asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community
asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift  - Free Stock Trading Community

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift - Free Stock Trading Community

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asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Stay informed with expert predictions of stock trends and real-time market data, covering global indices, futures, metals, and agricultural products. Make better decisions and achieve consistent growth in your investments.

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asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Stay informed with expert predictions of stock trends and real-time market data, covering global indices, futures, metals, and agricultural products. Make better decisions and achieve consistent growth in your investments.

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Stay informed with expert predictions of stock trends and real-time market data, covering global indices, futures, metals, and agricultural products. Make better decisions and achieve consistent growth in your investments. US Rep. Kevin McCarthy, right, speaks with Rep. Matt Gaetz after Gaetz voted “present” during the 14th round of voting for House speaker in January 2023. McCarthy was elected speaker after the 15th vote, but 10 months later Gaetz would force a vote that would oust McCarthy from his position. “I feel like the photo kind of shows the friction between those two people and also kind of foreshadows what we know now,” photographer Haiyun Jiang said.

Photographs by Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times/ReduxStory by Rebecca Wright, 【 - Free Stock Trading Community 】Published January 3, 2023

US Rep. Kevin McCarthy, right, speaks with Rep. Matt Gaetz after Gaetz voted “present” during the 14th round of voting for House speaker in January 2023. McCarthy was elected speaker after the 15th vote, but 10 months later Gaetz would force a vote that would oust McCarthy from his position. “I feel like the photo kind of shows the friction between those two people and also kind of foreshadows what we know now,” photographer Haiyun Jiang said.

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Expert predictions of stock trends to help you select high-potential stocks accurately, along with free real-time market data on stocks, futures, and commodities. Maximize your growth potential by staying updated on market movements. She was in Washington, DC, starting the second half of her photojournalism fellowship with The New York Times. She got her feet wet in 2022 covering Congress alongside fellow New York Times photographer and mentor Doug Mills.

"He taught me so much about what you look for, where you should stand and when to take risks and do something different,” Jiang said.

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Accurate stock market predictions with real-time stock indices, futures data, and global market trend analysis. Achieve stable growth and avoid losses by staying ahead with our expert recommendations. Then the 118th Congress convened on January 3, 2023, and the House — with its newly elected slim Republican majority —failed to elect a speaker.

“What I thought would be just a one-day election turned intoa weeklong power strugglewithKevin McCarthyhaving to go through 15 rounds of voting,” Jiang said. “Eventually on Friday after midnight, he (was elected speaker). That was not how I planned my beginning of 2023.”

Jiang has spent the past year capturing the chaos of Capitol Hill, documenting lawmakers navigating everything from the debt-ceiling crisis and government shutdown threats to McCarthy’souster as House speakerand Rep. George Santos'expulsion from Congress.

But she’s also challenging herself to cover the Hill a little differently. She’s looking beyond the press gaggles for those in-between moments that paint a larger picture of what’s going on.

“I'm very lucky in the sense that the Times has a different mission in terms of photo coverage,” Jiang said. “We’re trying to do something a little different, bring more variety to the coverage. That’s very, very important to me — that they encourage me to be a little different, to take risks.”

Looking for those in-between moments — and being at the right place at the right time — has led to some memorable photos. After Rep. Matt Gaetzvoted “present”and killed McCarthy’s attempt to become speaker during a 14th round of votes, McCarthy confronted Gaetz.

“That was such a serendipitous moment. I didn’t think they would actually meet up and talk that close,” Jiang said. “There were a lot of photographers on the balcony in the gallery, but I think in my angle you can see both of their faces. That’s a storytelling photo for me. It summarizes the dynamic of that speaker vote.”

Jiang, who interned with 【 - Free Stock Trading Community 】 Digital’s photo team in 2019, has always been interested in covering politics — partly because she grew up on the southern coast of China.

“I came from a country that doesn’t necessarily have political freedom,” Jiang said. “I think that enables me to look at American politics in a different way. I really cherish the fact that we get to witness all these historical moments because I think that’s what democracy intended — to have a free press to document what’s happened.”

Despite spending so much of her time at the US Capitol, Jiang doesn’t let the monotony get to her.

“I know that some people covering politics think about day in and out, it’s the same stuff, same place, same people, nothing has changed,” Jiang said. “But I don’t think every day is the same. Every day is different. The power shifts, the staff changes — but also, the context changes, too.”

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Free real-time stock market analysis, market dynamics reports, and expert insights into stocks, metals, energy, and agricultural products. Make profitable decisions by leveraging our advanced market forecasting tools. Not every day is perfect. There are days when Jiang feels like she missed “the” shot, or times where she feels out-of-sync.

"When you have a rough day, you doubt yourself. Am I good enough? Am I doing enough? What can I do better next time?” Jiang said. “Doug (Mills) always tells me, ’If you don’t do well, tomorrow is a new day.’ Think about what you can do better next time and prepare yourself for that the next day, because there’s no sense of dwelling on your mistakes.”

For Jiang — and many journalists — her job is more than just a job. It’s a responsibility that she doesn’t take lightly.

“It’s really a privilege to be working in that place,” she said. “It's such a magnificent building. It's historic. There are so many crazy moments that happen over there, and I get to see that.”

“As we all know, the stakes are high,” she said. “There's a lot of uncertainty going into next year, and I'm excited to see how that plays out. And as a photojournalist, I’m very curious to see how the American people eventually decide on what matters the most to them.”

asian paints limited (asianpaint) announces strategic shift ✌️【Stock Club】✌️ Receive expert stock predictions with real-time updates on global market trends, including stock indices, futures prices, and forex fluctuations. Use our insights to improve your investment strategies and boost your returns. She will likely be spending less time at the Capitol over the next year. She’s already booked to cover the Iowa caucuses later this month. But she will be back.

“I feel like it’s so important for journalists to stick with it, to be able to see beyond the obvious and bring the audience — which is the American public who reads the news — the best information we can present,” Jiang said. “I think that’s so important, and I don’t take it for granted. I don’t think I would ever want to leave Capitol Hill behind.”

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