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Sylvia Lim clarifies that WhatsApp message about Careshield Life is not fully attributable to her

Workers’ Party (WP) chairman Sylvia Lim has clarified that the contents of a WhatsApp message about the Careshield Life scheme cannot be fully attributed to her, although the message makes it seems like she is the source behind the entire text.

The WhatsApp message, which is circulating among various groups, quotes extracts of a speech Ms Lim made in Parliament in July 2018 but also includes parts written by someone else without making a distinction that Ms Lim did not write those parts.

In a Facebook post published on Sunday (4 Oct), Ms Lim wrote: “It has come to my attention that a WhatsApp message is circulating about CareShield, quoting extracts of a speech I made in Parliament in July 2018 on MOH’s CareShield Life Motion.

“Please note while the parts with direct quotes on Mr K’s case and the onerous nature of the 3 ADL test are correct, there are other parts of the message, particularly some mathematics on premiums, that were written by someone else. These parts should not be mistaken to have come from me.”

Good morning.It has come to my attention that a WhatsApp message is circulating about CareShield, quoting extracts of…

Posted by Sylvia Lim on Saturday, October 3, 2020

The WhatsApp message covers a notable speech Ms Lim made on the Ministry of Health’s CareShield Life Motion amid public backlash against public healthcare insurance schemes like Eldershield and Careshield Life in 2018.

On the back of the revelation that the authorities collected a hefty S$3.3 billion in premiums and only paid out S$133 million to policyholders, Ms Lim shared the story of an elderly resident who was denied help from Eldershield until it was too late.

The opposition MP revealed that the resident, an amputee who was suffering from advanced kidney failure, was an Eldershield policyholder until the scheme revoked his benefits since he could “partially” perform six activities of daily living (ADLs).

The Government considers individuals severely disabled and will pay out insurance benefits when they can to three out the following six ADLs: washing themselves; dressing themselves; feeding themselves; using the toilet by themselves; moving indoors by themselves; moving from a bed to an upright chair by themselves.

Even though the resident was so sick that he could only do these activities “partially,” the authorities decided to discontinue his benefits.

When Ms Lim stepped in to appeal the decision on the resident’s behalf, she was told that the resident must fill out more paperwork. Since the resident was languishing in a hospice at this time, his daughter had to do the necessary. A month after the authorities decided to restore his Eldershield benefits, the resident died.

Ms Lim shared in Parliament:

“This resident, Mr K, was suffering from an advanced stage of kidney failure and already had his leg amputated earlier due to diabetes. The insurer later decided to discontinue Mr K’s Eldershield benefits as the insurer’s panel doctor had assessed that he could perform all of the six activities of daily living “although partially”.
“When I appealed on his behalf for a re-assessment, the insurer wrote back to him to fill up another claim form. Meanwhile he was admitted to a hospice. When I saw him there, he requested me to write to the insurer to say that he would not be filling up the form as he was in the hospice.
“Eventually, his daughter filled up the form, and I understand that the hospice doctors assisted to get his Eldershield benefits restored. But within a month, he was dead.”

The resident’s brother, Facebook user GJ GJ, spoke up on social media and said that his brother passed away in May this year. Revealing that they belong to a low-income family, GJ shared that his sister-in-law went “from one institution to another and (kept) getting turned down bec we never met their protocol”.

Adding that his young nieces who are in their 20s were the ones who kept the household running, GJ added that the paperwork his family had to fill out before receiving help was unbelievable and that his brother struggled before he passed.

Expressing concern for other ailing policyholders like Mr K, Lim asked in Parliament:

“Mr Speaker, I do not know what rigorous standard is applied to determine if a potential ElderShield claimant is disabled enough. When I read about the ElderShield premiums in the billions that have been collected over the years, it struck me how Mr K and his family have apparently been abandoned in their time of need. Is the experience of Mr K an aberration? If this is going to be the experience that will be carried over to CareShield Life, it would be unacceptable.
“I am concerned that the “3-ADLs test”, which will exclude disabled persons facing high medical and care costs, would leave them in a lurch. By the time a person is unable to do 3 ADLs, one is in dire straits. One is either headed towards a nursing home or needs someone to provide care full-time. Before one reaches this stage, if Careshield can give some payouts, then it is likely that the disabled person can continue to be looked after at home with some part-time help. The payouts will fulfill a very important gap, to enable the disabled person to age in place and not tie up another nursing home bed.”

Lim stressed that the new Careshield Life scheme – a mandatory scheme which was imposed on all adults age 30 and above from this year – must review eligibility requirements for payouts so that policyholders receive adequate care and assistance and are not abandoned in their time of need despite paying exorbitant premiums for years:

“I would like to emphasize the point that CareShield Life will be a compulsory scheme, and young Singaporeans will have to pay 37 years of premiums. With this looming fact in mind, CareShield must have meaningful coverage, and my view is that the “3-ADLs test” needs to be reviewed and readjusted to serve this end.”

Former Senior Minister of State for Health Chee Hong Tat responded to Ms Lim that increasing payouts and lowering the claims criterion could make premiums more expensive.

Mr Chee also claimed that the Government is not making “profits” even after it collected S$3.3 billion in Eldershield premiums and only paid out S$133 million and said: “This balance amount is not profit, it is to meet future liabilities.”

Elderly amputee who was denied Eldershield benefits dies weeks after authorities reconsidered his case

Are Tan Chuan-Jin and Lim Wee Kiak claiming that mainstream media is biased towards WP?

Netizens are asking whether ruling party MPs Tan Chuan-Jin and Lim Wee Kiak are claiming that mainstream media is somehow biased towards the Workers’ Party (WP), after the pair lamented about the choice of words publications used in headlines about an adjournment motion ballot Mr Tan conducted this week.

On 14 Sept, Ms Lim filed an Adjournment Motion in Parliament to examine the issues that arose from the court case involving ex-domestic helper Parti Liyani who was acquitted on appeal for theft in a case brought by her former employer, then-Changi Airport Group Chairman Liew Mun Leong.

On Tuesday evening (29 Sept), however, Speaker of Parliament Tan Chuan-Jin revealed that Ms Lim lost the random ballot deciding on the motions raised in the House. A motion filed by People’s Action Party (PAP) MP Louis Ng, calling for protection against secondhand smoke in homes, won the ballot.

The results of the ballot sparked backlash against the way parliamentary motions are selected. The response to the random ballot appears to have riled Mr Tan up and he published multiple rebuttals against the backlash.

In his first update, Mr Tan expressed surprise over how “some folks choose to spin a false narrative about this process” and called it “disrespectful” to run-down the issues that others are speaking on.

Asserting his hope that the backlash is borne out of “passion and ignorance” rather than a deliberate intention to spread misinformation, the Speaker said rather defensively: “You do not change processes at anyone’s whim and fancy, and just because some of you want only your outcome because you believe it to be right.”

While some agreed with Mr Tan’s point of view, other observers felt that the Speaker got needlessly personal against critics.

Mr Tan then published two more posts on Thursday touching on the same matter. He re-posted slides published by the ‘Parliament of Singapore’ Facebook page about what an adjournment motion is and asked netizens to share the post.

When one netizen commented and suggested that the method of allotment needs to be reviewed, Mr Tan snapped back: “do you even bother to read about options available?”

He also refuted the notion that MPs are denied the chance to speak on important issues in a separate post and highlighted the various ways issues can be aired in Parliament. He wrote: “There are various ways in which issues can be aired in Parliament. The Adjournment motion is one route.

“Some seem to take issue with it and the way it is managed. But from the strident calls and accusations made by some, it appears that they believe that MPs are denied the chance to air topics of importance and it is left to the vagaries of chance.

“I assume many of these folks do follow Parliamentary debates and proceedings closely. Perhaps they might have forgotten about a more substantive route to take. MPs can move motions beyond just the Adjournment Motion route.”

There are various ways in which issues can be aired in Parliament. The Adjournment motion is one route. Some seem to…

Posted by Tan Chuan-Jin on Wednesday, September 30, 2020

While some netizens understood Mr Tan’s position, others felt that the way he worded his message seemed a little too passive aggressive.

Meanwhile, fellow ruling party MP Lim Wee Kiak piped up in the comments section and suggested that the problem lies in the choice of words publications used when they covered the issue. He wrote in a comment that drew 90 reactions on Facebook:

“The problem is the choice of words used by the media. The headlines read as Sylvia Lim’s motion was not picked. People misunderstood that parliament did not pick her motion for debate. It should be “balloted but was not successful in the ballot”.”

Mr Tan responded, “Lim Wee Kiak perhaps so. Then it also betrays their bias in the way they chose to report it.” His reply drew 60 reactions on the social media site.

Netizens responding to the exchange have asked whether the MPs are referring to the way mainstream media covered the story. The Straits Times (ST) reported that Ms Lim’s motion was “not picked” while TODAY similarly reported that her motion was “not selected”.

The notion that ST and TODAY could be biased towards an opposition party surprised netizens, given the ties between the government and mainstream media.

TODAY’s parent company Mediacorp is fully owned by Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings, which is run by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s wife, Ho Ching. There is also a strong public perception that Singapore Press Holdings (SPH), which publishes ST, is the “mouthpiece of the Government”.

US diplomatic cable leaked by WikiLeaks several years ago caused a stir after it quoted former ST bureau chief for the US as saying that SPH’s “editors have all been groomed as pro-government supporters and are careful to ensure that reporting of local events adheres closely to the official line”.

Responding to the exchange between Mr Tan and Dr Lim, netizens expressed disbelief that the MPs appear to be calling mainstream news publications biased towards the WP. Some netizens felt that Mr Tan came across as arrogant while others recalled how Dr Lim was the one who said that ministerial pay helps politicians maintain “dignity”:

Tan Chuan-Jin gets defensive in response to backlash for not picking Sylvia Lim’s adjournment motion

“Emo Chuan” strikes again: Tan Chuan-Jin appeals for sympathy by posting critical post about himself online

Straits Times carries forum letter urging local newspapers to be “independent and unbiased in reporting the news”

BLINKS are in love with BLACKPINK’s Lovesick Girls MV

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The love for BLACKPINK’s latest music video is overwhelming on Twitter. The South Korean girl group dropped their much-anticipated first full album The Album on October 2 as well as the stunning music video for their title track Lovesick Girls. 

Jennie did the production of the song while Jennie and Jisoo participated in writing its lyrics. Fans of BLACKPINK, known as BLINKS, have been celebrating the group’s long-awaited album and shared their favourite moments from the music video on Twitter.

Here are some of the tweets about the MV.

The girls all look out-of-this-world beautiful!

 

Fans are also loving the song’s lyrics

Lovesick Girls by BLACKPINK broke records by hitting millions of views within release. Picture: Instagram

BLACKPINK has broken the record for being the fastest Korean female group to achieve over 10 million views on YouTube with their music video Lovesick Girls.

The quartet surpassed the 10 million views mark in just 52 minutes after the music video was uploaded at 12pm on October 2. BLACKPINK previously held the same record for their song Ice Cream featuring Selena Gomez, which amassed 10 million views in two hours and 55 minutes.

The group has been enjoying massive success following the release of their much-anticipated record The Album today.

BLACKPINK currently holds the number one spot on the US iTunes singles and albums charts, making them the second Korean girl group to do so after Loona.

The Album includes six new tracks from Blackpink, including the song Bet You Wanna featuring American rapper Cardi B.

In other news, BLACKPINK will be starring in Netflix’s first K-pop original documentary BLACKPINK: Light Up the Sky. The documentary is directed by Caroline Suh and it will feature exclusive interviews with BLACKPINK members Jennie, Jisoo, Lisa and Rosé who are best known for their catchy hits like How You Like That, Kill This Love, and Ddu-du Ddu-du. 

It will chronicle their meteoric rise to global fame. The documentary will also feature never-before-seen footage of the members as young trainees under YG Entertainment.

BLINKS will get a glimpse of the recording process of the group’s album and watch the members riding out the highs and lows of K-pop stardom.  BLACKPINK: Light Up the Sky culminates with Blackpink’s 2019 historic performance at Coachella in California, where they became the first K-pop girl group ever to perform at the popular music festival.

BLACKPINK has collaborated with some international artists recently including Lady Gaga and Selena Gomez.

Li Shengwu among those who support PJ Thum amid police case

Founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew’s grandson Li Shengwu appears to be among those who support historian Dr Thum Ping Tjin who is being investigated by the police for possibly breaching the Parliamentary Elections Act (PEA).

Last month, the Elections Department’s (ELD) filed a police report against Dr Thum’s socio-political website New Naratif over an alleged breach of the PEA during the July election.

The ELD, which is under the Prime Minister’s Office, said that five paid Facebook advertisements New Naratif put up during the election period contravened the PEA since the publication was not authorised by any candidate or election agent in the General Election to conduct election activity.

The police summoned Dr Thum, the website’s founder and managing director, for investigations at Clementi Police Station on 21 Sept. The interview reportedly lasted about four-and-a-half hours. Police officers subsequently escorted the historian to his home, where they seized his laptop and mobile phone.

Several prominent individuals and organisations, including two political parties, came forward to express concerns over the action. An open letter signed by 52 academic experts on Southeast Asia was also sent to PM Lee, this week.

Lee Hsien Yang’s eldest son Li Shengwu, a Harvard academic, is among those who expressed support for Dr Thum amid the investigation. Mr Li reposted a video Dr Thum made on the day he was interviewed by the police and had his possessions seized on his personal Facebook page:

Shengwu is no stranger to action by the authorities himself. In 2017, Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) initiated legal proceedings for contempt of court against him over a private Facebook post he had published amid the Oxley Road dispute between his father and his uncle, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

The 35-year-old was eventually fined S$15,000 after being found guilty in the court case. He paid the fine in order to “buy some peace and quiet” but insisted that this does not mean he admits guilt.

Academics around the world call on PM Lee to drop case against New Naratif in open letter

SDP’s Paul Tambyah: “We badly need an independent election department”

Rapper Subhas Nair stands in solidarity with PJ Thum in wake of police report by ELD

Non-profit arts group asks whether LO Pritam Singh will raise PJ Thum issue in Parliament

SDP expresses concern over Elections Department’s action against socio-political site

International Press Institute condemns ELD’s police report against New Naratif

Activist claims the police seized PJ Thum’s laptop to “strike fear” and disrupt his life

Police seize PJ Thum’s laptop after Elections Dept lodges report against New Naratif

Workers’ Party Sengkang team asks public what they want to see at Rivervale Mall

Singapore – The Workers’ Party Sengkang team took to social media to ask residents what they wanted to see at Rivervale Mall, noting they were open to suggestions.

On Saturday (Oct 3), the elected parliamentarians for Sengkang GRC, Chua Kheng Wee and Jamus Lim were spotted at Rivervale Mall for their walkabout. “Had a great start to the weekend catching up with residents of Rivervale together with Jamus Lim at Rivervale Mall this morning,” wrote Mr Chua in a Facebook post.

He asked the public what they would like to see at the mall, adding they were open to suggestions.

Mr Lim also shared the post, and the two received much praise from netizens. “Never seen MPs kneel down while talking to residents except for Sengkang MPs,” commented Facebook user Haris Johar. Many noted how the team works tirelessly, holding walkabouts nearly every day.

Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab

“Sengkang residents really hit the jackpot by voting for WP,” said Facebook user Aston Tay.

Photo: FB screengrab

“Usually I only see walkabout before elections, but WP have proven something else,” observed Facebook user Valentinoz Teo. Others wondered where their respective MP from the People’s Action Party was.

Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab

Netizen Nicholas Neo, one of the residents who met with Mr Lim and Mr Chua, also commented on the post highlighting how “down to earth and genuine” the experience was, “unlike previous MPs who had a whole gang of cameramen and entourage like some wayang going on.”

Photo: FB screengrab

Meanwhile, the public also provided suggestions, given the opportunity. Many requested for more food variety in the mall and to remove or upgrade the Food Junction area because the food offerings were limited and expensive. A few also suggested a pet grooming shop and a movie theatre.

Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab
Photo: FB screengrab

Facebook user Hui Yi Yon admitted having to go to Punggol to a Sheng Siong supermarket as the supermarket in Rivervale Mall was becoming more and more expensive. “Cheaper and more variety of groceries please,” asked the resident.

Photo: FB screengrab

Had a great start to the weekend catching up with residents of #rivervale together with @jamuslim at Rivervale Mall this…

Posted by Chua Kheng Wee 蔡庆威 on Friday, October 2, 2020

Read related:

Ex-PAP MP Lam Pin Min draws intense criticism for officiating Sengkang community project in place of elected WP MPs

Li Huanwu proudly shares his mother’s reaction to his coming out on social media

Li Huanwu proudly shared links to his mother’s interview with Yahoo News on his Facebook page, making special mention of the comments she made about LGBT people in Singapore.

Born in 1986, Li Huanwu is the second of three sons born to Lee Suet Fern and Lee Hsien Yang – founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew’s youngest son and current Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s younger brother.

Li Huanwu publicly came out of the closet in 2018 and married his longtime partner Heng Yirui in May last year. Huanwu’s parents and brothers were in attendance at the wedding that was held in South Africa.

In a rare interview about her personal life, Lee Suet Fern spoke about her reaction when her son first came out to her. She said, candidly: “He did come to me because I’m closest to him and I’m not sure I handled it very well initially. Although I rapidly realised that it was tough for him and that he needed our love and support.

“And I’ve learnt a lot in the process. Huanwu is our child and we love and support him unconditionally, wholeheartedly and unreservedly. He has made every one of us in our family better persons. We think he was hugely courageous to have come out.”

Referring to Section 377A of the Singapore penal code which criminalises sexual relations between men, Lee Suet Fern said: “We know that for him and for other gay people, they face discrimination all the time. And in Singapore, they also face the Sword of Damocles of criminality. That’s tough.”

She added: “At the end of the day, at the heart of it all, whether you’re gay or not each of us just wants to be accepted and loved for who we are. And we love Huanwu.”

Li Huanwu published two Facebook posts sharing his mother’s interview. Linking to the longform interview on Thursday evening (1 Oct), he wrote: “My mother, in her own words (There’s parts of the interview video that aren’t in the text, including a portion on LGBT people in Singapore)”

He subsequently shared a direct link to the video in which his mother spoke about her reaction when he came out to her. Watch the video here:

This is the direct video link.

Posted by Li Huanwu on Thursday, October 1, 2020

My mother, in her own words.(There’s parts of the interview video that aren’t in the text, including a portion on LGBT people in Singapore)

Posted by Li Huanwu on Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Caught on cam: Another fight breaks out at Bedok 85

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Singapore — A rainy night did not stop a fight from breaking out at Bedok 85, with one man repeatedly targeting another.

A video of the incident began circulating on social media on Saturday (Oct 3). Facebook page All Singapore Stuff shared the footage with the caption: “Bunch of men at Bedok 85 tried to gang up on a guy in black. End up is they kena hentam (get beaten) instead. They should have picked on someone their own size.”

It happened at the Fengshan Market and Food Centre in Bedok North Street 4, better known as Bedok 85. The man in black is seen hurrying towards a group. A fight breaks out but it is mainly between that man and a man in the group who is in white and black. Earlier, the cameraman can be heard commenting: “Ok, fight. Ok, fight. Fight, fight, fight, fight, fight, Joe!”

Just as the men in the group think the fight is over, the man in black rushes and rains more blows on the man in white and black. He then rushes off in the direction from which he had appeared.

People online highlighted the irony that the Bedok Police Divisional Headquarters and the Bedok North NPC are just around the corner.

Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff

Others suggested that alcoholic drinks not be served in coffee shops during the pandemic to prevent such incidents.

Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff

One person pointed out that this was not the first fight here. It was only about a month ago that another Bedok 85 scuffle among three men resulted in swollen faces and bloody noses.

Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff
Photo: FB screengrab / All Singapore Stuff

Fight at Bedok 85

Bunch of men at Bedok 85 tried to gang up on a guy in black. End up is they kena hentam instead. They should have picked on someone their own size<Reader's Contribution by Chen>

Posted by All Singapore Stuff on Friday, October 2, 2020

S$300 Grocery Vouchers: Is it safe to distribute them by mail?

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Singapore — The Government has begun mailing Grocery Vouchers to people living in 1-room and 2-room HDB flats but a Facebook user has raised concerns about whether this is a safe way to do so.

It seems that there have been cases of letter boxes being tampered with and the vouchers, which are considered as good as cash, being stolen.

On Saturday (Oct 3), Facebook user Muhd Hxrry Hxmzxh uploaded a post in Complaint Singapore’s page with the caption, “Do you think that it is safe for the grocery vouchers to be mail(ed) to our mailbox?”

All Singaporeans aged 21 and above, who live in 1-room or 2-room HDB flats and do not own more than one property, will receive the Grocery Vouchers.

The support scheme is a part of the GST (Goods and Services Tax) Voucher benefits that have been disbursed to Singaporeans during the month of August since 2012. This year, 1.4 million Singaporeans will be receiving their GSTV benefits amounting to S$570 million distributed through various support schemes such as a one-time cash top-up of up to S$300 credited directly into their bank accounts beginning Aug 1.

The Grocery Vouchers will be delivered this month and in December 2020. Another batch of vouchers worth S$100 is scheduled to be delivered in 2021, according to the Ministry of Finance (MOF) website. The vouchers can be used at participating supermarkets, such as FairPrice, Giant, Prime and Sheng Siong.

Based on the photo that Muhd Hxrry Hxmzxh provided in his post, the vouchers are already being disbursed. However, an unfortunate situation confirming his question on the mode of delivery was shared by Facebook user Nueng Tjoeklhe-Bambang Soejono.

She posted a screenshot of a comment by someone who had seen four elderly women crying while looking at their broken letterbox. The anonymous individual was on the way to collect the vouchers. This person said: “When I approached them, they said their voucher has been stolen. One of them literally begging for people to find the person who did this.”

Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore

Nueng Tjoeklhe-Bambang Soejono added that she felt sad for the elderly women.

Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore

Some of those who agreed that it might not be safe to mail the vouchers suggested that those eligible for them should collect them, for example from the CC.

Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab / Complaint Singapore

/TISG

What happens if a US presidential candidate exits the race?

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by Chris Lefkow

A US presidential nominee has never died or had to withdraw from a White House race this close to an election.

But President Donald Trump’s hospitalization for coronavirus just a month from the November 3 vote has raised the question of what happens if such an event should occur.

Trump is 74 years old and while his opponent Joe Biden is reportedly in relatively good health at 77 he is the oldest Democratic nominee ever.

Here is a look at some of the potential scenarios in the event a nominee exits the race:

– Delay the presidential election? –
Unlikely. Congress set the date for the election and this one has already been scheduled, as per US law for the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

Both the Republican-controlled Senate and the Democratic-majority House of Representatives would have to agree on a postponement.

“I don’t see it happening,” said Capri Cafaro, a former Democratic member of the Ohio state senate who teaches at American University. “It is unlikely a Democratic majority would want to postpone the election.”

Even during the Civil War between the North and South, the 1864 election was held as scheduled with Abraham Lincoln winning another term.

– Can a candidate be replaced? –
Trump’s Republican Party and Biden’s Democratic Party both have rules outlining how to fill a vacancy on the presidential ticket should one occur.

In the case of Trump’s GOP, the 168 members of the Republican National Committee could vote to select the replacement.

The RNC could also reconvene its national convention of more than 2,500 delegates to select a new candidate but time pressure probably makes this unworkable.

A simple majority would be all that is needed to choose a new candidate in either scenario.

In the case of the Democrats, a new presidential nominee would be selected by the nearly 450 members of the Democratic National Committee.

– Can a replacement candidate be on the ballot? –
Probably not. “The problem at this point is that we are so far along in this 2020 election that not only have people cast ballots, ballots have already been printed,” Cafaro said.

“You really don’t have enough time to reprint ballots which say Mike Pence or Kamala Harris,” she said, referring to the Republican and Democratic vice presidential nominees respectively.

More than 3.1 million Americans have already cast their ballots, according to a tally kept by the US Elections Project at the University of Florida.

In addition, deadlines for ballot access vary from state to state and they have already passed in most cases.

– What about the Electoral College? –
While the United States holds a popular vote, the president is elected by an absolute majority of the 538 members of the Electoral College.

In every state but two (Nebraska and Maine), the candidate winning the majority of the popular vote in that state wins all that state’s electors.

Nothing in the Constitution obliges electors to vote in one way or another but the Supreme Court ruled in July that states could fine so-called “faithless electors” who do not respect the popular vote.

The members of the Electoral College will gather in their respective states on December 14 and vote for president and vice president.

In the event a candidate dies or withdraws before the Electoral College casts its votes, things could get messy.

Individual state laws come into play but each party could theoretically direct its electors to vote for a replacement candidate.

On January 6, 2021, Congress will certify the results, with the winner being sworn in as president on January 20.

cl/dw

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Trump says feels ‘much better’ but next few days ‘the real test’

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US President Donald Trump said in a video released on Twitter Saturday night that he was feeling “much better” in his battle against the coronavirus — but the next few days would be “the real test.”

The 74-year-old assured the public of his progress hours after a source with knowledge of the president’s condition had warned his vital signs were worrying, with the next 48 hours critical.

“I came here, wasn’t feeling so well,” said Trump, who is being treated at Walter Reed military medical center near Washington following his Covid-19 diagnosis.

“I feel much better now, we’re working hard to get me all the way back.”

It was unclear whether the undated video, apparently filmed at Walter Reed, had been made before or after the dire warnings about his health, which US media later said came from White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.

That message contrasted with a more optimistic assessment from his doctors, such as White House physician Sean Conley who characterized Trump as mobile, fever-free for 24 hours and with an improving cough and less nasal congestion and fatigue.

Sporting a blue blazer and white dress shirt, but more casual than usual without a tie, Trump predicted a quick recovery.

“I think I’ll be back soon and I look forward to finishing up the campaign the way it was started,” Trump said.

“We’ll be seeing what happens over those next couple of days,” Trump said, adding “I guess that’s the real test.”

The president added that he’d had “no choice” other than to work from his hospital suite rather than cocooning himself in his bedroom for his recovery.

Trump has all the capabilities of White House communications in a special suite at the hospital that allows him to carry out his normal duties.

“I was given that alternative: stay in the White House, lock yourself in, don’t ever leave. Don’t even go to the Oval Office, just stay upstairs and enjoy it,” Trump said.

Trump added that this would have involved seeing no one in person, which was not his approach to the presidency.

He also thanked global heads of state “for their condolences… they know what we’re going through.”

bur-bfm/ft

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP