal political slogan “defund the police” and repackaged it to “defund the U.N.” to win over their conservative base, my colleague Colum Lynch writes.

“The prospect of the U.S. election is already casting a pretty long shadow over U.N. diplomacy,” says Richard Gowan of the International Crisis Group, noting that U.N. diplomats have “never really shaken off the suspicion that Trump might return to power.”

Multilateralist Joe Biden was supposed to be the global antidote to Donald Trump’s isolationism. And indeed, the Biden administration rejoined the U.N. Human Rights Council, the Paris Agreement on climate change, UNESCO, and the U.N. Population Fund. It also resumed hundreds of millions of dollars in contributions to the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees.

But Biden’s staunch support of Israel’s military offensive in Gaza has tarnished his reputation at the U.N. “People aren’t going to just forget this,” says one senior U.N.-based diplomat.

Others say any dings against the U.S. — which spends more than $18 billion a year on U.N. activities — won’t stick.

As Peter Yeo, president of the Better World Campaign, the advocacy wing of the U.N. Foundation, puts it: “This too shall pass.”

Read: US presidential candidates rally behind ‘defund the UN’ campaign