Tag: U.S.

  • Trump asks Pennsylvania for help in revising election results

    Trump asks Pennsylvania for help in revising election results

    U.S. President Donald Trump called the speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives twice asking for assistance in revising his election loss in the state, media reported.

    According to The Washington Post, the office of House Speaker Bryan Cutler confirmed these calls.

    Pennsylvania is the third state after Georgia and Michigan, where Trump directly attempted to overturn the election results, the outlet noted.

    Cutler reportedly told Trump that the state’s legislative authorities were not authorised to change the composition of the Electoral College selected by voting.

    The winner of the U.S. presidential election, held on Nov. 3, is yet to be officially declared, but all major U.S. media outlets have named Democrat Joe Biden the winner.

    Earlier, Trump announced that he had instructed his team to start the transition process, but still promised to continue his attempts to dispute the validity of the vote.

  • Biden hints at scaled down inauguration

    Biden hints at scaled down inauguration

    U.S. President-elect Joe Biden has given a preview of what his January inauguration will look like, noting that the event will not be typical due to the pandemic.

    “We’re gonna follow again the science and recommendation of the experts on keeping people safe.

    “So, it is highly unlikely there’ll be a million people on the mall going all the way down,” Biden told reporters in Wilmington, Delaware.

    He added: “I think you’re going to see something that’s closer to what the convention was like, than the typical inauguration,” referring to the 2020 Democratic National Convention, which was held primarily online.

    “First and foremost, my objective is to keep America safe and still allow people to celebrate.

    “To celebrate and see one another celebrate,” he noted.

    The president-elect said discussions are currently ongoing with leading members of congress.

    Biden hinted that the large, in-person events that are usually held during a presidential inauguration, including a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC, will likely not take place.

    He also spoke of “a lot of virtual activity in states all across America, engaging even more people than before.”

    The inauguration will be held on January 20, and the number of confirmed coronavirus cases is expected to continue to rise until then.

    The number of coronavirus cases in the US has spiked sharply in recent weeks.

    More than 14.14 million Americans have been infected with the novel virus since the beginning of the outbreak and over 276,000 people have died from the disease, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

  • Trump calls on Georgia governor to halt upcoming Senate race

    Trump calls on Georgia governor to halt upcoming Senate race

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday urged Georgia’s governor to halt the state’s upcoming senate race and reiterated his baseless claims that the November presidential election saw widespread voter fraud.

    “Do something @BrianKempGA. You allowed your state to be scammed,” Trump tweeted at Georgia’s governor Brian Kemp.

    “We must check signatures and count signed envelopes against ballots.

    “Then call off election. It won’t be needed. We will all WIN!,” he added.

    Trump lost the historically conservative state of Georgia to President-elect Joe Biden, a Democrat, during last month’s election.

    He has refused to concede the race, however, and has instead attacked members of Georgia’s Republican Party and made unsubstantiated claims that the vote was rigged.

    The state of Georgia, which usually votes Republican, will have two simultaneous runoff elections for the Senate in January.

    The outcome of these races will determine which political party, the Democrats or the Republicans, will control the U.S. Senate after Biden is inaugurated.

    Trump’s tweet appeared to suggest that, if not for the voter fraud he alleges, Georgia’s Republican candidates for Senate would have won their elections by a wide enough margin that the January runoff would be unnecessary.

    Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, has said that there is no proof of widespread fraud perpetrated during the Nov. 3 election.

    Kemp and Raffensperger certified Georgia’s election results over a week ago, confirming that Biden won the state by a little more than 12,000 votes.

    Later on Tuesday Gabriel Sterling, a top official overseeing the election in the U.S. state of Georgia, called on Trump to disavow his fraud rhetoric saying that the president is inspiring violence against local election workers.

    “Stop inspiring people to commit potential acts of violence. Someone is going to get hurt.

    “Someone is going to get killed. And it’s not right,” Sterling said.

    Sterling started the fiery news conference saying a contractor working on the Georgia election infrastructure was threatened with a noose and online harassment.

    The Trump campaign has brought numerous lawsuits in key swing states in an attempt to change the election results, but almost all have been dismissed due to a lack of evidence.

  • Trump gives condition to quit White House

    Trump gives condition to quit White House

    U.S. President Donald Trump said he would leave the White House if the Electoral College declared Joe Biden the election winner.

    He said he was not prepared to concede defeat and repeated false claims that he won.

    The president said that he would “certainly” leave the White House if the Electoral College voted for Biden, telling reporters on a press call “you know that.”

    But he also repeated claims of “massive fraud” in the election, without providing supporting evidence, and said an Electoral College appointment of Biden would be a “mistake.”

    “I know one thing, Joe Biden didn’t get 80 million votes,” Trump said, according to reporters who dialled in.

    “It’s going to be a very hard thing to concede,” Trump said when asked what he will do if the Electoral College elects his Democratic opponent.

    According to forecasts by the U.S. media, Biden has secured 306 electoral college votes, significantly more than the majority of 270 votes necessary to win.

    Each state must officially certify their vote tallies before deadlines in early December.

    The Electoral College vote and the ultimate declaration of the winner by Congress on Jan. 6 are usually symbolic events, but since Trump has declined to concede, they may take on more significance this time.

    In the national popular vote count – a metric to gauge popularity but with no legal meaning – Biden leads Trump, with about 80 million votes to some 73.9 for the incumbent.

    Trump is pursuing numerous court cases to try to stop Biden from being declared the winner.

  • Biden presents his national security team

    Biden presents his national security team

    United States (U.S.) president-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday presented his future national security team to the public, highlighting their decades of experience in public service.

    Biden stressed that his nominees would help return the U.S. to its position as a global leader following the unpredictable years of the Trump administration.

    ”If confirmed by the Senate, his nominees would include the first Latino to lead the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the first woman to be director of national intelligence.

    “I’ve long said that America leads not only by the example of our power, but by the power of our example.

    ”And I’m proud to put forward this incredible team that will lead by example,” Biden said.

    Both Antony Blinken, Biden’s pick for secretary of state, and Alejandro Mayorkas, the future administration’s nominee for secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, described how their families fled communist regimes in Europe and Latin America and eventually settled in the U.S.

    Among the speakers was former secretary of state John Kerry, who Biden nominated to be the first presidential envoy for climate.

    Kerry noted that the U.S. will rejoin the Paris climate agreement on the first day after Biden takes office, and will take additional steps to combat climate change over the next four years.

    “America is back, multilateralism is back, diplomacy is back,” said Biden’s nominee for ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield.

  • Another U.S. firm announces COVID-19 vaccine with 94.5% effectiveness

    Another U.S. firm announces COVID-19 vaccine with 94.5% effectiveness

    American biotechnology company, Moderna, announced on Monday that its COVID-19 vaccine could be up to 94.5 per cent effective.

    The news came a week after another U.S. drug maker, Pfizer, announced the development of a vaccine with 90 per cent effectiveness.

    In a statement, Moderna said that after its Phase 3 trial, the vaccine met statistical criteria with an efficacy rate of 94.5 per cent.

    However, experts are warning that the numbers are not conclusive, as both estimates could increase or decrease as trials continue.

    The company requires the approval of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to roll out the vaccine for mass immunisation.

    Moderna said it would ask the FDA for emergency use authorisation (EUA) on a small group of higher-risk individuals.

    It stated that the application, to be made in the coming weeks, would include at least two months of safety data after the last injection in half the volunteers.

    The company added that the FDA application would include the “final analysis” of 151 cases of COVID-19 in its trial, rather than just the initial 95 cases.

    This puts it on track along with Pfizer for possible limited authorisation by the FDA as soon as December.

    Moderna is expected to have 20 million doses to go along with Pfizer’s 50 million for global distribution before more can be made in 2021, according to ABC News.

  • 9 Nigerians contest in Tuesday’s U.S. elections

    9 Nigerians contest in Tuesday’s U.S. elections

    No fewer than nine Nigerian Americans are on the ballot in Tuesday’s general elections in the United States.

    Running mostly on the platform of the Democratic Party, the candidates are bidding for different offices at the federal, state and local levels.

    Besides the presidential election, governorship polls are holding in 11 states and two territories, in addition to other state and local elections.

    Congressional elections are also holding on Tuesday with all the 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, and 35 of the 100 seats in the Senate up for grabs.

    At the federal level, Mr Oye Owolewa, whose father is from Kwara and mother from Oyo, is aiming for a ‘shadow’ (non-voting) seat in the House of Representatives.

    Owolewa, a Ph.D holder in Pharmacy from the Northeastern University, Boston, is seeking to represent the District of Columbia (DC) under the Democratic Party.

    If elected, the 30-year-old, whose agenda include fighting income inequality in the U.S., would be the first Nigerian congressman in the country’s history.

    Also at the federal level, Mr Yomi Faparusi, an Ibadan-born native of Ode-Ekiti in Ekiti State, is vying as an independent candidate to represent the state of Tennessee in the U.S. Senate.

    Faparusi holds a doctorate in Medicine from the University of Ibadan, a Ph.D. in Health from Johns Hopkins University, and Juris Doctorate from the Widener University School of Law, Delaware.

    This is not his first shot at the U.S. Congress. In 2014 and 2016, he vied for the Republican Party’s ticket to the House of Representatives, but lost in both occasions

    Faparusi’s priorities include being a positive voice for all Nigerians in the U.S. Senate, and inspiring Americans of African or Nigerian descent to seek public office in the country.

    In Missouri, a Republican controlled state, Mr Yinka Faleti from Lagos is the Democratic Party flagbearer in the election for the office of Secretary of State.

    According to Wikipedia, Faleti was in the U.S. Army as an active-duty officer from 1998 to 2004. He served in Kuwait, first under Operation Desert Spring and later as part Operation Enduring Freedom.

    The 44-year-old father of four holds a Bachelor’s degree from the United States Military Academy, West Point, and a Juris Doctorate from the Washington University School of Law.

    His goals as a Secretary of State include protection of the “right to vote for Missouri families”, and ensuring elected officials hear the people’s voice.

    Also at the state level, Mr Paul Akinjo from Ondo, is running for election to the California State Assembly under the Democratic Party to represent District 12.

    Akinjo once served as Vice Mayor of Lathrop, California, and in the U.S. Army Reserve from 1982 to 1989. His priorities include housing, immigration and transportation.

    In Delaware, a small Mid-Atlantic U.S. state, Adewunmi Kuforiji is aspiring to represent District 34 in the state House of Representatives.

    Kuforiji, originally from Ibadan, Oyo, secured the Democratic Party’s ticket on Sept. 15 after defeating his challenger, Robert Haynes, at the primary. He holds a Bachelor in Accounting and a Master’s in Business Administration from the Delaware State University.

    In the 2018 mid-term elections, he vied for the same position but lost to the incumbent, Lyndon Yearick, of the Republican Party, whom he is facing he on Tuesday.

    Also at the state level, Ms Esther Agbaje, is seeking to represent District 59B in the Minnesota House of Representatives on the platform of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFLP), an affiliate of the U.S. Democratic Party.

    The 35-year-old daughter of an Episcopal priest and a librarian, both Nigerian immigrants, defeated longtime state Representative Raymond Dehn in the party’s primary in August.

    She is one of one of four progressive greenhorns who defeated established Democratic legislators in the primary.

    Agbaje has a law degree from Harvard University, a Master’s from the University of Pennsylvania, and has served in the U.S. Department of State, among others.

    As a millennial, a “generation that has suffered numerous setbacks”, she seeks to bring a fresh perspective and new ideas to government.

    On the ballot at the local government level are April Ademiluyi, Ngozi Akubuike and Benjamin Osemenam.

    Ademiluyi, 39, is running on the Democratic Party’s ticket for Judge of the Seventh Circuit Court in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

    For her part, Akubuike, a legal practitioner, is an independent candidate for judge of the Minnesota 2nd District Court Position 8.

    Akubuike studied law in Nigeria, then worked in the banking sector before moving to the U.S. where she graduated from the Mitchell Hamline School of Law.

    She has served in several capacities, including legal manager for the state of Minnesota.

    Osemenam, who moved to the U.S. in 1982, is contesting for a seat in the Brooklyn Park City Council of Minnesota to represent East District.

    An engineer with the Minnesota Department of Transportation, he is vying on the platform of National Party.

    He is a former president of the Association of Nigerian Engineers in Minnesota.

  • Trump downplays pandemic severity as U.S. hits new daily case record

    Trump downplays pandemic severity as U.S. hits new daily case record

    The United States broke another daily record for new coronavirus cases on Friday as President Donald Trump downplayed the severity of the pandemic as election day nears.

    The U.S. has recorded half a million cases in the past seven days and crossed the 9-million mark of total infections. On Thursday, the country recorded more than 80,000 cases.

    Hospitalisations and deaths are also increasing, raising concerns in some Midwestern states about medical capacities reaching their limits. More than 1,000 people died of Covid-19 in the last day.

    “More Testing equals more Cases. We have best testing. Deaths WAY DOWN. Hospitals have great additional capacity! Doing much better than Europe. Therapeutics working!’’ Trump tweeted.

    The president said the opposition Democrats would impose lockdowns even though promising medicines and vaccines are being developed.

    Meanwhile, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is increasingly critical of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic, pointing to the high case load and the number of fatalities.

    Biden, who appears to be leading in the polls ahead of Tuesday’s election says Trump ignores science and has effectively given up on containing the spread.

    He has promised to increase testing and promote mask-wearing, if elected.

    More than 80 million people have already voted in the U.S.

    The two major party candidates are making campaign pushes in the final days before the election, hoping to net voters who have not yet cast their ballots.

  • Huawei sales up but growth slows under virus, U.S. pressure

    Huawei sales up but growth slows under virus, U.S. pressure

    Chinese tech giant Huawei, one of the biggest makers of smartphones and switching equipment, said Friday its revenue rose 9.9 per cent in the first nine months of this year.

    Huawei Technologies Ltd., gave no sales figure for the most recent quarter ending in September, but growth for the first three quarters was down from the 13.1 per cent reported for the first half of the year.

    Huawei is struggling with U.S. sanctions that cut off its access to most American technology and components in a feud with Beijing over technology and security.

    The White House says Huawei is a threat and might facilitate Chinese spying, which the company denies.

    In August, Washington prohibited Huawei from buying any semiconductor chips made with U.S software or technology, putting the smartphone maker in a bind.

    On Thursday, Huawei launched its new Mate 40 phone.

    Chinese companies haven’t yet been able to produce similarly advanced chips, experts say.

  • #EndSARS: U.S. calls for investigation into killing of protesters

    #EndSARS: U.S. calls for investigation into killing of protesters

    The United States has called for immediate investigation into the excessive use of force by the military in the alleged killing of unarmed protesters at Lekki toll gate in Lagos.

    In a statement on Thursday, the Secretary of State, Michael Pompeo specifically mentioned Tuesday’s shooting of protesters at the Lekki toll gate in Lagos.

    “We welcome an immediate investigation into any use of excessive force by members of the security forces.

    “Those involved should be held to account in accordance with Nigerian law,” Pompeo said.

    He strongly condemned the use of excessive force by security agents against unarmed protesters in the country.

    “The United States strongly condemns the use of excessive force by military forces who fired on unarmed demonstrators in Lagos, causing death and injury.

    He noted that peaceful assembly and freedom of expression are “essential human rights and core democratic principles” that should be respected by authorities.

    He urged the security forces to exercise maximum restraint and “respect fundamental rights and for demonstrators to remain peaceful”.

    “We extend our condolences to the victims of the violence and their families.

    “We welcome an immediate investigation into any use of excessive force by members of the security forces,” he said.