November 11-13, 2020 Volume 30 - No. 89 • 2 Sections - 14 Pages
‘THIS IS A NEW BEGINNING’
Fil-Am voters celebrate Biden-Harris victory, seek COVID-19 recovery These are some of the priorities Filipino American supporters are pushing under LEADING the country out President-elect Joe Biden’s first of the COVID-19 pandemic. 100 days in office. The former Supporting essential workers. vice president’s win comes as Addressing racial inequalities. the United States hit over 10.1 Tackling the climate crisis. million positive COVID-19 inCreating a pathway to citizen- fections and the grim toll of ship for undocumented resi- 238,863 deaths and counting. dents. For Lillie Madali of Atlanta, by CHRISTINA
M. ORIEL
AJPress
DATELINE
Georgia who helped mobilize Fil-Am voters in her region, Saturday’s results “meant hope for the future.” “For the many nurses in my family, risking their lives, working on the front lines against the coronavirus pandemic, the victory meant that we would soon VICTORY. U.S. President-elect Joseph R. Biden II and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris delivered victory speeches on Saturday night, have competent leadership and November 7 at the Chase Center in Wilmington, Delaware. They were joined by their spouses, Dr. Jill Biden (right) and Douglas Emhoff (far
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USA
The Trump administration lodges several lawsuits alleging voter fraud, insufficient ballot count operations in key states
2 Fil-Ams win re-election in Claremont, Anaheim
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‘It’s okay to ask’: Raising awareness of lung cancer among Asian Americans
Photo courtesy of the Biden-Harris campaign
Filipino Trump supporters sound off on the president’s legal challenge of election results
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
TWO Filipino Americans came out victorious during the 2020 general election as they won re-election for their respective positions in Southern California. Corey Calaycay was re-elected to his fifth term as a member of the Claremont City Council, representing the first district. “As the only candidate who possesses in-
left), who will be the country’s first second gentleman.
by KLARIZE
MEDENILLA AJPress
About 350 individuals, including Fil-Am supporters for President Donald Trump, gathered in front of the Clark County Election Department in Las Vegas, Nevada on Sunday afternoon, November 8 to protest the state’s results in the presidential race. Photo courtesy of Asian Industry B2B
several legal suits alleging voter irregularities, suggesting a preALTHOUGH mainstream me- mature call of the results. It’s important to note that aldia across the world reported President-elect Joe Biden’s vic- though media outlets have antory in the 2020 presidential nounced Biden as the winner, election on Saturday, Nov. 7, the results are still not official the Trump campaign has lodged as of press time — and this is a
standard for any election. It usually takes days and sometimes weeks before any election is officially complete and the votes are certified by individual states’ secretaries of state (the position that acts
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US tops 10 million COVID-19 cases by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
JUST 10 days after hitting 9 million cases of the novel coronavirus, the United States surpassed 10 million confirmed infections this week. The milestone happened on Monday, NoIN an attempt to challenge the cultural stig- vember 9, after Johns Hopkins University ma associated with lung cancer, change ex- recorded more than 100,000 new cases. Its pectations, and empower the lung cancer and death toll, meanwhile, passed 237,000. Asian American communities, a panel of canThe U.S., with about 4% of the world’s cer experts gathered at a virtual webcast on population, accounts for about one-fifth of October 29 as part of AstraZeneca’s “It’s Okay the 50.4 million cases of COVID-19 reported To Ask” educational lung cancer program. worldwide. The “It’s Okay To Ask” program was deThe same day, drugmaker Pfizer anu PAGE A4 nounced that interim results in human tri-
als showed their COVID-19 vaccine was more than 90% effective. “Today is a great day for science and humanity. The first set of results from our Phase 3 COVID-19 vaccine trial provides the initial evidence of our vaccine’s ability to prevent COVID-19,” Dr. Albert Bourla, Pfizer Chairman and CEO, said in a statement. “We are reaching this critical milestone in our vaccine development program at a time when the world needs it most with infection rates setting new records, hospitals nearing over-capacity and economies struggling to reopen. With today’s news, we are a significant step closer to providing people around Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte the world with a much-needed breakthrough
Malacañang photo by Richard Madelo
Palace hopes Biden admin will In historic ‘firsts,’ Todd Gloria set to be San Diego’s next mayor relax US immigration policies M. ORIEL
AJPress
Todd Gloria, 42, becomes San Diego’s first openly gay and first person of color mayor. Photo courtesy of Todd Gloria
IN an election cycle with many historic firsts across the country, San Diego has its own barrierbreaking moment with the first openly gay and first person of color to lead the city. Todd Gloria, who is Filipino, Latino and Native American, will serve as the mayor of California’s second-largest city and the U.S.’ eighth largest city after opponent Barbara Bry conceded in the race on Monday, November 9. Gloria, the current assemblymember for the state’s 78th Assembly district, captured 56.13% of the vote (340,632) versus Bry’s 43.87% (266,231), according to the San Diego County Registrar
of Voters’ update on Monday. Gloria thanked Bry in a Twitter post and said it was time to “come together as San Diegans to resolve the many challenges we face.” “Voters have embraced my vision of creating a City that works #ForAllofUs,” he wrote. “It’s now time to turn that vision into reality. I am honored to be the next Mayor of San Diego.” The 42-year-old Democrat was first elected as a member of the San Diego City Council in 2008, and was interim mayor from August 2013 to March 2014 when outgoing Mayor Kevin Falconer took office. When he was elected to the state Assembly in 2016, he was the second person of Filipino
by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
WHILE Malacañang expects no major changes in the United States’ foreign policy under President-elect Joe Biden, it hopes for a shift in the U.S. immigration policy that will treat Filipino immigrants better. “Sa tingin ko ang Amerika din naman ay consistent sa foreign policy, so walang rin major changes yan (I think America is consistent with its foreign policy so there will be no major changes there),” Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque said Monday, November 9. “Pero...pagdating sa larangan ng immigration, inaasahan natin na sana na magkaroon ng policy u PAGE A3 shift under a Democratic adminis-
tration dahil napakadami ng Pilipino na naninirahan sa Estados Unidos (But...in the area of immigration, we expect there will be a policy shift under a Democratic administration because there are many Filipinos living in the United States),” he added. Malacañang also hopes the new leadership will help undocumented Filipino workers in the U.S. get a chance to become legal residents. There were approximately 313,000 undocumented Filipinos from 2012 to 2016, according to Migration Policy Institute (MPI) estimates, making up about 3% of the country’s total undocumented population. “Bagamat mayroon iilan sa kanila ay ‘yung mga tinatawag natin TNT o mga iligal, ay napak-
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