We’ve got you covered from Hollywood to Broadway...and Online!
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Volume 19 - No. 25 • 14 Pages
T h e F i l i p i n o A m e r i ca n C o m m u n it y N e ws pap e r
Volume 18 - No. 17 • 2 Sections – 16 Pages
J un e 2 6 - j u ly 2 , 2 0 2 0
1799 Old Bayshore Hwy, Suite 136, Burlingame, CA 94010 • Tel: (650) 689-5160 • Fax: (650) 239-9253 • www.asianjournal.com
Also published in LOS ANGELES, LAS VEGAS, New York/NEW JERSEY
Trump signs order temporarily freezing DATELINE USA All California residents worker visas, prefers ‘merit-based system’ required to wear face from the AJPress NEWS TEAM across America
coverings in public
The California Department of Public Health on Thursday, June 18 released updated guidance that requires Californians to wear a face-covering in high-risk settings. A growing body of scientific research has shown that people with no or few symptoms of COVID-19 can still spread the disease and that the use of face coverings, combined with physical distancing and frequent hand washing, will reduce the spread of COVID-19. “Science shows that face coverings and masks work,” said Governor Gavin Newsom. “They are critical to keeping those who are around you safe, keeping businesses open
by Klarize
Medenilla AJPress
CERTAIN foreign workers will be barred from seeking employment in the United States as President Donald Trump on Monday, June 22 signed an executive order that places a temporary freeze on work visas through the end of the year.
Those affected include the H-1B visas for tech workers, H-2B visas for low-skill jobs, H-4 visas for spouses of certain visa holders, J visas for those in work and student exchange programs and L visas for “intracompany transfers.” According to a White House proclamation, the administration would be “moving to a merit-based immigration system” but the president also cited
Trump, Biden campaigns to address AAPI community during virtual presidential town hall by Christina
u PAGE 3
Critics of the new addition to the curriculum argue the state should not impose academic decisions
u PAGE 4
M. Oriel
AJPress
CA Senate votes in favor of ethnic studies requirement for Cal State Univ. students UNDER new state legislation passed last week, students attending California State University (CSU) schools will now be required to take courses in ethnic studies. Starting in the 2021-2022 academic year, the CSU is required to offer courses focusing on race and ethnicity, particularly implementing comprehensive courses on Native Americans, African Americans, Asian
the economic downturn caused by the COVID-19 pandemic as a reason to preserve jobs for Americans. “American workers compete against foreign nationals for jobs in every sector of our economy,” the White House wrote, adding that the “economic shocks” reverberating across the country are “likely u PAGE 2
MANILA MARKS 449TH YEAR. Manila City Mayor Francisco “Isko Moreno” Domagoso (center) and Vice Mayor Dra. Honey Lacuna (right) lead the wreath-laying ceremony at the shrine of Rajah Soliman along Roxas Boulevard on Wednesday, June 24. Manila is celebrating its 449th founding anniversary. PNA photo by Avito C. Dalan
WITH the United States presidential election less than five months away, the campaigns of President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will court Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) voters — considered the fastest-growing segment of eligible voters in the United States — in a virtual town hall on Saturday, June 27. Biden will be present to directly make his pitch, while former Governor of Guam Eddie Baza Calvo will serve as a surrogate for Trump in the livestreamed event hosted by APIAVote in partnership with community organizations. Rep. Judy Chu (D-Calif.), chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, will provide remarks. Journalists Amna Nawaz of PBS News Hour and Vicky Nguyen of NBC will moderate. “This two-hour event will allow the candidates and campaigns to present their vision in how that addresses the concerns of Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander folks,” APIAVote Executive Direc-
u PAGE 4
SC junks quo warranto petition vs ABS-CBN Fil-Am leaders in California denounce racist COVID-19 moniker used by Trump by Ritchel
Mendiola AJPress
THE Supreme Court on Tuesday, June 23, dismissed Solicitor General Jose Calida’s quo warranto petition against broadcast giant ABS-CBN on the “ground of mootness.” “I was able to confirm with Chief Justice [Diosdado] Peralta that the Supreme Court dismissed today during their en
banc meeting the quo warranto petition filed by the Solicitor General against ABS-CBN Corporation on the ground of mootness,” said SC Public Information Chief Atty. Brian Keith Hosaka. He also confirmed that the court still hasn’t issued a resolution on the franchise case of ABS-CBN Convergence, which operates ABS-CBN Mobile. ABS-CBN Convergence expired on March 17, before the
franchise of ABS-CBN Corporation did. “The complaint against ABSCBN Convergence remains pending,” Hosaka said. “Let us wait for the resolution of the court on this matter, as for the reason for their action,” he added. Malacañang, for its part, said it respects the High Court’s decision. u PAGE 2
Fil-Am DACA recipients breathe a sigh of relief as US Supreme Court halts ending of program by Rae
Ann Varona AJPress
A U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Thursday, June 18 stopped President Donald Trump’s administration from rescinding a program that protected more than 800,000 young undocumented immigrants, or “Dreamers,” who came to the U.S. as children from deportation. In a narrow 5-4 vote, the court held that the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) effort to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was “arbitrary and capricious” in that it violated the Administrative Procedure Act. “I woke up to my Slack notifications going off like wildfire,” Set Hernandez Rongkilyo, an un-
documented Fil-Am filmmaker and community organizer, told the Asian Journal. Originally from Caloocan, Philippines, Rongkilyo came to the U.S. from Japan with his family when he was 12 years old. It wasn’t until he began school at the University of California, Los Angeles when he met other undocumented people. In the days leading up to the ruling announcement, Rongkilyo had been organizing with a group of undocumented people across the country. Like many, he was also protesting with the Black Lives Matter Movement taking place with a backdrop of the still current COVID-19 pandemic. “I was shocked, but I was so tired. I didn’t even have time
to process emotionally,” added Rongkilyo, admitting that he wasn’t expecting a decision to go in favor of undocumented immigrants. While the ruling does not provide permanent protections, the decision has been a sigh of relief for the hundreds of thousands who have grown up in the U.S. from a young age — many of whom are approaching their 30s. Of the current 650,000 DACA recipients in the U.S., roughly 200,000 recipients are in California with about 85,000 in Los Angeles. The majority come from Mexico and other Central or South American countries, but many were also brought from Asia including the Philipu PAGE 2
by Klarize
Medenilla AJPress
In response to President Donald Trump’s usage of a racist term related to the coronavirus, Filipino American Assemblymember Rob Bonta (DOakland) and California Medical Association President Dr. Peter N. Bretan, M.D. released a joint statement denouncing the president’s choice of words. Trump recently used the racist term “kung flu” at his rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma on Saturday, June 20 as a reference to the COVID-19 virus’ origins in China. Since the beginning of the pandemic, Asian and Asian Americans in the United States — and even across the globe — have been the targets of harassment, violence and hate incidents because of the virus’ original association. “President Trump’s racist dog whistle remarks have no place in our politics or in the house of medicine. Comments like those made by the president last weekend at a political rally in Tulsa, OK fuel racist stereotypes about COVID-19 that have harmful impacts in our communities and in the practice of medicine,” Bonta and Bretan wrote in their statement. As Bonta and Bretan noted,
community members and leaders of the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) community have denounced the use of “Wuhan virus,” “Chinese virus,” and “kung flu” as a contributor to the string of anti-Asian hate since the beginning of the pandemic, as previously reported in the Asian Journal. When Trump used the term at his Saturday rally, it was met with raucous applause from the 6,200 supporters in attendance. “These remarks promote hatred toward the API community,” they continued. “Asian-Americans have been at the forefront of providing quality health care to all Californians. While Californians of Asian descent make up 14% of our state’s population, we comprise 28% of the state’s physicians. The president’s rac-
u PAGE 3
Filipino American Assemblymember Rob Bonta (D-Oakland)