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After another court loss in Wisconsin, Trump says fight is ‘not over’

President Trump said he would keep challenging the election results even after a Wisconsin judge and the Supreme Court rejected his efforts.

— NYT: Top Stories

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For Edit

Facebook cannot buy its way out of competition

It wasn’t legal when John D. Rockefeller did it, and it’s still not legal.

— NYT: Top Stories

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George Clooney says he wants to be ‘Sexiest Man Alive’ a third time

George Clooney showed has some ambitious goals when it comes down to People magazine.

 

— FOX News

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The Texas lawsuit and the Age of Dreampolitik

The separation of political reality from political fantasy still exists — for now.

— NYT: Top Stories

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U.S. begins shipping vaccine as virus rages on

The first vaccines left a Pfizer facility in Michigan early Sunday, with UPS and FedEx teaming up to ship it to all 50 states in the most ambitious inoculation campaign in U.S. history.

— NYT: Top Stories

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Weather & Environment

Leaders fete 5 years of Paris climate pact, without U.S.

FILE – In this Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020 file photo, the sun rises amid smog during the dry season in Mexico City. Five years after a historic climate deal in Paris, world leaders are again meeting to increase their efforts to fight global warming. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

 

PARIS (AP) — World leaders are staging a virtual gathering Saturday to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the Paris climate accord, which set a goal for keeping global temperatures from rising above levels that could have devastating consequences for mankind.

The event, hosted by France, Britain, Italy, Chile and the United Nations, will see heads of state and government from over 70 countries pledge to increase their efforts to curb the greenhouse gas emissions that fuel global warming.

Experts say commitments put forward by the international community have already improved the long-term outlook on climate change, making the worst-case scenarios less likely by the end of the century. But wildfires in the Amazon, Australia and America, floods in Bangladesh and East Africa, and record temperatures in the Arctic have highlighted the impact an increase of 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.2 Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times is already having on the planet.

The Paris agreement aims to cap global warming at well under 2C (3.6F), ideally no more than 1.5C (2.7F), by the end of the century.

Achieving this will require a phasing-out of fossil fuels and better protection for the world’s carbon-soaking forests, wetlands and oceans.

The United States, which quit the Paris accord under President Donald Trump, won’t attend the event at the federal level. But Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts and U.S. business leaders, such as Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook, will take part.

President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to rejoin the pact and put the U.S. on course to reduce its emissions to net zero by 2050.

Also absent from the event are major economies such as Australia, Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico, none of which has offered significant improvements on its existing emissions targets.

Environmental campaigners singled out Brazil’s recent announcement that it will stick to its target of cutting emissions by 43 percent over the next decade compared with 2005 levels and aim for net zero by 2060 — far later than most other countries.

By contrast, an agreement Friday by European Union members to beef up the continent’s 2030 targets from 40% to at least 55% compared with 1990 levels was broadly welcomed, though activists said it could have aimed even higher.

China, the world’s biggest emitter, also surprised the world in September by announcing a net zero target of 2060, with emissions peaking by 2030. Observers say this is likely a low offer that Beijing can significantly improve on in years to come.

The 189 countries that are party to the Paris agreement are required to submit their updated targets to the United Nations by the end of the year. This would normally have occurred at the annual U.N. climate summit, but the event was postponed for a year due to the pandemic.

The gathering, now scheduled to take place in Glasgow in November 2021, will see haggling over financial support for poor countries to cope with climate change, and fine-tuning the rules for international markets in emissions trading. Britain, next year’s host, announced this month it is aiming to cut emissions by 68% over the next decade and end state support for fossil fuel industry exports.

Former U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres, who was a key player at the Paris negotiations, said leaders had a duty to be optimistic about their ability to curb global warming.

“Because if we don’t, the alternative is unthinkable,” she said. “None of us adults alive today want to have on our shoulders the responsibility of turning over a world that is a world of misery for generations to come.”

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Jordans reported from Berlin.

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Summit website: https://www.climateambitionsummit2020.org

— Associated Press

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‘An indelible stain’: How the G.O.P. tried to topple a pillar of democracy

The Supreme Court repudiation of President Trump was also a blunt rebuke to Republican leaders who had put their interests ahead of the country’s.

— NYT: Top Stories

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International & World

Flamethrower drone incinerates wasp nests in China

In this Dec. 10, 2020, photo released by Blue Sky Rescue of Zhong County, a drone equipped with a flamethrower burns a wasp nest at a village in Zhong county near Chongqing municipality in southwestern China. A drone has been converted into the flying flamethrower in central China in a fiery campaign to eradicate more than 100 wasp nests. (Blue Sky Rescue of Zhong County via AP)

 

BEIJING (AP) — A drone has been converted into a flying flamethrower in central China in a fiery campaign to eradicate more than 100 wasp nests.

Blue Sky Rescue, a volunteer group that conducts search and rescue and other emergency work, have teamed up with villagers in Zhong county near the city of Chongqing.

They raised 80,000 yuan ($12,200) to buy a drone and equip it with a gasoline tank and an arm-length nozzle.

Videos released by Blue Sky show a recent mission by the six-arm drone. It hovers above a hive as large as a suitcase before swooping down. The drone operator flips the ignition switch, and the drone spits bursts of fire onto the hive.

“The burning ashes of the wasp’s nest gradually peeled off and fell, and the surrounding residents applauded and praised the rescue team,” said an article on a local news app run by state-owned Chongqing TV.

The article quotes a resident thanking Blue Sky for helping the village: “Now we don’t have to worry about being stung by a wasp.”

Blue Sky said it has destroyed 11 hives so far. There are more than 100 to go.

 

— Associated Press

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Business

AM Best places credit ratings of members of Farmers Insurance Group under review with developing implications

OLDWICK, N.J.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–AM Best has placed under review with developing implications the Financial Strength Rating (FSR) of A (Excellent) and the Long-Term Issuer Credit Ratings (Long-Term ICR) of “a” of the members of Farmers Insurance Group (Farmers). Concurrently, AM Best has placed under review with developing implications the Long-Term Issue Credit Ratings (Long-Term IR) of “bbb+” on the outstanding surplus notes of Farmers Insurance Exchange (Exchange) (Woodland Hills, CA) and Farmers Exchange Capital. All companies are domiciled in Los Angeles, CA, unless otherwise specified. (Please see link below for a detailed listing of the companies and ratings.)

These Credit Rating (rating) actions follow the announcement that Farmers has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire MetLife Auto & Home Group in a $3.94 billion deal, 60% to be funded by Farmers Group, Inc. and the remaining $1.51 billion by Exchange. The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2021, subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals.

The under review with developing implications status reflects the need for AM Best to fully assess the financial and operational impacts of the acquisition, including potential benefits that Farmers may receive from the acquisition. AM Best will continue to hold discussions with Farmers’ management and monitor its balance sheet strength, operating performance, business profile and enterprise risk management. The ratings will remain under review until the close of the transaction and a review by AM Best of the post-transaction details.

A complete listing of Farmers’s FSRs, Long-Term ICRs and Long-Term IRs also is available.

This press release relates to Credit Ratings that have been published on AM Best’s website. For all rating information relating to the release and pertinent disclosures, including details of the office responsible for issuing each of the individual ratings referenced in this release, please see AM Best’s Recent Rating Activity web page. For additional information regarding the use and limitations of Credit Rating opinions, please view Guide to Best’s Credit Ratings. For information on the proper media use of Best’s Credit Ratings and AM Best press releases, please view Guide for Media – Proper Use of Best’s Credit Ratings and AM Best Rating Action Press Releases.

AM Best is a global credit rating agency, news publisher and data analytics provider specializing in the insurance industry. Headquartered in the United States, the company does business in over 100 countries with regional offices in New York, London, Amsterdam, Dubai, Hong Kong, Singapore and Mexico City. For more information, visit www.ambest.com.

Copyright © 2020 by A.M. Best Rating Services, Inc. and/or its affiliates. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Contacts

Edin Imsirovic

Associate Director
+1 908 439 2200, ext. 5740
edin.imsirovic@ambest.com

Christopher Sharkey
Manager, Public Relations
+1 908 439 2200, ext. 5159
christopher.sharkey@ambest.com

Robert Raber
Director
+1 908 439 2200, ext. 5696
robert.raber@ambest.com

Jim Peavy
Director, Communications
+1 908 439 2200, ext. 5644

james.peavy@ambest.com

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Election 2020 today: Biden’s Obama redux; GOP bands together

FILE – In this April 29, 2016, file photo, then-national security adviser Susan Rice is seen on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. President-elect Joe Biden is naming Susan Rice as director of the White House Domestic Policy Council. The role will give her broad sway over his administration’s approach to immigration, health care and racial inequality and elevates the prominence of the position in the West Wing. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

 

Here’s what’s happening Friday in Election 2020 and President-elect Joe Biden’s transition.

TODAY’S TOP STORIES:

OBAMA REDUX: President-elect Joe Biden is getting a lot of the old gang back together. Now well into the process of selecting Cabinet nominees and senior appointees, the incoming Biden administration has a distinctly Obama-esque feel. The familiar names brought back include Denis McDonough, Susan Rice, Tom Vilsack, John Kerry and Antony Blinken.

GOP BANDS TOGETHER: Republicans have found a new way to express their loyalty to President Donald Trump. The Texas lawsuit asking the U.S. Supreme Court to invalidate Biden’s victory has quickly become a conservative litmus test. Many Republicans are signing onto the case even as some have predicted it will fail. The last-gasp bid to subvert the results of the election is the latest demonstration of Trump’s enduring political power even as his term is set to end.

HUNTER BIDEN: The revelation that federal prosecutors have launched a tax investigation into Biden’s son Hunter is now looming over the transition. It’s reviving distracting storylines and complicating the choice of an attorney general, who would have to oversee a probe into Biden’s son. Privately, Trump is demanding to know why the investigation was not revealed ahead of Election Day.

REPUBLICAN RIFT: Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey spent much of Trump’s presidency trying not to provoke confrontation with the president or his fervent defenders. He almost made it through. State law required Ducey to certify Arizona’s presidential election results and sign off on Trump’s defeat. The episode has spiraled into a public and politically damaging dispute between Ducey and influential Trump loyalists in his own party. The rift may be a preview the lasting political impact of Trump’s campaign against democracy.

TIME HONOR: Time magazine has selected Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris as its “Person of the Year.” Time’s editor-in-chief says the duo won the honor for “changing the American story, for showing that the forces of empathy are greater than the furies of division, for sharing a vision of healing in a grieving world.” Other candidates included Trump; frontline health care workers and Dr. Anthony Fauci; and the movement for racial justice.

QUOTABLE: “Short term, we know that when the president sours on anyone … there’s a group of Republicans out there that, wherever the president goes, they will go. The question is going to be whether or not those folks stick to that.” — Mike Noble, a Phoenix pollster and former GOP political consultant.

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Find AP’s full election coverage at APNews.com/Election2020.

— Associated Press