PARIS — From
Florida governor Ron DeSantis to Tunisian tennis star Ons Jabeur and Britain's
Prince Harry, here are 10 people who are expected to make headlines in 2023.
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Ron DeSantisWill Donald Trump's
former apprentice, popular Florida governor Ron DeSantis, turn on his one-time
mentor by challenging him for the Republican nomination for president?
Trump is already
gearing up for a potential battle with his MAGA (Make America Great Again)
disciple, whose stock has soared among Republicans.
DeSantis won a
landslide re-election in November's midterms, in which Trump loyalists fared
badly. The property mogul has coined a nickname for the self-styled anti-woke
warrior: "Ron de Sanctimonious".
Kristalina
GeorgievaThe 69-year-old head
of the International Monetary Fund will have her work cut out for her in 2023
to try to head off a new global debt crisis triggered by escalating inflation
and interest rates.
Since Russia invaded
Ukraine in February, driving up global food and energy prices, the
Washington-based fund has provided around $90 billion in support to 16
countries. Her message to countries that may need digging out is: act early.
Prince HarryBritain's royal family
is bracing for more potentially damaging revelations as Prince Harry prepares
to release his highly anticipated memoir "Spare".
Harry has promised an
"unflinching" account of life inside The Firm in the book, which will
hit the shelves on January 10.
In perhaps a sneak
preview, he accused his brother William of a furious response to his plans to
quit royal life, but insisted in a Netflix documentary series aired in December that he
had few regrets about leaving.
The 38-year-old
self-exiled royal and his wife Meghan are already divisive figures in Britain
following their tell-all Oprah Winfrey interview in 2021, in which they accused
unnamed senior royals of racism.
Bob IgerDisney's longtime CEO
has been called back from retirement to try and work his old magic on the
struggling entertainment company, which is burning through cash in its quest to
attract streaming customers to Disney+.
But the 71-year-old
faces a tall order to return Disney to the glory days of his 2005-2020 tenure.
Ons JabeurTunisia's tennis heroine,
who became in 2022 the first Arab woman to reach a Wimbledon final, will
attempt to win her first Grand Slam title in 2023.
The 28-year-old world
number two, dubbed the "Minister of Happiness" in her homeland for
her cheerful disposition and multiple successes, already has three WTA titles
to her name.
Sydney McLaughlinUS hurdler Sydney
McLaughlin, who smashed her own world record in 2022 after winning two Olympic
golds (400m hurdles and 4x400m hurdle relay) the previous year in Tokyo, has attracted
huge followings for a much-overlooked sport.
The 23-year-old, voted
World Athlete of the year for 2022, has hinted she could change discipline to
the 400m flat.
She will be one of the
most closely-watched performers at the world athletics championships in
Budapest in August.
Peter ObiThe man to watch in
Nigeria's presidential election in February is 61-year-old former governor
Peter Obi.
He has galvanized the
youth vote by campaigning as an alternative to the two parties that have
dominated power since the end of military rule in 1999.
The Labor Party
candidate, who is promising a "new Nigeria", has mobilized a small
army of young urbanites known as "Obi-dients", who tout his prudent
eight-year management of the finances of Anambra state as proof of his
leadership ability.
Margot RobbieAustralian actress
Margot Robbie, 32, nearly broke the internet when the first pictures of her and
Ryan Gosling playing iconic doll duo Barbie and Ken in Greta Gerwig's film
about the Mattel toys were released in June.
Gerwig's feminist
"Barbie" is one of the most keenly awaited releases of 2023, along
with Damien Chazelle's "Babylon".
The latter also
features "I, Tonya" star Robbie, this time as an unhinged, drugged-up
anti-Barbie, in a tale about the wild ways of 1920s Hollywood.
Tsai Ing-wenTaiwan's pro-democracy
president, 66, sparked China's fury — and huge retaliatory military drills — in
2022 by hosting US House speaker Nancy Pelosi for a visit to the island, which
Beijing views as part of its territory and has vowed to retake, by force if
necessary.
Her showdown with Xi
Jinping looks set to continue in 2023. Washington is warning that China's most
powerful leader since Mao could seek to seize Taiwan "much faster"
than previously thought.
Tsai has compared
Beijing's plans for Taiwan to Moscow's invasion of Ukraine and insists there
will be "no compromise" on the territory's democratic way of life.
Victor WembanyamaSuch is the excitement
around France's 18-year-old basketball prodigy, who is widely expected to be
the first pick in next year's NBA draft, the association has begun streaming
Victor Wembanyama's games with French club Boulogne-Levallois Metropolitans 92.
Four-time NBA champion
LeBron James is among the admirers of the willowy 2.2-meter-tall Frenchman,
saying he has a "generational talent" that borders on
"alien".
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