Politics
Biden Secures Democratic Nomination for Presidential Rematch Against Trump
(CTN News) – President Joe Biden, who began office intending to stabilise a nation convulsed by the coronavirus pandemic and the Jan. 6 insurgency, earned a second straight Democratic nomination Tuesday, setting up an all-but-certain rematch with his predecessor, whom he blames for destabilising the country.
Biden became his party’s presumed nominee after winning enough delegates in Georgia. That increased Biden’s lead over 1,968 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago this August, where his candidature will be officially announced. Former President Donald Trump is anticipated to capture the Republican nomination soon.
Biden, who ran for president 37 years ago, faced no significant Democratic challengers in his reelection campaign at 81. This is despite his low approval ratings and a lack of voter enthusiasm for his presidency, partly attributed to his age.
A recent survey by The Associated Press-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research found that only 38% of U.S. adults approve of Biden’s performance as president, while 61% disapprove.
Biden and his backers are banking that, despite their reservations, his Democratic base and independent voters terrified of a second Trump administration will support him during a brutal seven-and-a-half-month general election.
Financial Advantage and Campaign Strategy of Biden
The campaign’s focus on Trump’s perceived flaws, paired with his attacks on Biden, creates a lacklustre campaign that many Americans oppose but must vote on in November.
Biden has framed the contest as a war for freedom, domestically and internationally. He contrasts his support for Ukraine and efforts to strengthen NATO with Trump’s admiration for Russian President Vladimir Putin, as well as his proposal that Russia might strike NATO nations he considers delinquent.
“We face a sobering reality,” Biden said Tuesday after securing the nomination. “Freedom and democracy are under threat here at home in a level they have not been since the Civil War. Donald Trump is waging a campaign of resentment, revenge, and retribution that undermines the whole concept of America.”
He said, “I believe that the American people will choose to keep us moving into the future.”
Biden is opposing GOP-led moves to restrict abortion rights, which have also threatened in vitro fertilisation operations.
Democrats attribute their recent political success to the backlash caused by the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the federal right to abortion. Trump picked three of the justices who voted to overturn Roe v. Wade and claimed credit for the decision.
Despite significant accomplishments and what his friends regard as advantages on important topics, Biden faces a rematch with Trump with flaws he can’t readily address.
During his first two years in office, Biden implemented long-term infrastructure improvements and increased funding for the semiconductor industry. The Senate confirmed Biden’s Supreme Court nominee, making Ketanji Brown Jackson the first Black woman to become a justice.
Following the COVID-19 epidemic, the United States experienced economic growth and low unemployment rates. Biden approved revising the Electoral Count Act to make it more difficult for presidential losers to challenge election results in Congress following Trump’s 2020 election loss based on unsubstantiated fraud accusations.
Biden administration officials urged Putin against invading Ukraine and declassified intelligence to rally international support for the country. Ukraine has resisted Russia’s intentions to replace President Volodymyr Zelenskyy with a puppet administration, relying on weapons and information from the US and Western Europe. As a result, the country has maintained control over most of its land.
The disastrous U.S. pullout from Afghanistan created vivid pictures of desperate people fleeing the land that American troops fought to secure for two decades but lost in a matter of months to the Taliban. A suicide explosion outside Kabul airport killed 13 US forces during the evacuation of American civilians and allies.
Inflationary pressures eroded income gains for many Americans as the economy expanded. Inflation has fallen since its peak two years ago, but only 34% of US adults agree with Biden’s handling of the economy, according to an AP-NORC poll.
Despite campaigning to reverse Trump’s immigration crackdown, Biden’s White House struggled to process record numbers of migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border without authorization, often thousands per day. Republican states bused migrants to Democratic-led cities, which struggled to accommodate them.
Biden’s campaign argues that the White House has reduced inflation and presented border legislation, which Republicans helped negotiate but ultimately rejected.
However, the president’s age remains one of people’s most serious concerns about his candidature.
Biden, already the oldest president in American history, would be 86 if he served his whole second term. Regardless of the outcome of the November election, he or Trump would become the oldest leader ever sworn in on Inauguration Day 2025.
Just hours before earning the nomination, Biden faced hours of evidence from a special counsel who reviewed his mishandling of confidential documents and found that he couldn’t charge the president due to forgetfulness. Robert Hur, the prosecutor, described Biden in his report as “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”
The president’s age has become a major vulnerability on the campaign trail, though many people have similar reservations about Trump, who is 77. According to the most recent AP-NORC survey, 63% are sceptical of Biden’s mental abilities to function effectively as president. And 57% answered the same about Trump.
In both his State of the Union speech and a new campaign video, Biden emphasised the need for experience while also injecting humour.
As he told Congress this week, “I know I don’t look it, but I’ve been around for a while. When you reach my age, certain things become clearer than ever.”
Biden claims he has shown to be a more effective leader than Trump. He and the Democrats also have a substantial monetary edge over Trump and the Republicans heading into November, as the president raised $10 million in the 24 hours following his address.
There is evidence that Trump’s campaign’s focus on Trump is effective. Since all major Democrats declined to challenge Biden in the primary, no Democrat has consented to join No Labels’ well-funded drive to form a “unity ticket.”
Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota was among the few Democrats to run before dropping out. Before Minnesota’s Super Tuesday primary last week, many furious with Biden said they weren’t aware of Phillips’ challenge or saw it as a distraction from beating Trump.
According to one voter, Aishah Al-Sehaim of St. Louis Park, Minnesota, “It’s not even about hope to affect change in the coming years, but simply that things don’t get more screwed up nationally and internationally.”
Biden’s backers believe that a protest vote campaign for Israel’s battle with Hamas will diminish by November, forcing liberals and people of colour to choose between him and Trump. For 30,000 people were killed in Israel’s onslaught following the October 7 bombings.
In 2012, then-President Obama saw several “uncommitted” delegates emerge from uncontested primaries, particularly in conservative states.
“In terms of where he is now, he’s been in tougher spots, and I know he feels confident,” said longtime Biden ally and former Delaware Senator Ted Kaufman. “I sure feel confident.”
Biden initially sought the Democratic nomination for president in 1988, but his campaign was derailed when it was revealed that he had plagiarised speeches. His 2008 candidature ended after a bad showing in the Iowa caucuses, and his 2020 campaign was on life support until he turned it around with a win in the South Carolina primary, eventually consolidating the party’s support.
“Sure beats the hell out of the alternative,” Kaufman joked about the simpler path to nomination this time. That doesn’t mean it’s not tough; it doesn’t mean it doesn’t take character.”
Politics
Millennials in Canada Have Turned their Backs on Justin Trudeau
Justine Trudeau and his Liberal Party are currently engaged in a fierce battle for second place against Jagmeet Singh’s socialist NDP, as both parties find themselves trailing by 20 points behind Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives.
A recent poll indicates that 38% of Canadians consider Trudeau to be the most ineffective leader the nation has encountered in over fifty years. An impressive 47% of Canadian Millennials indicated they would support Poilievre if an election were to take place today, while nearly half of all Canadians express a desire for an election to be called this year.
Pierre Poilievre’s strong appeal among young voters can be attributed primarily to economic factors: soaring inflation, a pressing cost-of-living crisis, and the challenge of housing affordability are pushing many away from the Liberals, who have held power for nearly nine years.
According to UnHeard, Millennials are increasingly distancing themselves from Trudeau due to his stringent measures aimed at controlling the internet to combat alleged disinformation, as well as his climate change initiatives, notably the carbon tax.
An increasing number of Canadians are becoming aware of Trudeau’s ineffective policies and his approach to mass immigration. This past summer, there was significant outrage among parents of teenagers and young adults as they observed their children remaining at home without jobs.
The primary concern stemmed from the fact that most low-skilled and entry-level positions were being filled by unskilled, temporary foreign workers, predominantly from India.
There has been a notable rise in criminal activities linked to international students and unvetted temporary residents who are becoming involved with Punjabi gangs in Canada, contributing to a surge in auto thefts nationwide.
Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives are actively seeking to alter Trudeau’s approach to mass immigration and prioritize the construction of more housing should they come into power.
Significantly, Pierre Poilievre is perceived as more trustworthy than Trudeau, with over half of Canadians characterizing Poilievre as “open and honest about his actions, decisions, and intentions,” while only 39% share that sentiment regarding Trudeau.
The characteristics in question may shed light on Poilievre’s favorable polling, particularly among younger voters and women, who have historically leaned towards the Liberals or the NDP rather than the Conservatives.
The Liberal Party’s support has dwindled to an estimated 7% of Canadians, revealing a significant number of disillusioned voters eager for transformation. Poilievre is emerging as the type of leader that resonates with the desires of many Canadians.
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Politics
U.N. Special Rapporteur Calls on Thailand’s Banks to Cut-Off Myanmar Junta
The U.N special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar has said the Bank of Thailand, commercial banks, and the anti-money laundering office are working on measures to stop the Myanmar Junta from acquiring weapons through Thailand’s banking system.
Tom Andrews the U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, said that some banks commercial in Thailand had aided Myanmar Junta’s by facilitating transactions that supplied military equipment to the Junta through the international banking system.
He called on the Bank of Thailand and financial institutions to do more to stop Myanmar’s junta acquiring weapons which they use on civilians to maintain power.
The special rapporteur was in Bangkok to address a parliamentary committee on security, he called on the Thai government to stop financial transactions that help supply weapons to Myanmar’s junta in line with a plan promoted by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) that sets out an end to violence as a first step toward peace.
In his 2023 report “The Billion Dollar Death Trade,” Andrews noted that Singapore had implemented a clear policy opposing the transfer of weapons to Myanmar.
Thailand’s Banks Lacked Clear Policy
As a result, exports of weapons and related materials from Singapore-registered entities using the formal banking system dropped from almost U.S. $120 million in fiscal year 2022 to just over $10 million over the next 12 months.
However, he said Thailand had no explicit policy position opposing weapons transfer to the Myanmar Junta, which saw exports from Thai-registered entities more than double in 2023, from just over $60 million to nearly $130 million.
He called on Thai Government to conduct a thorough investigation into transfers as Singapore had done into its companies’ dealings.
Andrews told the the committee that five Thai commercial banks and Thai-based companies were assisting Myanmar’s junta obtain weapons, dual-technology items and jet fuel, enabling Military Junta to conduct atrocities against the people.
But said he had found no evidence that the Thai government was involved or was aware of the transactions or that Thai commercial banks had knowledge.
Banks Condemn Myanmar Junta Violence
Meanwhile representatives from Thailand’s central bank, anti-money laundering office and the commercial banks named in the report were also present at the parliamentary meeting at government house in Bangkok.
A representative of the Bank of Thailand said officials were working with the commercial banks and the anti-money laundering office to make sure that enhanced oversight was properly practiced.
The Thai Bankers Association that was also at the parliamentary meeting said it did not have the means to investigate and monitor such irregularities beyond Thailand’s borders.
Mr. Pongsit Chaichatpornsuk, a Thai Bankers Association representative told the committee that If government security agencies tell us, we will stop transactions. We don’t support arms procurement by Myanmar Junta or any military government to violate human rights.
Thailand, which shares a long border with Myanmar and hosts many thousands of refugees fleeing conflict there, has tried to promote dialogue between Myanmar’s military rulers and opposition forces but no progress has been made.
This Article was first published in RFA
Politics
People Rushing Sign Online Petition to Impeach South Korea’s President Crash Site
The Speaker of the National Assembly of South Korea said in a statement that an online petition calling for South Korea’s President Mr. Yoon Suk-yeol’s impeachment crashed due to the enormous number of individuals attempting to sign the petition. Saying the National Assembly would resolve the matter as quickly as possible.
Since the petition was launch on the National Assembly’s website on June 20, more than 811,000 people have signed it. The petition urges Parliament to introduce legislation to impeach President Yoon on the grounds that he is unfit for office.
Late on June 30, National Assembly Speaker Mr. Woo Won-shik issued an apology for the disturbance and stated that Parliament would take action to protect the public’s fundamental rights.
People attempting to access the petition on July 1 experienced delays of up to four hours. At one point, an error message indicated that more than 30,000 individuals were waiting to access the site.
South Korea’s Parliament Hesitant
The online petition accuses Yoon of corruption, escalating the risk of conflict with North Korea, and endangering South Koreans’ health by failing to prevent Japan from leaking treated radioactive water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear power plant.
By law, Parliament must assign every petition signed by more than 50,000 people to a committee, which will then decide whether to put it to a vote in the assembly.
However, the opposition Democratic Party, which has a majority in Parliament, is hesitant to turn the petition into an impeachment bill, according to media reports, with a spokesperson stating that the party has yet to address the topic.
The Parliament can impeach a president with a two-thirds majority. The Constitutional Court then deliberates the motion and decides whether to remove or reinstall the president.
Meanwhile, on Monday Reuters reported North Korea criticized a joint military exercise performed this month by South Korea, Japan, and the United States, according to official media, saying such drills demonstrate the three nations’ alliance has evolved into “the Asian version of NATO”.
On Thursday, the three countries began large-scale combined military drills named “Freedom Edge” featuring navy destroyers, fighter fighters, and the nuclear-powered US aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt, with the goal of strengthening defenses against missiles, submarines, and air strikes.
The drill was designed at a three-way meeting at Camp David last year to boost military cooperation amid concerns on the Korean peninsula caused by North Korea’s weapons testing.
Pyongyang will not overlook the strengthening of a military bloc led by the United States and its allies, and it would respond aggressively and decisively to defend regional peace, according to North Korea’s foreign ministry, as reported by KCNA.
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