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Japan formally proclaims Crown Prince Akishino heir to throne

Japan’s Crown Prince Akishino (in orange robe) attends a ritual ceremony after he was formally proclaimed the first in line as heir to the throne, at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo, Japan, November 8, 2020, in this handout photo provided by the Imperial Household Agency of Japan. Image via Imperial Household Agency of Japan/Handout via Reuters

TOKYO — Japan formally proclaimed Crown Prince Akishino the first in line as heir to the throne on Sunday, the last of a series of ceremonies after his elder brother, Emperor Naruhito, became monarch last year following their father’s abdication.

The day-long ceremonies at the palace had been scheduled for April but were postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic and have been scaled back as infection keeps rising, although Japan has escaped the explosive outbreak seen in many other countries.

Under Japanese law, only males can inherit the throne, so Naruhito’s only offspring, 18-year-old Princess Aiko, is ineligible. Moves to amend the law lost steam when Akishino’s wife bore a son, Hisahito, in 2006.

“I deeply ponder the responsibility of Crown Prince and will discharge my duties,” Akishino in orange robe said in front of attendees, most of whom were wearing masks, according to footages by public broadcaster NHK.

Akishino, 54, is one of just three heirs to the throne along with Hisahito, 14, and Prince Hitachi, 84, the younger brother of Emperor Emeritus Akihito, who stepped down last year in Japan’s first abdication in two centuries.

Changes to the succession law are anathema to conservatives, but debate over how to ensure a stable succession is likely to intensify.

One option is to allow females, including Aiko and Hisahito’s two elder sisters, to retain their imperial status after marriage and inherit or pass the throne to their children, a change that surveys show most ordinary Japanese favor.

Conservatives want to revive junior royal branches stripped of imperial status after the war. — Reuters

‘I just couldn’t be silent’: How American women decided the 2020 presidential race

ARCHBALD, Pa, — Marygrace Vadala’s 82-year-old mother had been a fan of President Donald Trump since his days hosting the reality TV show The Apprentice. She enthusiastically voted for him in 2016.

But in the first weeks of the coronavirus pandemic, as the two watched daily White House briefings, Ms. Vadala’s mom—Grace Webber—voiced her first doubts.

“Why isn’t he listening to the medical experts?” Ms. Vadala, a 48-year-old home care nurse, recalled Ms. Webber asking.

Weeks later, Ms. Webber landed in the hospital with a gastrointestinal bleed. She soon contracted the coronavirus, spending nearly a month on a ventilator. In May, Vadala, a devout Catholic, said goodbye to Webber over FaceTime, clutching her mother’s rosary beads.

Vadala, who lives in a suburb of Scranton, Pennsylvania, had been a Republican all her life. But she concluded Trump lacked the “integrity and trustworthiness and responsibility” she was raised to value, and she wanted him out. She became a prominent booster of Trump’s Democratic rival, even agreeing to appear in an online ad for former Vice-President Joe Biden’s campaign.

“I just couldn’t be silent on this one,” she said. “I let my mom’s voice be heard.”

Women appear to have been crucial in delivering the US presidency to Biden. They were at the forefront of the highest US voter turnout in at least a century, casting ballots at higher rates than men. And more than half of female voters—56%—chose the former vice-president compared to 48% of men, according to exit polls from the Edison Research firm.

Media outlets called the race for Biden on Saturday after he pulled ahead decisively in Pennsylvania.

It wasn’t just women who carried Biden: Trump lost ground among male voters in 2020 compared to 2016. But key to Biden’s success were his gains among white college-educated women in battleground states—like Ms. Vadala—who turned out in higher numbers than for Trump’s Democratic rival Hillary Clinton four years ago.

African-American women, and to a lesser degree, Latinas, supported Biden’s bid for the White House over Trump by wide majorities nationally, and more so than African-American and Latino men.

Trump has not conceded the race, even as Biden’s lead in the vote tally rises. Recounts appear likely in states where the margin is narrow, but Trump would need to overturn the results in at least three states to prevail. Trump’s court battles, too, are widely seen as unlikely to change the outcome.

Trump’s difficulties in appealing to women voters long predate this election and the pandemic. Accusations of sexual harassment and assault—which he vehemently denies—have dogged him for years. The day after Trump’s 2017 inauguration, hundreds of thousands of people protested his election in a Women’s March in Washington DC and other cities around the country.

Still, Trump held strong with one female demographic across both elections: white women without college degrees, including some of Ms. Vadala’s relatives in Pennsylvania.

To capture a variety of opinions in the 2020 race, Reuters spoke to 42 women in 12 states— Arizona, Florida, Nevada, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Ohio, Nebraska and Indiana—where voters swung for and against Trump.

Some once-stalwart Republicans told Reuters they had, for the first time, crossed party lines to vote for Biden. Some were young, first-time voters, selecting Biden only because they saw the alternative as far worse. Others, whether Republican or Democrat, said they had never liked or voted for Trump.

Among Trump supporters, some women were enthusiastic fans whose votes and organizing on his behalf helped him outperform expectations in several states.

Regardless of their differences, many women threw themselves into political activism for the first time during this presidential campaign.

Biden backers said in interviews that they were motivated by back-to-back crises of the past year including the coronavirus pandemic, economic turmoil and widespread protests against racism, and police brutality.

Paula McCabe, 44, of Williamsport, Pennsylvania, who lost her job at a casino equipment manufacturer during the pandemic, said she was more motivated than ever to vote this year.

“I’ve never been through an election that literally meant the entire country was going to crash and burn or finally thrive,” said Ms. McCabe, who voted for Biden. “This to me is probably the most important vote I’ve ever been alive for.”

SHADOW OF THE VIRUS
Women in the United States have in many ways borne the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout. They have left the labor force at starkly higher rates than men, according to US Bureau of Labor statistics, as they juggle homeschooling duties and childcare. Those able to stay employed are more often working frontline jobs, especially in medicine or social services, according to the Washington DC–based Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Reuters polling before the election showed COVID-19, the disease that has killed more than 236,000 Americans this year, was the dominant issue for all voters—but more so for women. The Edison voter exit poll said 52% of women voters said that Biden would be better at dealing with the virus compared with 44% who thought the same of Trump.

But views on how much the coronavirus mattered to their vote were starkly divided along political lines—24% of Biden voters said it was the issue that mattered most to them compared to 5% of Trump supporters.

Ellen Peters, an 80-year-old great grandmother in the small town of Rossville, Indiana, said she knew she was at higher risk for COVID-19. She mailed in her ballot early for Trump—who won the state handily – because she liked his focus on getting the economy going again.

“I’m worried, in that I hate being sick and I would hate what it would do to my family,” said Ms. Peters, who did not graduate from college and retired this year from her family’s bookkeeping company. “But I’m old. I could go to sleep tonight, and never wake up, too.”

MAKING HISTORY
The fear of COVID-19 was ever-present for Denise Callaway in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, after she lost several friends to the disease. But her primary motivation for voting was different: the chance to elect Kamala Harris as the first female, and African-American, vice-president.

Ms. Callaway, 64, said she cried when Biden announced Harris as his running mate. Looking at a portrait in her living room of her great-great grandmother, a striking figure with piercing eyes and high cheekbones, Ms. Callaway remarked that she had likely been enslaved. Ms. Callaway felt she had to help in this historic election, she said – for her ancestor, for herself and for her daughters.

Ms. Callaway, a retired public relations executive and consultant, connected with the Biden campaign in Wisconsin through friends at her Black sorority. She began canvassing by phone and participated in weekly Zoom prayer circles with other volunteers.

Black women, who overwhelmingly vote Democratic and at higher rates than Black men, were never big Trump supporters. But they grew increasingly critical of the president this year, Reuters polling showed. According to the Edison data, 91% of Black women supported Biden, 11 percentage points more than Black men.

Racial justice issues were important to voters overall. More than half of all voters, and 87% of Biden voters, said they had a favorable view of the Black Lives Matter movement. These activists helped launch national protests after the killing of George Floyd, a Black man, by police in Minnesota.

Ms. Callaway and her husband raised their son and two daughters—now adults—in Milwaukee County, one of the few that went for Clinton in 2016 when Trump won Wisconsin by under 23,000 votes, in part by citing decades of lost manufacturing jobs.

Ms. Callaway, the daughter of an auto executive, remembers Biden’s efforts to stabilize the auto industry in 2009 during the Obama administration, and says Trump has broken promises to bring manufacturing jobs to Rust Belt states.

This year, Biden flipped Wisconsin back by almost as narrow a margin as Trump won it in 2016, unless a recount changes the result, which rarely happens in US elections.

After days of anxiously watching the votes trickle in, when the election was called in Biden’s favor on Saturday, Ms. Callaway wrote a one-line e-mail: “Worth. The. Wait!!!”

HER FIRST VOTE
In Arizona, young Latina voters like Yazmin Sagastume, 19, helped Biden pull into the lead, although votes were still being counted on Saturday. If Biden wins, he would be the first Democratic presidential candidate elected in the state since 1996.

Ms. Sagastume spent the day before Tuesday’s election dropping voter guides on more than 100 doorsteps in Phoenix with two friends. Their votes for Biden were the first they had ever cast for president.

Nationally, Biden overwhelmingly won the support of  young people as a whole, gaining the votes of 62% of 18- to 29-year-olds.

Ms. Sagastume grew up in Phoenix, the youngest of five children born to a mother from Mexico and a father from Guatemala. Now in college, she became politically active while in high school.

Ms. Sagastume said she is not a big Biden fan. She supported the progressive Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary and relates much more to 31-year-old New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez than a septuagenarian white male.

Nevertheless, for months she made calls to young Hispanic voters encouraging them to vote.

“We’re just trying to get Trump out,” she said. “That’s the only goal.”

To her dismay, she recently learned two older brothers supported Trump. And in some parts of the country, Trump did better than expected among Latino voters, a diverse population that includes many religious and political conservatives.

Trump won 45% of votes from Hispanic women in Florida—up 11 points from 2016—where many voters of Cuban and Venezuelan heritage appreciated the president’s stance against socialist or communist governments.

In states along the US-Mexico border, where Trump has implemented some of his strictest immigration policies, his support grew. In Texas and Arizona, Trump won 38% and 32% of Hispanic women respectively, substantially more than four years ago.

Teresa Mendoza, 48, a property manager in Mesa, Arizona, outside Phoenix, is the daughter of migrant farm workers from Mexico. But she said she was not turned off by Trump’s immigration stance. More security is needed at the border, she said, because it is more dangerous – with more drug trafficking and human smuggling—than when her parents migrated in the 1970s, she said.

In addition, she said, Trump’s policies, such as cutting taxes and regulations, directly improved her family’s finances, while Obama’s Affordable Care Act raised the cost of her private health insurance.

Ms. Mendoza said she got a tax refund under Trump, after years of paying large tax bills. Trump’s relaxation of many environmental rules also made it easier for her husband, who runs a flooring business, to obtain many of the chemicals he needs, she said.

After the election was called for Biden, Ms. Mendoza said she would accept the results if there was an “audit” of the votes, citing unverified reports she had seen on the internet about glitches in voting machines and irregularities at some polling sites.

‘KICKED IN THE TEETH’
As the campaign progressed, personal connections frayed in a deeply divided country.

A fifth of American voters said they stopped talking to a family member or lost a friend because of the election, according to a Reuters/Ipsos Election Day poll.

Denise Auton, a 46-year-old retired social worker who lives outside Raleigh, North Carolina, said her husband revealed on their anniversary that he had voted for Trump.

“It was like I got kicked in the teeth,” she said, tearing up. Ms. Auton lives on a 43-acre farm in Middlesex, surrounded by cotton fields. Sitting on the front porch, she described how she and her 13-year-old daughter, Hannah, are at odds with her husband, Jeff, and their son, Bryce. “My son is 15, and of course he listens to his father. He thinks it’s funny when Trump says all this off-the-cuff stuff but really (Trump) is just a bully.”

Having worked with disabled people, she was upset after overhearing her husband’s family—also Trump supporters—make fun of Biden’s stutter.

A Baptist, she says she found Trump’s views and treatment toward women “degrading.” On her kitchen counter is a pink floral-bound Bible on top of a sheet of Biden-Harris stickers. On the back of her SUV one sticker says “STD- Stop The Donald, don’t let the infection spread.”

But on Facebook she treads more carefully. Most people in her circle are Trump supporters.

Ms. Auton was raised in a Republican household but diverged from her roots when she attended a liberal arts college. She campaigned for Obama.

But never before has she been as passionate about politics. She had her Trump-supporting husband drive her around the county to put out Biden-Harris signs and, with her daughter, wrote postcards to encourage people to vote.

As of Saturday, Trump led in North Carolina, but the race still was too close to call in the state.

More than half of college-educated white women in North Carolina, like Ms. Auton, voted for Biden, while their support for Trump dropped 8 percentage points compared to 2016.

“The intensity is just so strong with this election,” she said. “It just feels like there’s a whole lot more at stake.”

FALTERING AMONG FARMERS
Even among rural women, one of Trump’s strongest bases of support in 2016, the president saw his margins shrink.

Nationally Trump won 54% of the US rural vote, according to Edison exit polling, 7 points less than in 2016. Slightly more than half of rural women supported Biden this year.

One was Rebecca Seidel, 37, who runs a small, sustainable dairy farm in Berks County, Pennsylvania, with her husband.

For most of her life, her views hewed closely to her Republican father’s. But after Trump was elected in 2016, Seidel left the Republican Party and registered as a Democrat, partly because of what she saw as rising racism and Trump’s protectionist trade policies.

In the 2020 campaign, Ms. Seidel’s concerns kicked into high gear when she and her entire family contracted COVID-19. Her mom was hospitalized for four days and Ms. Seidel lost her sense of smell and taste, crimping her plans to open a small cheese-making business, she said.

At a local farm supply store recently, she noticed a group of men chatting as they bagged up animal feed. None wore masks—a sign to her that some in her community weren’t taking the pandemic seriously enough.

“It’s become a political statement,” Ms. Seidel said. “Some people believe if you wear a mask, you’re not for Trump.”

‘NOT TRUMP’
Trump has long commanded a strong following among white evangelical Christian voters—and 76% of them voted for him this time around, according to Edison. But that is 4 percentage points less than in 2016.

He lost Hyla Winters’ vote.

Ms. Winters, 71, a devout evangelical and regular attendee of a Las Vegas megachurch, voted for Trump in 2016. But over time, she became disheartened by his attacks on perceived enemies.

“His behavior is appalling,” said Ms. Winters, a retired college administrator. “It’s embarrassing.”

While she has not embraced the entire Democratic platform, she saw Biden as a “decent individual.”

She had been somewhat supportive of Trump’s plan to build a wall on the US-Mexico border but was horrified by his “zero tolerance” policy in which young migrant children were forcibly separated from parents.

She went online to find ways to get more involved politically, eventually finding a YouTube video on how to create a blog. In February, she started one, naming it nottrump.net.

As the protests against police brutality broke out, she reached out to a Black friend to learn more about what it meant to have “white privilege.”

“She gave me some homework,” Ms. Winters said, including some books and online resources.

During early voting, she volunteered for seven days at a voting site to answer questions and direct people to open booths. On the last day, a line snaked through the parking lot even before the polls opened. Ms. Winters was amazed at the turnout.

“I am ashamed to admit, this is a shift for me,” said Ms. Winters of her political involvement. “I’m 71 years old, and this is the first time I have gotten this engaged in a presidential election.”

She got some bad news Wednesday, however: She tested positive for COVID-19.

“The only place that I was around people that I don’t know was at early voting,” she recalled telling a health department contact tracer. She had been wearing a mask under an outdoor tent, but she said some voters had no face coverings.

Her husband, a Trump supporter, also tested positive. While neither have serious symptoms, they now have to quarantine together. Maybe they will have more time to resolve some of their political differences, Ms. Winters said.

She hadn’t worried much about the virus when she volunteered. But even if she had, she said, “I would have done it anyway. It was too important to me not to.” — Mica Rosenberg, Gabriella Borter, P.J. Huffstutter, Mimi Dwyer and Chris Kahn/Reuters

Biden’s trade policy will take aim at China, embrace allies

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joseph R. Biden has pledged to work more closely with US allies in confronting China on trade, and is seen as unlikely to roll back his predecessor’s tariffs on imported steel, aluminum, Chinese and European goods any time soon.

“I’ve been told that if you close your eyes, you might not be able to tell the difference” between the Biden and Trump trade agendas, said Nasim Fussell, former Republican trade counsel at the US Senate Finance Committee. “Biden’s not going to be quick to unravel some of these tariffs.”

Mr. Biden, who captured the presidency on Saturday after days of vote counting, was elected with the strong backing of trade unions and progressives who have been skeptical of past free trade deals, so he will face pressure to maintain protections for vulnerable industries, such as steel and aluminum.

His top economic priority will be to revive an economy slammed by the coronavirus pandemic, so trade agreements will likely take a back seat to stimulus efforts and infrastructure development.

Biden advisers say he will seek to end “artificial trade wars” with Europe and would immediately consult with US allies before deciding on the future of US tariffs on Chinese goods, in a bid for “collective leverage” against Beijing.

Former Trump and Obama administration trade officials say that in order to roll back tariffs on Chinese goods, Biden would likely demand the same basic concessions from China that Trump did: curbing massive subsidies to state-controlled firms, ending policies that force US companies to transfer technology to Chinese counterparts, and opening its digital services markets to US tech firms (another big Biden donor constituency).

“Any president will have these on their agenda, but they’re going to be really difficult,” said Jamieson Greer, who served until April as chief of staff at the US Trade Representative’s (USTR) office.

MORE PREDICTABLE

A Biden administration will be more predictable on trade after Trump’s abrupt shifts and tariff threats, said Wendy Cutler, a former USTR trade negotiator.

“The days of advisers scrambling to implement what they learn through presidential tweets will be in the past,” said Ms. Cutler, vice-president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

Mr. Biden is not seen likely to try to revive the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the 12-country Pacific Rim trade deal negotiated by the Obama administration but abandoned by Trump in 2017.

Instead, reforming the badly damaged World Trade Organization with new rules against subsidies and other non-market practices is viewed as a bigger priority. — David Lawder/Reuters

Biden wins U.S. presidency, supporters celebrate in deeply divided nation

WILMINGTON, Del./WASHINGTON – Democrat Joe Biden won the U.S. presidential election on Saturday after a bitter campaign, sparking street celebrations among his supporters in major cities even as President Donald Trump refused to accept defeat.

Biden’s victory in the battleground state of Pennsylvania put him over the threshold of 270 Electoral College votes he needed to clinch the presidency, ending four days of nail-biting suspense in a deeply divided country.

“With the campaign over, it’s time to put the anger and the harsh rhetoric behind us and come together as a nation. It’s time for America to unite. And to heal,” Biden said on Twitter.

Congratulations poured in from abroad, including from conservative British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, making it hard for Trump to push his repeated claims, without evidence, that the election was rigged against him.

Trump, who was golfing when the major television networks projected his rival had won, immediately accused Biden of “rushing to falsely pose as the winner.”

“This election is far from over,” he said in a statement.

Trump has filed a raft of lawsuits to challenge the results but elections officials in states across the country say there has been no evidence of significant fraud, and legal experts say Trump’s efforts are unlikely to succeed.

Biden was due to address the nation after 8 p.m. on Saturday (1 a.m. Sunday GMT) from his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.

As the news of his win broke, loud cheers erupted in the halls of the hotel where aides to the former vice president were staying.

Biden’s running mate, U.S. Senator Kamala Harris, tweeted a video of her calling Biden to congratulate him: “We did it Joe!” Harris will be the first woman, the first Black American and the first American of Asian descent to serve as vice president, the country’s No. 2 office.

Cheers and applause were heard around Washington, with people emerging onto balconies, yelling, honking car horns and banging pots. The wave of noise in the nation’s capital built as more people learned of the news. Some sobbed. Music began to play, “We are the Champions” blared.

In the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant, some people erupted in screams of joy as word spread. Several residents danced on the fire escape of one building, cheering while others screamed “yes!” as they passed by.

Trump supporters reacted with a mix of disappointment, suspicion and resignation, highlighting the difficult task that Biden faces winning over Americans in more rural areas who believe Trump was the first president to govern with their interests at heart.

“It’s sickening and sad,” said Kayla Doyle, a 35-year-old Trump supporter and manager of the GridIron Pub on Main Street in the small town of Mifflintown, Pennsylvania. “I think it’s rigged.”

Angry pro-Trump “Stop the Steal” demonstrators gathered at state capitol buildings in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Arizona. Protesters in Phoenix chanted “We want audits!” One speaker told the crowd: “We will win in court!”

There were no signs of the violence or turmoil many had feared, and the pro-Trump protests mostly faded as the results sunk in. Prior to the election, Trump refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he lost, and he falsely declared victory long before counting was complete.

Former and present political leaders also weighed in, including congratulations from former Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican U.S. Senator Mitt Romney. Trump ally Senator Lindsey Graham called on the Justice Department to investigate claims of voting irregularities.

The networks’ declaration for Biden came amid concerns within Trump’s team about the strategy going forward and pressure on him to pick a professional legal team to outline where they believe voter fraud took place and provide evidence.

Trump’s allies made it clear the president does not plan to concede anytime soon.

One Trump loyalist said Trump simply was not ready to admit defeat even though there would not be enough ballots thrown out in a recount to change the outcome. “There’s a mathematical certainty that he’s going to lose,” the loyalist said.

Biden’s win ends Trump’s chaotic four-year presidency in which he played down a deadly pandemic, imposed harsh immigration policies, launched a trade war with China, tore up international agreements and deeply divided many American families with his inflammatory rhetoric, lies and willingness to abandon democratic norms.

On Saturday, Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien urged supporters to be ready to attend protests or rallies that the campaign is “propping up around the country,” according to a person familiar with the situation.

“At a moment’s instance, we may need your help at protests in your states, to make sure the president is represented and our side of the argument is shown,” Stepien said on a call with Trump allies and surrogates.

DIFFICULT TASK AHEAD

For Biden’s supporters, it was fitting that Pennsylvania ensured his victory. He was born in the industrial city of Scranton in the state’s northeast and, touting his middle-class credentials, secured the Democratic nomination with a promise to win back working-class voters who had supported Trump in 2016.

He launched his campaign in Pittsburgh last year and wrapped it up with a rally there on Tuesday. It was a tight race in industrial states such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, but Biden did enough to prevail.

He faced unprecedented challenges. These included Republican-led efforts to limit mail-in voting at a time when a record number of people were due to vote by mail because of the pandemic, which has killed more than 236,000 people in the United States.

When Biden enters the White House on Jan. 20, the oldest person to assume the office at age 78, he likely will face a difficult task governing in a deeply polarized Washington, underscored by a record nationwide voter turnout.

Both sides characterized the 2020 election as one of the most crucial in U.S. history, as important as votes during the 1860s Civil War and the 1930s Great Depression.

For months, officials on both sides raised the spectre of the United States not being able to pull off a fair vote. In the end, however, voting at the polls proceeded with limited disruption.

Biden’s victory was driven by strong support from groups including women, African Americans, white voters with college degrees and city-dwellers. He beat Trump by more than four million votes in the nationwide popular vote count.

Biden, who has spent half a century in public life as a U.S. senator and then vice president under Trump’s predecessor Obama, will inherit a nation in turmoil over the coronavirus pandemic and the related economic slowdown as well as protests against racism and police brutality.

Biden has said his first priority will be developing a plan to contain and recover from the pandemic, promising to improve access to testing and, unlike Trump, to heed the advice of leading public health officials and scientists.

In addition to taming the health crisis, Biden faces a huge challenge remedying the economic hardship caused by the pandemic. Some 10 million Americans thrown out of work during coronavirus lockdowns remain idled, and federal relief programs have expired.

The U.S. economy remains technically in recession, and prospects are bleak for a return to work for millions, especially in service industries such as hospitality and entertainment where job losses hit women and minorities particularly hard.

Biden also has pledged to restore a sense of normalcy to the White House after a presidency in which Trump praised authoritarian foreign leaders, disdained longstanding global alliances, refused to disavow white supremacists and cast doubt on the legitimacy of the U.S. election system.

Despite his victory, Biden will have failed to deliver the sweeping repudiation to Trump that Democrats had hoped for, reflecting the deep support the president still retains.

This could complicate Biden’s campaign promises to reverse key parts of Trump’s legacy. These include deep Trump tax cuts that especially benefited corporations and the wealthy, hardline immigration policies, efforts to dismantle the 2010 Obamacare healthcare law and Trump’s abandonment of such international agreements as the Paris climate accord and Iran nuclear deal.

Should Republicans keep control of the U.S. Senate, they would likely block large parts of his legislative agenda, including expanding healthcare and fighting climate change. That prospect could depend on the outcome of four undecided Senate races, including two in Georgia that will not be resolved until runoffs in January.

For Trump, 74, it was an unsettling end after an astonishing political rise. The real estate developer who established a nationwide brand as a reality TV personality upset Democrat Hillary Clinton to win the presidency in 2016 in his first run for elected office. Four years later, he becomes the first U.S. president to lose a re-election bid since Republican George H.W. Bush in 1992.

Despite his draconian immigration curbs, Trump made surprising inroads with Latino voters. He also won battleground states such as Florida, where his pledge to prioritize the economy even if it increased the threat of the coronavirus appeared to have resonated.

In the end, though, Trump failed to significantly widen his appeal beyond a committed core of rural and working-class white voters who embraced his right-wing populism and “America First” nationalism.

Duane Fitzhugh, a 52-year-old teacher celebrating Biden’s victory outside the Trump Hotel in Washington, said it was as if an evil enchantment was being lifted.

“It’s like a pall fell over the country four years ago and we’ve been waiting years for it to end,” he said. – Reuters

DPWH reports 25 contractors blacklisted since 2016; Duterte tells corrupt officials to ‘resign now’

THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) reported on Friday that it has so far blacklisted 25 contractors since 2016 as President Rodrigo R. Duterte again rebuked the agency and told corrupt officials to “resign now.”

Mr. Duterte, in a televised address Friday evening, said “ghost projects” are the most rampant source of corruption, referring to infrastructure programs that do not get delivered.

“We are still investigating DPWH. Ang DPWH ang pinaka-racket diyan is ‘yung ghost project. So walang delivery, ghost project. Marami ‘yan (In the DPWH, their main racket is ghost projects. There is no delivery of the program, ghost project. There’s a lot of that in DPWH),” he said.

DPWH Secretary Mark A. Villar, meanwhile, said the blacklisting of contractors is tied to the sanctioning of officials who are colluding with them.

“This is a testament that collusion between contractors and DPWH officials is not being tolerated. If any of our implementing offices are tolerating erring contractors by letting them continue with their projects without sanctioning them, the Department will not hesitate in imposing disciplinary action against them,” Mr. Villar said in a statement on Friday.

Mr. Villar noted that the DPWH has banned the biggest number of contractors in the last four years compared to five from 2010 to June 2016, and eight in 2005 to 2010.

The DPWH has also adopted new systems such as the use of drones and satellite photography or geotagging for real-time monitoring of projects.

Mr. Duterte, who recently ordered a government-wide anti-corruption drive, has repeatedly pointed to the public works department as among the agencies with the most fraudulent activities.

At the same time, the President has cleared Mr. Villar from involvement in the anomalies.

“For the longest time, there was not much investigation being undertaken, but those involved in those anomalies, I advise you to resign now… because when the time comes, I will throw the book at you, even the kitchen sink,” Mr. Duterte said.

Palace Spokesperson Harry L. Roque, in a briefing on Friday, said the President’s “mega task force” assigned to probe corruption in the entire government will be responsible for auditing DPWH projects. — Gillian M. Cortez

Major brands vow to maintain prices for ‘noche buena’ goods

SEVERAL manufacturers of food products traditionally used for the Christmas eve feast, or noche buena, have committed not to raise prices this year, according to the Trade department.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez, in a mobile message to reporters on Friday, said companies behind major brands such as Lady’s Choice, Clara Ole, Alaska, and UFC will keep prices stable amid the economic crisis prompted by the coronavirus pandemic.

Lady’s Choice is a spreads and dressings brand from Unilever Philippines, while UFC is a catsup brand from Nutri-Asia, Inc. Clara Ole is a company selling tomato and spaghetti sauces, and Alaska Milk Corp. sells condensed milk.

Meat processors CDO Foodsphere Inc., Virginia Food, Inc., and Century Pacific Food Inc. will also refrain from price increases, Mr. Lopez said.

“(We are) expecting more brands to join the move to keep prices stable,” he said.

The Trade department last month said it was evaluating applications from food companies to increase the prices of goods to cover higher operating costs.

Mr. Lopez had advised consumers to select “value for money” products. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Health dep’t to adjust protocols on Avigan trials to reach 100 patients; 2,092 new COVID-19 cases recorded

THE Health department on Friday said it will adjust protocols for its trials on the anti-flu drug Avigan after facing challenges in recruiting patients, with so far just four participants out of the 100 target.

In an online media forum on Friday, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Singh-Vergeire said the problem is getting patients with mild cases of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) as not many of them are being admitted in hospitals.

“The trials are done in hospital settings on mild cases but we know right now, there are not many mild cases being admitted to the hospital,” she said, adding that there has also been a decline in the overall number of COVID-19 cases.

Ms. Vergeire said the clinical trial team has approved the recruitment expansion in princple.

“While we are waiting for the revision on protocol, we are continuing the existing protocol,” she said.

New COVID-19 patients recorded on Friday stood at 2,092, bringing the total to 391,809, of which 34,374 were active cases, based on Health department data.

Of the active cases, 83.6% were mild cases while 9.8% were asymptomatic. Critical and severe cases were at 4.2% and 2.4%, respectively.

There were 462 new recoveries, bringing the total to 349,974.

Total mortality count reached 7,461 with 52 new deaths.

Meanwhile, Science and Technology Secretary Fortunato T. dela Peña said in the same forum that the World Health Organization (WHO) has yet to give a specific date on when the Philippines will take part in the Solidarity Trials for COVID-19 vaccines.

Wala pa silang inaannounce kung aling mga vaccines ang makakasama at kung anong protocol ang susundin (They have not announced what vaccines will be included and what protocols will be followed),” he said.

Mr. Dela Peña, however, said they still expect the trials in the country to begin by December. — Gillian M. Cortez

Red Cross chair says Duterte misled in ‘greedy’ remark

THE Philippine Red Cross chairperson, Senator Richard J. Gordon, did not take offense in President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s remark that the humanitarian organization is “greedy,” but warned that the country’s leader should be more cautious with his public remarks as he could be “misled” by some of his Cabinet officials.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte slammed Red Cross on Thursday evening in a televised meeting with some Cabinet members, calling it “mukhang pera” for halting testing services for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) after collectibles from state insurer Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) ballooned to about P1 billion.

“I’m not offended,” Mr. Gordon said in a press conference Friday, “I think the President should really be careful. Sometimes he is not aware that his statement is not really presidential.”

Mr. Gordon alleged that Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III, who sits as PhilHealth board chair, is possibly feeding the President wrong information. “I think he was misled by the statement. Because the way the predicate was laid by Secretary Duque was wrong,” said the senator.

A majority of senators, including administration allies but excluding Mr. Gordon, filed a resolution in April calling for Mr. Duque’s resignation citing his poor handling of the COVID-19 outbreak.

Mr. Gordon said PhilHealth has so far paid P700 million of its dues to the Red Cross, and P377 million remains outstanding.

TESTING PRICE RANGE

Meanwhile, the Department of Health (DoH) on Friday said a price range for COVID-19 tests will be released possibly by next week.

In an online forum with reporters on Friday, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Singh-Vergeire said the DoH and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) are “studying carefully” the price range for testing kits.

She added that a final draft of the joint circular is already with DTI, and this will be presented to stakeholders before issuance.

DoH said the price range setting is based on the World Health Organization’s laboratory test costing tool, maximum drug retail price model, and suggested retail price based on a survey.

Mr. Duterte recently signed Executive Order No. 118, which ordered the DoH and DTI to formulate the price range on COVID-19 testing that “is just, equitable, and sensitive to all stakeholders.”

The directive was issued following reports on high costs of COVID-19 tests in some health facilities.

DIALYSIS

In another health-related development, Quezon City Rep. Alfred D. Vargas appealed to PhilHealth to resume its extended free dialysis program immediately, saying its decision to temporarily halt its promised 90-session limit hurts patients who have been affected by the pandemic.

“It is unconscionable to have our indigent dialysis patients scrounge around for money amid record unemployment and rising poverty during this pandemic,” Mr. Vargas said in a statement on Friday.

Republic Act No. 11494 or the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act, which recognizes the existence of a national emergency and economic disruption due to a coronavirus pandemic, provided PhilHealth the basis to for “the provision of special privileges such as exemption from the 45-days limit or the 90- session limit per calendar year in the case of hemodialysis patients.”

House Minority Deputy Speaker Carlos Isagani T. Zarate said should PhilHealth and the DoH refuse to act on the issue, the House Makabayan bloc will initiate a legislative probe. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza and Gillian M. Cortez

New management structure set on COVID-19 vaccination program

A NEW management structure for the coronavirus vaccination program has been formalized with the appointed “vaccine czar,” Secretary Carlito G. Galvez Jr., as head.

Palace Spokesperson Harry L. Roque announced Friday that the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) has issued Resolution No. 83 creating the COVID-19 Vaccine Cluster.

"As a result of this restructuring, the COVID-19 Immunization Program Management Organizational Structure, which was approved under IATF Resolution No. 82 last October 26, 2020 was abolished," he said.

The Department of Health was originally designated to lead the vaccination task force.

Mr. Galvez, who has been functioning as chief implementer of the national task force program on the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), was appointed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte as vaccine czar earlier this week.

His new responsibilities include overseeing the procurement, storage, and distribution of COVD-19 vaccines. — Gillian M. Cortez

Manila Bay water quality monitoring system launched

By Angelica Y. Yang

THE Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), in partnership with the SM Group and with support from the Pasay City government, unveiled a water quality monitoring project in Manila Bay on Friday as part of the agency’s mandate to rehabilitate the polluted waters.

The program involves land- and marine-based monitoring probes, including seven water quality buoys, that will collect real-time data on the depth, temperature, conductivity, pH levels, dissolved oxygen and turbidity of the bay.

Four buoys are scheduled to be deployed off the Baywalk area, said DENR chief Roy A. Cimatu during the launching ceremony held at the SM By the Bay.

The project is in line with the Supreme Court’s order to restore the bay’s water quality to “recreational water class 1” or “Class SB” levels.

Coastal and marine waters under the Class SB level are those deemed suitable for bathing, swimming, skin diving, and other forms of contact recreation.

“We have an annual obligation to the Supreme Court on how far we have complied with the mandamus… we can do this by monitoring the waters,” the DENR chief said.

Data on the water’s various parameters can be viewed in real-time through a cloud-based platform connected to the water quality monitors.

The water quality probes, however, cannot capture other parameters such as fecal coliform level, total suspended solids, oil and grease, and E.coli, among others.

To monitor these factors, the DENR said there will be a monthly sampling and lab analysis of water samples.

Pasay City Mayor Imelda G. Calixto-Rubiano, for her part, said the equipment are important in implementing a scientific method of monitoring.

Meanwhile, Mr. Cimatu, when sought for comment on the controversial use of artificial white sand as part of Manila Bay’s rehabilitation, said DENR is “prepared to defend their decision.”

Better or worse? SWS survey shows mixed expectations on quality of life

AN almost equal percentage of adult Filipinos expect their personal quality-of- life in the next 12 months to either improve, worsen, or stay the same, according to the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) poll.

The SWS report released Friday showed 33% of adult Filipinos see things will stay the same amid a coronavirus pandemic, 32% were “optimists” or expecting their lives to improve, while 30% were “pessimists” or anticipate worse conditions. The remaining 6% are unsure about the next 12 months.

SWS interviewed 1,249 people using mobile phone and computer-assisted telephone interviewing from Sept. 17 to 20 for the poll, which had an error margin of ±3 points.

“Compared to a typical face-to-face interview which takes approximately 90 minutes to complete, a phone interview has a maximum limit of 20 minutes due to respondent phone-fatigue. Thus, the SWS September 17-20, 2020 National Mobile Phone Survey questionnaire contained fewer items than the regular quarterly Social Weather Report Survey,” the report noted.

The questionnaire included items on how people were dealing with the pandemic, core SWS indicators such as Hunger and Quality of Life for historical comparison, and selected items on contemporary Philippine issues. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

ASEAN chief justices to share knowledge on judgements, court processes

THE chief justices of the 10-member Association of SouthEast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have committed to further strengthen knowledge-sharing on court processes, enforcement of judgements in both civil and commercial cases, and handling disputes of international interest.

The Council of ASEAN Chief Justices (CACJ) on Thursday signed the Hanoi Declaration, an agreement on judicial cooperation through the conduct of a masterclass for ASEAN judges and judicial officers on Hague conventions concerning the taking of evidence abroad in civil or commercial matters, and the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgements in civil or commercial matters.

Under the declaration, the chief justices also agreed to create a working group to study the current legal framework within each ASEAN jurisdiction governing the taking of evidence for foreign proceedings and develop a model rule.

The signatories were Chief Justice Diosdado M. Peralta of the Philippines, Chief Justice Steven Chong Wan Oon of Brunei Darussalam, Vice President You Ottara as representative of the President of the Supreme Court of Kingdom of Cambodia, Chief Justice Muhammad Syarifuddin of Indonesia, Vice President Bounkhouang Thavisack as representative of the President of the People’s Supreme Court of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Chief Justice Tun Tengku Maimun binti Tuan Mat of Malaysia, Chief Justice Htun Htun Oo of Myanmar, Judge Lee Seiu Kin as representative of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Singapore, Metinee Chalodhorn as President of the Supreme Court of Thailand, and Chief Justice Nguyen Hoa Binh of Vietnam.

In a statement on Friday, the Supreme Court Public Information Office said the declaration complements the high court’s approval of the guidelines on the implementation of the Hague Service Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial Documents in Civil and Commercial Matters, which is expected to address court delays and simplify the serving of summons and other documents in a foreign jurisdiction.

“The Guidelines shall govern the operation and implementation of the Hague Service Convention in the country, insofar as they concern judicial documents in civil or commercial matters,” the information office said.

The CACJ acknowledged that the “the Working Group on Cross-Border Disputes Involving Children has (a) began to explore the possibility of developing a common set of values, aspirations and principles for ASEAN Judiciaries in cases of cross-border child disputes within ASEAN; and (b) agreed to explore holding the 3rd ASEAN Family Judges Forum in conjunction with the 2022 HCCH Judicial Roundtable on the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction and the 1996 Hague Convention on Parental Responsibility and Protection of Children.” During the gathering hosted by the Judiciary of Vietnam, Mr. Peralta shared the Philippine Judiciary’s reduction of bail and granting recognizance for indigent persons deprived of liberty, which addresses the need to further decongest overcrowded jails and detention facilities to further prevent the spread of the lethal coronavirus.

Mr. Peralta also shared that the local judiciary already allowed the online filing of complaints or criminal information as well as posting of bail, and started the pilot testing of hearings of criminal cases through video conferencing.

The 9th CACJ meeting will be hosted next year by the Judiciary of Indonesia. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza