Good Morning Australia!! - Europeans stand up to nationalism, but will it be enough? - A Republican says Trump must be impeached - The billionaire who promised "liberation" to a new group of college grads - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Across the great cities of Europe (and some average ones, too), tens of thousands marched against the rise of far-right nationalism on the last weekend before the European Parliament elections.  Recent polls indicate that a coalition of right-wingers led by Italy's Matteo Salvini of The League could do well in the election from 23 to 26 May.  "I am here because I don't want to relive what a national-socialist party already did during my lifetime," said 74-year old Renate Foigt in Berlin, "That should never happen again."  Earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel decried the far right "who want to destroy the Europe of our values" such as peace, prosperity, human and minority rights, and free movement.

Austria's election will probably be in September.  The PM this past weekend called for a new poll after his far-right deputy was caught putting his palm out for Russian money.

India's BJP and Prime Minister Narendra Modi appear to be heading towards a second term in power, according to exit polls.  The opposition Congress Party appeared to be gaining ground earlier in the five-week, seven-phase election, but Modi rallied his Hindu nationalist base to overcome criticisms of low youth employment and weak prices for agricultural output.

Swiss voters opted to put tougher restrictions on semi-automatic and automatic weapons in a weekend ballot.  The move, approved by nearly 64 percent, put the country's gun laws more in line with the surrounding European Union.

Movie star and politician Arnold Schwarzenegger isn't pressing charges against the guy who drop kicked him at a fitness event in South Africa.  "I'm moving on and I'd rather focus on the thousands of great athletes I met," he tweeted, adding that he hopes the attacker "gets his life on the right track".

A bomb blast hit a bus carrying South African tourist near the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, injuring 17 people.

Blazing bowls, bongs, and blunts, thousands marched peacefully in Chile's capital to demand the legalization of Cannabis.  Currently, only Uruguay allows people to grow and smoke their own in South America.

A Republican congressman is the first in his party to call for the impeachment of Donald Trump.  Rep. Justin Amash from Michigan said that US Attorney General William Barr mischaracterized the Mueller Report, which did say that Trump had "engaged in specific actions" that "meet the threshold for impeachment".  Amash rebuked others in his party for failing at actually read the report.  Trump responded with the usual round of insults.  Many of the Democratic presidential candidates have called for Trump's impeachment, but their congressional leadership is taking what many complain is an overly cautious approach and instead recommending that they try to beat Trump in the 2020 election.

Among the many promises of Donald Trump was to restart the US steel industry.  That hasn't happened.  Instead, the former headquarters of the once-mighty Bethlehem Steel was imploded to make way for smaller shopping plazas and apartments.

And now...

A US Billionaire investor promised to pay the student loan debt of a university's graduating class.  Robert F. Smith gave the commencement address at Morehouse College, an all-male traditionally African-American university in Atlanta, and pretty much broke the Internet with the announcement.  The total amount covered for the 396 students is up to $40 million.  Morehouse President David A. Thomas called Smith's gesture, "a liberation gift." 

But while no one has a problem with the man's incredible generosity, Morehouse is just one of thousands and thousands of universities casting graduating classes off into the world, with many young people saddled with insurmountable debt that will take decades to pay back.  Firebrand Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez asked the US not to forget the story tomorrow morning, and track the students to compare their life choices to those who must plan their lives around crushing student loan payments.