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The Czech election may have consequences for Ukraine.
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History is never far away in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic famous for its hilltop castle and magnificent Baroque heart.

This week’s Czech elections may turn out to be historic for less romantic reasons.

Among the vote’s biggest friction points is the degree to which the government will continue to be a provider of arms and equipment to help Ukraine defend against Russia’s attack.

Echoing US President Donald Trump, election favorite Andrej Babiš, a billionaire populist who previously served a term as Czech premier, has promised voters that it’s time for them to be put first.

Babiš at a campaign rally in Prague on Tuesday. Photographer: Milan Jaros/Bloomberg

For Babiš, that means curtailing military aid to Ukraine, a country that lies less than 500 miles to the east. If not stopping a Czech ammunition initiative for Kyiv, he’s calling for it at least to be redirected under the management of NATO or the European Union.

At rallies around the country of some 11 million, he argues that massive arms outlays have largely enriched one man. While not mentioned by name, that man would be Michal Strnad, now the second-richest Czech.

Babiš’s questioning of aid for Ukraine has lit a fire beneath the campaign of Prime Minister Petr Fiala, who struggled to excite voters with his policies of fiscal prudence.

Fiala has now upped his game, telling Czechs that picking Babiš would put them on the wrong side of history.

Fiala at a Spolu party rally in Prague on Monday. Photographer: Milan Jaros/Bloomberg

Recourse to history may not normally be a vote winner, but it continues to resonate for many Czechs.

After all, momentous events are still being debated and processed, from the policy of appeasement toward Nazi Germany in 1938, through the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia 30 years later, to the “Velvet divorce” of 1993 into separate Czech and Slovak republics.

As results start trickling in tomorrow, it will become clear whether Trump-style allure or the lessons of history prevail. — Andrea Dudik

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Chart of the Day

Some 80% of voters in Switzerland told public broadcaster SRG SSR in a survey that their government is “too friendly” to the US after Trump imposed an outsized 39% tariff on imports from the country. The poll also found that Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter, who holds the rotating Swiss presidency to the end of the year, is considered the cabinet’s most powerful person despite criticism for her failure to secure a trade deal from the US president.

And Finally

When storm clouds unleashed a downpour over Dubai on April 16 last year, the city was already drenched from torrents of rain the previous evening. It was soon clear that the United Arab Emirates was experiencing a once-in-a-generation flood as images circulated online of water swamping the desert metropolis famous for its sunny climate and extravagant displays of wealth. This account of what happened in Dubai that day unpacks a story of catastrophe, weird science, competing narratives and unintended consequences.

Photographer: Katarina Premfors

Pop quiz (no cheating!). The former leader of which African nation was sentenced to death in absentia for treason and fined more than $30 billion this week? Send your answers to balancepower@bloomberg.net

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