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Future Forward Dissolution May Backfire on Regime: US Scholar

Future Forward Party supporters react to the verdict on Feb. 21, 2020.

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand’s Constitutional Court on Friday ordered the popular opposition Future Forward Party dissolved, declaring that it violated election law by accepting a loan from its leader.

The court also imposed a 10-year ban on the party’s executive members holding political office.

“This is a setback for the opposition parties but may be a political disaster for the military-backed regime,” said Kevin Hewison, a professor emeritus of the University of North Carolina and veteran Thai studies scholar. “Political uncertainty could potentially destabilize a regime already struggling with several crises and a moribund economy.”

The ruling against the party comes just ahead of a no-confidence debate in parliament set to begin Monday against Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and several of his Cabinet members. The party has been an irritant to the government and the conservative forces in Thai society that back it, because of both its reformist positions and its popularity.

The party placed a strong and surprising third in a general election last March and currently holds 76 seats in Thailand’s House of Representatives.

It was founded in March 2018 as Thailand was heading toward an election after a period of military rule that began with a 2014 coup.

There are 16 members of the party’s executive committee, 11 of whom are members of parliament and lose their seats. The party’s remaining 65 lawmakers can take part in the upcoming no-confidence debate, but must find a new party within 30 days to keep their seats. It was not immediately clear how the 11 empty seats will be filled.

The Constitutional Court was referred the case by the Election Commission, which in December determined that the Future Forward Party had broken the law by accepting a 191 million baht ($6.03 million) loan from its founder and chief, Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit.

The commission said it considered the loan tantamount to a donation, which are limited to 10 million baht ($316,000).

The party’s main defense was that the law makes no mention of loans. Thanathorn is a 41-year-old billionaire whose family fortune was made in the auto parts industry.

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Future Forward Party Found Guilty, Disbanded by Court

A file photo of Future Forward Party founders Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul.
A file photo of Future Forward Party founders Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul.

BANGKOK — The Constitutional Court on Friday dissolved a key opposition party for violating election laws by accepting an illegal loan from its billionaire founder.

The Future Forward Party was found guilty after the court considered the 191 million baht loan it received from party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit to be a donation, which is forbidden by the voting laws. It was the fourth anti-military party to be disbanded by the same court in the last 13 years.

Apart from disbanding the party, the court banned 16 executives of the party from politics for 10 years including its founder Thanathorn, ending his short-lived career as a maverick politician who stunned the political landscape by placing third in the March 2019 poll, his first-ever election.

Read: Our Person of the Year 2019: Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit

Because 11 of the executives also serve as MPs, the ruling subsequently shrank the number of the party’s seats in Parliament down to 65.

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Future Forward Party supporters react to the verdict on Feb. 21, 2020.

The rest of the MPs must find a new party within the next 30 days to keep their lawmaker status.

Speaking after the verdict, Thanathorn apologized to his supporters for failing to keep the party intact, but pledged to carry on campaigning on their behalf outside the Parliament.

He said now is not the time to cry, but to unite and take up the struggle for liberty and justice.

“Our goal is to plant the flag of our ideology onto the land,” Thanathorn said. “The only solution that is left for this country is to amend the Constitution.”

Writing in an online post, PM Prayut Chan-o-cha sought to extend an olive branch to the opposition by suggesting that Future Forward supporters can still resort to other methods to hold his government accountable.

“Having a good and responsible opposition will benefit the country and the people as a whole,” Prayut said.

Income, Not Loan

The Election Commission filed the complaint in 2019 based on the evidence brought forward by transparency activist Srisuwan Janya, who accused the party of breaking election laws by accepting the loan from Thanathorn.

The loan was first mentioned by Thanathorn himself, who admitted at a forum held at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand in May that he handed the money to his newly founded party.

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A Constitutional Court judge reads the verdict on Feb. 21, 2020.

Election regulators said the loan counts as a donation forbidden by voting laws, which prohibits a person from donating more than ten million baht to a political party within a year. The party denied the allegation, saying that a loan cannot be counted as a donation since the party agreed to pay back the debt to Thanathorn.

In its ruling today, the court said there was a clear intent that the loan was a donation by its own party founder.

No Future For You

The demise of the upstart party came less than two years after it was founded by auto parts tycoon Thanathorn who pledged to campaign on progressive policies, like reforming the military, promoting human rights, and decentralizing the government.

The party later proved to be extremely popular, coming third in last year’s general election and dethroning even the pro-establishment Democrats from their traditional strongholds in Bangkok.

Its popularity was highlighted when thousands joined a rally called by Thanathorn to protest the court case, distinguishing the protest as the largest political demonstrations since the 2014 coup.

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Future Forward Party supporters react to the verdict on Feb. 21, 2020.

But the party also came under legal challenges nearly as soon as it began to make its bid for power, including a bizarre lawsuit that accused Thanathorn of drawing inspiration from the Illuminati and attempting to overthrow the Thai monarchy in favor of a New World Order.

Thanathorn himself had his MP status suspended just days after the parliament convened due to a legal challenge by election regulators. He was later stripped of his MP seat on allegations of violating a voting law.

In the wake of today’s verdict, the Future Forward joined the rank of other anti-military parties dissolved by the Constitutional Court, starting from the Thai Rak Thai Party back in 2006 to the Thai Raksa Chart Party last year.

Future Forward Party founders Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul at the first meeting of the party at Thammasat University's Rangsit campus on May 27, 2018.
Future Forward Party founders Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul at the first meeting of the party at Thammasat University’s Rangsit campus on May 27, 2018.

Additional reporting Teeranai Charuvastra

Related stories:

Will Street Protests Return if Future Forward is Disbanded?

Thanathorn Sues Officials for ‘Rushing’ His Case to Court

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Twitter User Arrested, Jailed for ‘Insulting Monarchy’

Twitter logo. Photo: Associated Press

BANGKOK — Police earlier this week arrested and charged a Twitter user for posting negative content about the monarchy, a rights lawyer group said Friday.

The user was charged with cybercrime and denied a bail release by the court on the grounds that the suspect was a flight risk, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, who identified the man as a 20-year-old resident in Chonburi province.

Although the charge of royal defamation itself was not filed, an attorney for the suspect said the secrecy and procedures in this case are similar to prosecution on royal insult offenses.

“They don’t use 112 anymore, because they rely on the Computer Crime Act instead,” the attorney said, referring to Article 112 of the Criminal Codes, or lese majeste. “But the court’s rationale for denying bail is similar to 112 cases, word for word.”

Thai Lawyer for Human Rights said the suspect was accused of running a Twitter username who frequently posted information critical of the monarchy.

The group said at least 10 police officers raided his home on Wednesday, then forced him to give up the passwords for his phone and social media accounts for investigation.

He was also allegedly interrogated without a lawyer’s presence at Pattaya City Police Station, where he was charged with violating Section 14 of the Computer Crime Act, which bans importing information that threatens “national security” into the computer system. He faced up to five years in prison if found guilty.

Read: Army Detains Suspected Admin of Monarchy Satire FB Page

In its remand request filed to the court, police said they tracked down the suspect by asking internet service provider TrueMove H to unmask the user’s identity and location. The suspect is currently being held at a prison in Chonburi.

An attorney who represents the suspect said she will file another bail request on Monday.

Crackdown on critical discussion about the monarchy on the online world intensified after the May 2014 military coup, with a number of people arrested and social media pages blocked.

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Man Confesses to Killing 3 in Lopburi Gold Heist

A still from CCTV footage showing the suspect walking into Robinson shopping mall with a handgun on Jan. 9, 2020.
A still from CCTV footage showing the suspect walking into Robinson shopping mall with a handgun on Jan. 9, 2020.

BANGKOK — A school director accused of murdering three people in a gold store robbery in January pled guilty in court on Friday.

Prasittichai Khaokaew, 38, enterred the guilty plea at the Criminal Court a day after he was indicted on murder charges and other firearm offenses for the deadly heist in Lopburi province. The prosecutors said they are seeking the death sentence.

Prosecutors said Prasittichai gunned down three people, including a 2-year-old toddler, and wounded four others while he robbed a gold shop inside Robinson Department store on Jan. 9.

He then fled the scene with 664,470 baht worth of gold necklaces, according to the prosecutors.

Prayut Petchkhun, deputy spokesman for the attorney-general, said nine charges were brought against Prasittichai, including premeditated murder, armed robbery, firing a weapon in public places without due cause, and illegal possession of firearms.

Prasittichai said during a police news conference after his arrest that his motive was solely for the money. He is now being held in Bangkok Remand Prison.

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Khaosod, Matichon Acquitted of Defaming Suthep in Graft Case

A file photo of Suthep Thaugsuban

BANGKOK — The Appeal Court on Thursday dismissed a libel case against Khaosod and Matichon newspapers filed by former deputy PM Suthep Thaugsuban.

The suit, which also named former chief of the Department of Special Investigation Tharit Pengdit as a co-defendant, accused the defendants of libeling Suthep when Tharit announced an investigation into possible corruption under Suthep’s oversight.

Affirming a ruling delivered by the lower court, the Appeal Court said Khaosod and Matichon were reporting the news relevant to public interest and therefore could not be held liable for libel. The court also said then-DSI chief Tharit was carrying out his duty as required by the law.

The investigation was launched in 2013 by Tharit’s agency to look into alleged irregularities related to the construction of 396 police stations authorized by Suthep, who was overseeing police affairs at the time.

Khaosod and Matichon reported extensively on the case, prompting Suthep to file a defamation suit. The two newspapers were part of Matichon Group, the same company that owns Khaosod English.

The DSI eventually concluded there was evidence to believe a graft did take place in the project and forwarded the case to the National Anti-Corruption Commission, who in turn recommended the prosecutors to take up the case against Suthep in July 2019.

The investigation is ongoing.

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House Shoots Down ‘Anti-Coup Committee’

Soldiers are deployed on the streets of Bangkok during a coup on May 22, 2014.

BANGKOK — A proposal by the opposition to set up a panel to prevent future military coups failed to pass a vote in the the House of Representatives on Thursday.

The House voted 242 against 215 to reject the plan, which was submitted by Future Forward Party sec-gen Piyabutr Saengkanokkul earlier this month. Two abstain from voting. The voting came after 47 MPs took to the floor to debate the proposal, which the Future Forward said could be a solution to end the chronic cycle of coups in Thailand.

Under the plan, the panel would identify risks that could lead to military coups in the future and act against them. Thailand witnessed 13 ‘successful’ coups, and many other failed attempts, since the end of absolute monarchy in 1932.

Piyabutr told the House before voting took place that the past two military coup in 2006 and 2014 were the main cause in creating the current political division.

“The legitimacy of elections was destroyed. and this led to many people having no trust in the parliamentary system,” he said.

The failure to pass the motion did not surprise many critics of the government, led by former junta leader Gen Prayut Chan-ocha who enjoys a majority in the House and Senate.

Sombat Boonngam-anong, an activist who led a brief attempt to resist the May 2014 coup in the immediate aftermath, was one of them.

“I can’t quite fully say that this is a government from the people. It’s more like it’s a military regime which continued to survive through elections,” Sombat said. “That’s why they are preserving [the junta’s legacies] and protecting them from scrutiny.”

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German Gunman Calling for Genocide Kills 9 People

A man places flowers near a hookah bar where several people were killed on Wednesday night in Hanau, Germany, Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)

HANAU, Germany (AP) — A German who shot and killed nine people of foreign background in a rampage that began at a hookah bar frequented by immigrants had posted an online rant calling for the “complete extermination” of many “races or cultures in our midst,” authorities said Thursday.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the attack exposed the “poison” of racism in the country.

The gunman, Tobias Rathjen, 43, was found dead at his home along with his mother, and authorities said they were treating the rampage as an act of domestic terrorism.

Turks, ethnic Kurds and people with backgrounds from Bulgaria, Bosnia and Romania were among those killed, according to news reports. Turkey’s ambassador said five of the dead were Turkish citizens. People of Turkish background make up Germany’s single largest minority.

Rathjen opened fire at the hookah bar and a neighboring cafe in the Frankfurt suburb of Hanau around 10 p.m. Wednesday, killing several people, then traveled about 2.5 kilometers (1.5 miles) and fired on a car and a sports bar, claiming more victims. In addition to the dead, six people were injured, one seriously, authorities said.

Hookah lounges are places where people gather to smoke flavored tobacco from Middle Eastern water pipes. Metin Kan, who knew many of the victims, said it was obvious why the gunman chose the neighborhood.

“Look, a hookah bar there, a gaming parlor there, a doner kebab place there — it’s a place frequented by immigrants,” he said. “Why this hatred of foreigners? We all get along here.”

Kadir Kose, who runs a cafe nearby, said he was shocked at the extent of the violence: “This is a whole other level, something we hear about from America.”

The bloodshed came amid growing concerns about far-right violence in Germany and stepped-up efforts to crack down on it, including last week’s detention of a dozen men on suspicion they were planning attacks against politicians and minorities.

“This poison exists in our society and its is responsible for far too many crimes,” Merkel said, citing the killings of 10 people across the country between 2000 and 2007 by a far-right gang, the fatal shooting last year of a regional politician from her party, and a deadly attack outside a synagogue in Halle on Yom Kippur in October.

She pledged to stand up against those who seek to divide the country.

“There is much to indicate that the perpetrator acted out of far-right extremist, racist motives,” she said. “Out of hatred for people with other origins, other faiths or a different appearance.”

While investigators said it appeared the gunman acted alone, Germany’s federal prosecutor, Peter Frank, said authorities are trying to find out whether there were others who knew of or supported the attack. He added that his office is looking into any contacts the killer may have had inside Germany or abroad.

Peter Beuth, interior minister for the state of Hesse, said it does not appear Rathjen had a criminal record or was on the radar of Germany’s domestic intelligence agency.

Witnesses and surveillance video of the getaway car led authorities quickly to the gunman’s home, where he and his 72-year-old mother were found dead with gunshot wounds, apparently bringing the number of victims killed to 10.

Frank identified the gunman only as Tobias R., in line with German privacy laws, and confirmed he had posted extremist videos and a screed with “confused ideas and far-fetched conspiracy theories” on his website, which has since been taken down. He identified himself on the website as Tobias Rathjen.

“We now have ethnic groups, races or cultures in our midst that are destructive in every respect,” Rathjen wrote in his rambling, 24-page screed on his website. He said he envisioned first a “rough cleaning” and then a “fine cleaning” that could halve the world’s population.

“The following people must be completely exterminated,” he wrote, then went on to list two dozen countries, most of them Muslim.

The deadly attack was quickly condemned by many organizations, including the Central Council of Muslims, the Confederation of Kurdish Associations in Germany, and the Central Council of Jews.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called it a “heinous attack” and expressed confidence that German authorities “will exert all kinds of effort to shed light on all aspects of this attack.”

In his rant, Rathjen also detailed fears that he had been under government surveillance for years and blamed the monitoring for his inability to have a relationship with a woman. He also claimed to have approached police several times with conspiracy theories.

Separately, he sought help last year in finding out who was allegedly observing him from a Austrian man, Bernd Gloggnitzer, who teaches “remote viewing,” a practice that adherents claim gives them the ability to sense the unseen.

“I didn’t reply because I could tell from the email that he was a nutcase,” Gloggnitzer told The Associated Press. He said Rathien forwarded to him a criminal complaint that he had drawn up and sent to Germany’s federal prosecutors, and “it was one conspiracy theory after another.”

In the criminal complaint that he drew up, Rathien said that he worked for a price comparison website as a sales consultant but quit to devote all his attention to investigating the alleged surveillance. On his own website, he said he was born and raised in Hanau and earned a business degree.

He had a license to possess a gun, first issued in 2013, local authorities told Germany’s dpa news agency. Local media reported he owned three 9 mm pistols. Some 5.4 million of Germany’s 83 million people have guns. Owners must undergo background checks, including showing that they are not mentally ill.

German police were also examining a video Rathjen may have posted online several days before the attack in which he detailed a conspiracy theory about child abuse in the United States, dpa reported.

He made no reference to the far-right QAnon movement in the U.S., but the message was similar to the fringe group’s central, baseless belief that President Donald Trump is under attack from “deep state” enemies and that satanists and cannibals are running a child sex trafficking ring.

___

Geir Moulson in Berlin, Michael Probst and Christoph Noelting in Hanau, and Suzan Fraser in Ankara contributed to this report. Rising and Jordans reported from Berlin.

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Japan to Assist Chinese Pingpong Rivals Stranded by Virus

Kyodo file photo of Ma Long

TOKYO (Kyodo) — The Japan Table Tennis Association has agreed to take in about 50 members of China’s national table tennis team who are unable to return home in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, association sources said Friday.

According to the sources, Japanese table tennis’ governing body is arranging to bring the players, including reigning Olympic and world singles champion Ma Long, to a training base in the Kanto region centered on Tokyo after the March 22-29 team worlds in Busan, South Korea.

Continue reading the story here.

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Bloomberg Struggles to Respond to Politics of #MeToo Era

Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg waves after speaking at a campaign event, Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mike Bloomberg’s name last appeared on a ballot a decade before #MeToo transformed cultural mores surrounding sexual harassment and the treatment of women. As he campaigns for the presidency, the 78-year-old billionaire is struggling to adjust.

The former New York City mayor was caught flat-footed during much of Wednesday night’s debate when rival Elizabeth Warren blasted his company’s use of non-disclosure agreements in cases of sexual harassment. She sought to portray such agreements as endemic of a broader culture of sexism at the company, Bloomberg LP, when he was CEO.

Bloomberg’s response was dismissive. He said those who alleged misconduct “didn’t like a joke I told” and argued that non-disclosure agreements were “consensual” deals supported by the women involved.

The response struck some women as out of touch with how the #MeToo movement has reshaped the conversation around sexual harassment in the workplace — and the use of non-disclosure agreements in particular. Employment lawyer Debra Katz, who represented accuser Christine Blasey Ford in her Senate testimony against then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, said Bloomberg’s comments “really missed the mark.”

“I think Bloomberg’s comments were tone-deaf,” she said. “In this moment, when we now understand that many NDAs were entered into in coercive manners, it’s incumbent upon companies and especially those (led by people) like Bloomberg, who are public figures, to agree to revisit these issues.”

The episode could cost Bloomberg some support from women, who are crucial to winning the Democratic nomination and defeating President Donald Trump. Warren kept up the pressure on Thursday, saying when women complain, Bloomberg can “throw a little money on it, put a little gag in the woman’s mouth.”

Bloomberg campaigned Thursday in Salt Lake City, Utah, where he showed no sign of changing his approach, bemoaning the division on display during the debate and reinforcing his central point that he’s best positioned to beat Trump.

Still, his rise in the polls is prompting scrutiny of Bloomberg’s company. Bloomberg LP has reportedly faced nearly 40 lawsuits involving 65 plaintiffs on an array of employment issues between 1996 and 2016. It’s unclear how many of these cases were related to sexual harassment, but a number of recent media reports have disclosed charges of sexist comments made by Bloomberg and other managers at the company.

Earlier this month, The Washington Post published a long-rumored joke book of crude comments Bloomberg allegedly made about women from 1990. His campaign has said he never made any of the comments disclosed in the booklet.

But Tina Tchen, the CEO and president of Time’s Up, the organization created to fight sexual harassment in the wake of #MeToo, said she wasn’t surprised by allegations about the culture at Bloomberg LP.

“Being in the finance world, having worked in a corporate law firm myself in the ’80s and ’90s, I think it’s fair to say that workplaces, especially the Wall Street workplace, was a very different place in terms of the comments that were considered normal and accepted,” she said.

But she said, now, “most companies have evolved, and are continuing to evolve,” particularly on the issue of NDAs. She noted that NDAs have “long been a tool that have silenced survivors of sexual harassment … and really take agency away from survivors.”

They can also make it tougher for a company to correct a culture of sexual harassment, because the secrecy surrounding these incidents mean employees and managers don’t know how widespread they are. Tchen said it would be perfectly reasonable for Bloomberg to amend the NDAs now.

“Knowing what we all know now about the workplace and sexual harassment, are you willing to, now, allow folks to speak up about their experience?” she asked.

Many types of litigation, from insurance cases to product liability, are routinely settled through confidential settlements.

In sexual misconduct cases, they’ve served to protect the privacy of victims as well as the careers and reputations of the accused, including comedian Bill Cosby, Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly and other powerful men.

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, some think the practice should be revisited.

“One interesting thing is whether it will be an end to the confidentiality pledge,” Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said at a February 2018 event at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.

“I hope those agreements will not be enforced by courts,” she added in a revised version of the speech published last year.

Katz said that while there’s a role for non-disclosure agreements to help victims preserve their privacy, and that the majority of her clients prefer to keep their agreements confidential, she believes public figures like Bloomberg should release them from the secrecy clause if they want to go public.

“Certainly in this environment, Bloomberg needs to be transparent,” she said. “And, if in fact, there was nothing that implicated his conduct in these agreements, he should want to have them be made public. But to the extent that he presided as CEO of these companies and simply paid settlements as the cost of doing business, and didn’t take appropriate corrective measures, that’s certainly something that should be important for voters to know about.”

A number of current and former employees have spoken out in defense of Bloomberg, and say his promotion of women and advocacy on women’s issues has long been one of his strengths. Bloomberg himself noted on the debate stage that he has employed and elevated many women to positions of leadership within his organization and his mayoral administration. He appointed the first woman to serve as deputy mayor, and has donated tens of millions of dollars to organizations promoting women’s reproductive rights and other women’s rights efforts.

Fatima Shah, who currently serves on the campaign as national director overseeing coalitions and constituencies and worked in the Bloomberg administration from 2006 until he left office, said he made clear in his administration that women “were all clear partners in the work that we were doing.” She suggested a few incidents that occurred at Bloomberg LP, which employs thousands of people globally, were “wrongly layered onto Mike.”

“As a father, as a brother, as a son, as a mayor, as a business leader and philanthropist, his leadership has consistently focused on engaging women, on issues that matter to women,” she said.

But his refusal to acknowledge and apologize for issues within his company come in stark contrast to how some of his Democratic opponents have addressed similar issues throughout the campaign. After several women said Joe Biden made them feel uncomfortable with unwanted physical contact, he pledged to “be more mindful about respecting personal space in the future.” And Bernie Sanders apologized and enacted reforms after women came forward with claims of sexual harassment on his 2016 campaign.

Some of Bloomberg’s critics from his time as mayor say his refusal to show a similar level of contrition is unsurprising. Melissa Mark-Viverito, a former New York City Council speaker who did battle with Bloomberg frequently, said his debate performance “very much reminds me of the Mike Bloomberg that I knew.”

“It does continue to reinforce that image that people have that he is out of touch and has no willingness to understand or address that,” she said.

Indeed, that may be the continued political fallout for Bloomberg if he fails to address the issue, warned Democratic strategist Maria Cardona. She suggested Bloomberg’s refusal to apologize for the conduct at his company could blur the very clear distinction the candidate has tried to draw between himself and Trump, who has faced many more and far more salacious claims of sexual harassment directed at him personally, but who has also never taken responsibility for any wrongdoing.

“If Bloomberg really wants to be the one that unequivocally is left standing as the one Democrat that can fight Trump, I don’t think he’s going to be able to do that until he puts this to rest,” she said.

__

Dale reported from Philadelphia.

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More Enterprises in China Resume Work Amid Epidemic

Workers are busy at a tilapia processing line in an aquatic product company in Chengmai, a county of south China's Hainan Province, Feb. 18, 2020. The aquatic product export enterprises in Hainan resumed work recently under strict measures taken to prevent and control the novel coronavirus epidemic. (Xinhua/Guo Cheng)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China is taking more targeted measures to resume production and support companies hit by the outbreak.

Figures including new confirmed cases across the country, new confirmed cases outside Hubei Province, and new confirmed cases in Wuhan, epicenter of the outbreak, as well as in other places of Hubei, have all been dropping gradually.

The State Council executive meeting on Tuesday urged a multi-pronged approach to facilitate business operations and employment, while local authorities including those in Shenzhen, Shanghai and Changchun in northeastern Jilin Province offered to issue more policy-backed loans, further lower interest rates and discount interest payments for micro, small and medium-sized companies.

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A worker is busy at a plant of Yihai Kerry (Harbin) Oils, Grains & Foodstuffs Industries Co., Ltd. in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Feb. 20, 2020. Some oils and grains enterprises in Heilongjiang have resumed production in an orderly manner under strict measures taken to prevent and control the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) recently. (Xinhua/Wang Song)
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Workers queue to get lunch takeaway box at a plant of Sany Heavy Industry in Changsha, central China’s Hunan Province, Feb. 20, 2020. Sany Heavy Industry has resumed production in an orderly manner under strict measures taken to prevent and control the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) since Feb. 18. (Xinhua/Chen Zeguo)
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A staff member takes the body temperature of a customer at the duty-free shop in Haikou, south China’s Hainan province, Feb. 20, 2020. Two offshore duty-free shops resumed operation Thursday in south China’s island province of Hainan amid the novel coronavirus outbreak. (Photo by Pu Xiaoxu/Xinhua)
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Workers wait for a customized train bound for south China’s Guangdong Province at the platform of a railway station in Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China’s Yunnan Province, Feb. 19, 2020. The customized train carried some 600 returning workers from Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan to Guangdong Province to resume their work on Wednesday. (Photo by Wang Hong/Xinhua)
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A staff member works at the workshop of a printing company for printing teaching materials in Tangshan, north China’s Hebei Province, Feb. 19, 2020.
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Returning workers prepare to enter Baise Railway Station in Baise, south China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Feb. 19, 2020. The customized train carried some 700 returning workers from Baise of Guangxi to Guangzhou of Guangdong to resume their work. (Xinhua/Lu Boan)
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