Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Farmers Insurance says it is cutting 2,400 jobs in bid to ensure long-term profitability

Associated Press
Mon, August 28, 2023 

The logo for the Farmers Insurance Group is seen on the North Course during the first round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament, Jan. 26, 2012, in San Diego. Farmers Insurance will lay off 11% of its workforce — or about 2,400 employees — as part of restructuring efforts, the company announced Monday, Aug. 28, 2023. 
(AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) 


NEW YORK (AP) — Farmers Insurance said Monday it will lay off 11% of its workforce — about 2,400 employees — as part of a corporate restructuring aimed at increasing its efficiency and long-term profitability.

The California-based insurer owned by Swiss giant Zurich Insurance Group said the job cuts will impact all lines of its business. Monday was the last working day at the company for most employees impacted by the layoffs, Farmers confirmed to The Associated Press.

In a statement announcing the job cuts, Raul Vargas, Farmers Group Inc. president and CEO, alluded to “existing conditions” in the insurance industry.

“As our industry continues to face macroeconomic challenges, we must carefully manage risk and prudently align our costs with our strategic plans for sustainable profitability," Vargas said. “Our leaner structure will make us more nimble and better able to pursue opportunities for growth and ultimately make Farmers more responsive to the needs of our insured customers and agents.”

In recent months, Farmers — along with other insurers including Allstate and State Farm — have pulled back on property insurance in states like Florida and California. As these regions become increasingly susceptible to natural disasters, from hurricanes to wildfires, in the era of climate change, the insurers have cited the need to reduce risk exposure and operating costs — but critics have accused the companies of exacerbating the cost-of-living crisis.

Monday's layoff announcement from Farmers follows mass job cuts seen at a handful of companies in the past year — including T-Mobile, Google, Meta, Amazon and Microsoft. Beyond the tech sector, layoffs have also hit Disney park employeesnewspapers and some higher education jobs.

Farmers Insurance lays off 2,400 workers as insurers pull back from California

Sam Dean
Mon, August 28, 2023 

A car drives through flooding during Tropical Storm Hilary in Lincoln Park on Aug. 20. Insurance providers have pointed to a rising risk of extreme weather events as they've reevaluated their business in California. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Farmers Insurance, one of the nation's largest property and casualty insurers, is laying off 2,400 workers, representing 11% of its total workforce.

The Los Angeles-based company cited a need to reduce operational costs and focus on "long-term sustainable profitability" in an announcement Monday to explain the job cuts.

This has been a chaotic year for the California insurance market, and this isn't the first dramatic move that Farmers, the second-largest home and auto insurer in California, has made in recent months.

In July, the company announced that it was not planning on accelerating its growth in the state, and would keep writing new policies at the same pace as before. In a typical year, this would not constitute news — but in 2023, it amounted to a shot across the bow for homeowners, builders and state regulators.

State Farm, the top home insurer in the state, had announced in May that it was hitting pause on writing new home insurance policies in the state, saying that rising construction costs from inflation, ballooning reinsurance fees and growing wildfire risks were making it difficult to add more policies. Allstate, sixth largest in the state, hit pause last year. Farmers' announcement was an admission that it didn't intend to fill the void left by its competitors' pullback.

Read more: Farmers, California's second-largest insurer, limits new home insurance policies

“Given the existing conditions of the insurance industry and the impact they are having on our business, we need to take decisive actions today to better position Farmers for future success,” Raul Vargas, president and chief executive of Farmers Group, said in the layoff announcement Monday. “As our industry continues to face macroeconomic challenges, we must carefully manage risk and prudently align our costs with our strategic plans for sustainable profitability."

The "existing conditions" and "macroeconomic challenges" that Vargas refers to are the same rising costs for reconstruction and risk of severe weather events, including fires, floods and tropical storms, that State Farm pointed to earlier this year. Those factors also have driven up the costs of the reinsurance policies that insurance companies take out to cover their own losses in case of major catastrophic events.

Farmers also said it would stop selling new homeowners policies in Florida earlier this year, and plans to pull back further in that state, according to reporting by Insurance Journal.

Despite these negative trends, Farmers has been faring better than most of its competitors in California. State Farm's home and auto lines lost more than $2 billion in the first three months of 2023, with $1.8 billion in losses coming from its car insurance division alone. Farmers, by comparison, lost about $150 million in the same period.


While the major players in California insurance have pulled back from the market, insurance industry groups have been clamoring for reforms to the state's regulatory system. Since 1988, when California voters approved Proposition 103, insurance companies have only been allowed to increase their rates with the approval of the California Department of Insurance, currently led by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, according to a strict set of transparency and financial requirements.

Lawmakers in Sacramento have taken notice of the situation in the market — and the industry's arguments.

Read more: State Farm's California freeze: Looming insurance apocalypse or political ploy?

The state Senate Republican Caucus released a public letter to the insurance commissioner last week stating that the "insurance industry is broken" and echoing the industry talking points that companies should be able to use new fire models to set higher rates for homeowners in high-fire-risk zones, pass along reinsurance costs to policyholders and generally speed up the rate increase approval process. Democratic lawmakers, who control the state government, are discussing reforms along similar lines, according to reporting by Politico.

Consumer Watchdog, the nonprofit consumer advocacy group that led the Proposition 103 ballot campaign, called the potential changes a "multi-billion dollar bailout" of the insurance industry in a statement Monday. Harvey Rosenfield, founder of the group, added that "insurance companies are trying to exploit a crisis to get deregulation they have sought for 35 years.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


UPDATE 1-Exxon says world set to fail 2°C global warming cap by 2050



Sabrina Valle
Mon, August 28, 2023 

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Exxon projects oil, gas to be 54% of world’s needs in 2050

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CO2 emissions in 2050 to double IPCC's desired scenario


By Sabrina Valle

HOUSTON, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Oil and natural gas are still projected to meet more than half of the world’s energy needs in 2050, or 54%, Exxon Mobil Corp said on Monday, with the world failing to keep global temperature increases below 2 degrees Celsius.


The largest U.S. oil producer projects the world will reach 25 billion metric tons of energy related carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in 2050, according to its energy outlook published on Monday.

That is more than twice of the 11 billion metric tons the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) say would be needed on average in its Lower 2°C scenarios.

"An energy transition is underway, but it is not yet happening at the scale or on the timetable required to achieve society’s net-zero ambitions," the producer said.

Exxon produces less than 3% of the world's daily crude demand and in May its shareholders overwhelmingly rejected calls for stronger measures to mitigate climate change.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has been saying since 2021 that much greater resources have to be directed to clean energy technologies to put the world on track to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

Only two of the 55 technologies needed to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 are “on track,” Exxon said citing the IEA. Emissions will decline only by 25% by 2050 as lower-emission options grow, the company said, below desired scenarios.

Overall, Exxon projects energy-related CO2 emissions will peak at more than 34 billion metric tons sometime this decade as economies and energy demand grow, and then decline to 25 billion metric tons in 2050.

Exxon is investing $17 billion over a six-year span through 2027 in lower carbon emissions technologies such as carbon capture and sequestration and hydrogen. The company says these two technologies, currently not commercial, are a significant promise for hard-to-decarbonize sectors in IPCC Lower 2°C scenarios.

Most of the capital is directed to reducing carbon emissions of its operations and of third parties. Unlike its European peers, Exxon has stayed away from consolidated renewable sources such as wind and solar power. It expects wind and solar to provide 11% of the world’s energy supply in 2050, five times today’s contribution. (Reporting by Sabrina Valle; Editing by Josie Kao)
Samish Indian Nation Confronts Effects of Climate Change with Bull Kelp


Bull kelp acts as a natural carbon sink, reducing greenhouse gas concentrations and mitigating the impacts of global warming.
(photo courtesy of Samish Indian Nation)

BY BEN PRYOR AUGUST 28, 2023

Tribal nations in the Pacific Northwest have experienced scorching heat waves this summer, breaking the norms of their historically temperate environment. Spring saw the region break long-standing records as May temperatures soared above the 90-degree Fahrenheit.

In July, Seattle broke records of six consecutive days with temperatures exceeding 90 degrees. At the same time, the heat in August was attributed to the death of three individuals in the region.

More broadly, July was Earth’s hottest month since U.S. temperature recordings began. These climate dynamics demand attention and underscore the urgency for comprehensive action in an increasingly unpredictable climate landscape.

At the forefront in the Pacific Northwest are the tribal nations situated along the waterways of Washington’s Puget Sound, facing the harsh realities of extreme weather events and their accompanying challenges. Among them is the Samish Indian Nation, located in the scenic San Juan Archipelago of Washington, nestled against the backdrop of the Cascade Range.

“The impacts are far-reaching and go unnoticed by the casual observer,” Samish Indian Nation Chairman Tom Wooten told Native News Online. “The people who have lived within our traditional territory, the Salish Sea, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike, see the impacts and are taking positive action now.”   

The Samish Department of Natural Resources focuses on preserving, protecting, and enhancing culturally significant natural resources and habitats within this area for current and future generations. Today, several species are struggling to survive and adapt.

“The elevated temperatures impact our health, as well as fresh and saltwater quality,” said Wooten. “The finfish and shellfish Samish citizens and our relations, the killer whale of the Salish Sea, relies on for our diets. These foods nourish our people’s bodies, spirits, and minds.” 

The Realities Facing the Samish Indian Nation

Their history instructs proper relationship with the land, waters, and resources by teaching lessons left for them by ancestors about both the natural and spiritual worlds and how those worlds cannot be separated. 

“The Samish Nation are a canoe people and have resided on the coasts of our island homes for time immemorial,” said Wooten. “Now our current, cultural, and historical sites are impacted by sea-level rise.”

The Pacific Northwest has experienced a significant decline in salmon harvest in recent years, which impacts the cultural heritage of regional tribes. Salmon are central to Washington tribes’ cultures, identities, and businesses. 

The participation of non-tribal commercial fishers further exacerbates the reduction in salmon harvest. This decline becomes compounded by the fact that the aquatic ecosystem depends on a certain balance or harmony to succeed. The food chain erodes from the bottom as smaller parasites die or relocate to cooler waters. 

In the Samish community, a common saying is, “When the tide goes out, our table is set for dinner.” The warming water temperatures threaten the health of all five species of Pacific Salmon, smelt, herring, steelhead trout, halibut, sucker, clams, oysters, and bull kelp. 

The Strength of the Humble Bull Kelp

The Samish Nation is not sitting idly by. For generations, tribal members have been harnessing the power of bull kelp to address the ongoing impacts of climate change. 

“The big thing for us in the near to medium term is to better understand the bull kelp, the overstory kelp, kelp species that are native to Samish traditional territory,” said Marcus Campidilli, a Climate Adaptation Specialist for the Samish Department of Natural Resources. “As we’re getting a better understanding of what is causing the decline of that species, how to best combat climate change by potentially out planting some of these bull kelp, and trying to rebuild some of these kelp forests that traditionally were very abundant and are a huge food source for Samish peoples.” 

This unassuming marine plant can help remove carbon, actively absorbing and storing atmospheric carbon dioxide through photosynthesis. Through this, bull kelp acts as a natural carbon sink, reducing greenhouse gas concentrations and mitigating the impacts of global warming.

“Our concern is not singularly focused on any one potential stressor causing the decline of these kelp forests,” said Campidilli. “It is more kind of getting an understanding of which stressor is the big one or is it a multitude of stressors? From a climate change perspective, the big stressor is increased annual temperature because the kelp in this area has a specific temperature range  – it needs colder water to really thrive.” 

Given the global nature of climate change, the solutions are found in collective action and working together.

“As far as a solution, I don't think there is a one-size-fits-all sort of approach,” said Campidilli. “It’s not something where any one group, whether it’s one local municipality, or the state or, various NGOs (non-governmental organizations) or the tribes individually, are able to cause a broad change. I think that collective action piece is something that is kind of crucial to changing some of those policy issues.”

ALL OUR RELATIONS

Longtime Host of “The Price is Right” Bob Barker, Who Was Part Sioux, Walks On at 99

Bob Barker, best known for being the longtime host of “The Price is Right,” walked on at his Hollywood Woods home on Saturday of natural causes. Barker was less known for his Native American roots. Barker was 99.

Bob Barker (Photo/Wiki photo)

“It is with profound sadness that we announce that the World’s Greatest MC who ever lived, Bob Barker has left us,” publicist Roger Neal said in a statement Saturday. 

He was born Robert Willam Barker in 1923 in Darrington, Washington. His father, Byron John Barker, was one-quarter Sioux, which made him one-eighth. His father was an electrical line foreman, who passed away from injuries sustained in a fall from an electrical tower in 1929. 

After his father’s death, Barker’s mother moved the family to the Rosebud Indian Reservation where she taught school. The family lived there until Barker’s early teens.

“I always bragged about being part Indian because they are a people to be proud of. And the Sioux were the greatest warriors of them all,” Barker told the Associated Press in 1962 in an interview. 

Barker’s show business career on the radio for a station in Florida. In 1956, he began to host Truth or Consequences until the program ended in 1974.

Barker had already begun hosting “The Price is Right" in 1972 and remained the host until 2007. He announced his retirement on October 31, 2006 and his final episode aired on June 15, 2007.

“The Price is Right” is television’s longest running game show.

Traditional Homelands Returned to Indigenous Hands


Victor Jacinto, Tyrese Gould Jacinto, president and CEO of the Native American Advancement Corporation, and her father, former Chief Mark “Quiet Hawk” Gould, in front of the former Morningstar Fellowship Church on Aug. 15. 
(photo/New Jersey Conservation Foundation)

BY NATIVE NEWS ONLINE STAFF AUGUST 24, 2023

Sixty-three acres of Cohanzick Lenape traditional homelands are now in the hands of the Native American Advancement Corporation (NAAC), an organization dedicated to the advancement and development of all North American Natives based in Bridgeton, New Jersey. 

Tyrese Gould Jacinto, president and CEO of NAAC, and her father, former Chief Mark “Quiet Hawk” Gould, are citizens of the Nanticoke Lenape Nation and have direct ancestral ties to this sacred land. 

“The acquisition of the Cohanzick Nature Reserve is a monumental step toward preserving this ancestral homeland and sharing its significance with the broader community,” Jacinto said in a statement on Tuesday. “We are committed to creating a haven for individuals, a place where traditions are deeply rooted in conservation, and the public can learn about the rich cultural heritage of the Cohanzick Lenape people.”

The property was previously a Morningstar Fellowship Church property in Quinton Township within the Burden Hill forest area in New Jersey before it was transferred to the sole ownership of NAAC. Now, the organization plans to turn the former church into an educational, cultural, and environmental center. It will be known as the Cohanzick Nature Reserve.

As part of the future nature reserve, NAAC plans to launch Indigenous conservation education programs based on traditional knowledge from the land’s original stewards that will be open to the public. Those who participate will have the opportunity to engage in hands-on workshops, and guided tours of the nature reserve. 

The acquisition of the land was done in collaboration with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Green Acres Program, New Jersey Conservation Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving land throughout New Jersey, and The Nature Conservancy, a global conservation organization. The Nature Conservancy contributed funding to the project.

The DEP’s Assistant Commissioner of Community Investment and Economic Revitalization, Elizabeth Dragon, says she takes pride in Green Acres’ contribution as it is part of the DEP’s commitment to preserving and protecting open spaces for outdoor recreation. 

Two Native Scholars Link Native Culture to Math

Yahoo News
Native Education

Danny Luecke (enrolled member of Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma), developer/instructor for the bachelor’s degree in Secondary Math Education at Turtle Mountain Community College. Luecke is currently completing his Ph.D. in math and math education at North Dakota State University.
(Photo/American Indian College Fund)

BY NATIVE NEWS ONLINE STAFF AUGUST 12, 2023

The focus of tribal colleges’ work is to seek connections between the cultures and heritage of the Indigenous communities they serve and mainstream education curricula.

Danny Luecke (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma), a member of the Teacher Education Department at Turtle Mountain Community College, and Dr. David Sanders (Oglala Sioux Tribe), vice president of research at the American Indian College Fund, explored the connections between math content, local culture, and the classroom.

While using an Indigenous research paradigm at Sitting Bull College, located on the Standing Rock Reservation, their work looks at how to connect language and culture in the tribal college math classroom and has contributed to a change in the theory of knowledge incorporated at tribal colleges and universities.

Their resulting co-authored, peer-reviewed research paper titled “Dakota/Lakota Match Connections: an epistemological framework for teaching and learning mathematics with Indigenous communities and students,” was published in Frontiers in Education on July 27, 2023.

“My main thought was how to connect the TCU math classroom with language and culture. Most of us were taught math with the Western value of separation/abstraction (that is removing relationship) as the only and superior way to think mathematically. The myth that Western math is placeless, without culture, and contains all mathematical knowing is very prevalent, but does not align with the SBC mission statement that has D/Lakota language, culture, and values influencing every classroom, including the math class," Luecke said of his research and work at Sitting Bull College as a math teacher partnering with its immersion school,

Through conversations at Sitting Bull College with elders, language instructors, math instructors, and people in the community, Luecke said he found many examples of the connections between the Dakota/Lakota language and math. \

The research methodology Luecke and Sanders used incorporated the voices of community members, elders, Native speakers, and culture bearers. Around the same time, Luecke said he was doing work personally to learn what it means to be a member of the Choctaw Nation.

Luecke is the developer/instructor for the bachelor’s degree in Secondary Math Education at Turtle Mountain Community College. He is currently completing his Ph.D. in math and math education at North Dakota State University. His research focuses on Dakota/Lakota Math Connections at Sitting Bull College. He was born and raised in Fargo, North Dakota. In addition to his membership in the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, Luecke has ancestry from multiple European nations as well. He says he is honoring all his ancestors and the Creator through his life and work with the Standing Rock and Turtle Mountain communities. He has also written other articles about Indigenous math connections, including the forthcoming article "Dakota/Lakota Math Connections: Results from Developing a Community-based Math Resource" submitted for publication in 2024 in the Tribal College and University Research Journal, and “Ojibwe Math at Turtle Mountain Community College,” to be published in the Fall 2023 issue of Tribal College Journal. His forthcoming dissertation (December 2023) is titled “Dakota/Lakota Math Connections: Applying an Indigenous Research Paradigm to Research in Undergraduate Math Education.”

“Danny has taken up an important strand of practical research, applying an Indigenous methodological approach which requires Indigenous communities to be involved throughout the process. In Danny's work, community members have shaped, developed, and drive the connections between Western Mathematics, English, Dakota/Lakota Mathematics and the Dakota/Lakota languages while not privileging one over the other. Stemming from this work is the idea that mathematics can increase Dakota/Lakota language fluency and Dakota/Lakota languages can help increase mathematical conceptual understanding. In essence, the intersection of these four areas helps to demystify the subject of mathematics, with the understanding that all cultures use mathematics," Sanders said, 

Cheryl Crazy Bull, President and CEO of the American Indian College Fund says making making cultural connections with teaching students leads to meaningful education for Native students.

“Naming our traditional knowledge and linking that knowledge with teaching and learning in our schools and homes is one of the ways that we ensure quality, meaningful education for our children. When scholars make those connections for us, we honor and appreciate that scholarship and the opportunity to share it with the broader educational community," Crazy Bull said.

Confederated Tribes of the Coos Concerned about Offshore Wind Development Plans

Kaili Berg
Mon, August 28, 2023
\
(Photo Courtesy of Northwest Power and Conservation Council)

The federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) released two draft Wind Energy Areas (WEAs) off the Oregon coast for the development of offshore wind energy. The Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians are concerned.

The tribe believes that the release of WEAs was premature and threatens fisheries, local fishing jobs, and some of Oregon’s pristine ocean viewsheds, some of which are sacred to the Tribe, according to a press release.

“The Tribe supports any green economic development project that follows the law and does not harm local fishing jobs, our environment, or Tribal cultural resources,” Tribal Council Chair Brad Kneaper said in a press release. “We cannot support offshore wind development until we are provided assurance that it will do good and not harm the Tribe, its members, and the greater community.”

The WEA’s draft covers approximately 219,568 acres offshore of southern Oregon with their closest points ranging from approximately 18 to 32 miles off the coast, according to BOEM.

The Tribe raised a number of concerns to BOEM about wind energy development. These comments include areas of ocean views excluded from the wind areas, along with areas critical to resident and migratory wildlife and fishing.

“Last week, BOEM shared its initial visual impacts assessment that demonstrates that the blades and lights from these facilities could be seen from important places along the coast both during the day and at night. This is not acceptable to the Tribe,”  Kneaper said in a statement from the Confederated Tribes of Coos.

According to the Oregon Department of Wildlife, commercial fishing generated an estimated $558 million in income for the statewide economy in 2019, which is equivalent to 9,200 jobs.

Fishing is an important industry on the coast that employs tribal members and supports tribal business. Fish, including salmon, are also an important cultural and subsistence resource to the Tribe. Any impact to fish from wind development could harm local jobs and the tribe according to the statement.

The Tribe has called the coast their home since Time Immemorial. The Tribe's beliefs, traditional practices, fishing, first foods and relations are interconnected and influenced by all that is encompassed in the greater ocean. The tribe consistently advocates that any projects, on land or offshore, avoid impacts on sites of traditional and religious significance to the tribe according to a statement.

“The Tribe remains open to working with the BOEM to resolve the issues raised in our

Comments,” Kneaper said.  “We plan to provide comments to BOEM on the WEAs, to provide testimony at the public hearings, and to coordinate with our local and state partners to address our concerns.”

About the Author: "Kaili Berg (Aleut) is a member of the Alutiiq\/Sugpiaq Nation, and a shareholder of Koniag, Inc. She is a staff reporter for Native News Online and Tribal Business News. Berg, who is based in Wisconsin, previously reported for the Ho-Chunk Nation newspaper, Hocak Worak. She went to school originally for nursing, but changed her major after finding her passion in communications at Western Technical College in Lacrosse, Wisconsin. "

Contact: kberg@indiancountrymedia.com

As China hosts Canada's climate minister, hopes of lowering diplomatic temperatures remain dim


South China Morning Post
Mon, August 28, 2023 

The first visit to China in four years by a Canadian cabinet minister could be the latest bid for improved ties, but chances of a major rapprochement are slim, while the risk of confrontation remains high, Chinese observers said.

On Monday, Canada's Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault joined Chinese and foreign officials, as well as representatives of the United Nations, during a three-day annual gathering in Beijing of the China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development (CCICED), a semi-official think tank Canada helped establish in 1992.

Guilbealt was also expected to meet with his Chinese counterpart Huang Runqiu in Beijing.

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The trip is the first visit by a Canadian government minister to China since 2019, when bilateral ties hit a low point following the arrest in Vancouver of Huawei's chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, on a US warrant in December 2018. Days later, two Canadian nationals - Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig - were detained in China on security and espionage charges.

It could be seen as the latest attempt by Beijing and Ottawa to find common ground amid strained relations.

"Climate change and biodiversity are the most important areas of cooperation between China and Canada today," said Huang Zhong, an associate researcher with the Centre for Canadian Studies at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies.

He noted that climate change was among the few areas where Canada had pledged to work with China in its Indo-Pacific strategy, which described China as an "increasingly disruptive global power".

"Cooperation in other areas between China and Canada has basically stagnated, and this is where the interests of the two countries converge more than anything else at the moment," Huang added.

Before his departure to the Chinese capital, Guilbeault told Reuters that there was potential for Canada and China to work together on climate change.

Both China and Canada are major emitters of greenhouse gas emissions, ranking first and 10th respectively among the main polluting countries, according to the bp Statistical Review of World Energy 2021.


"Maybe there are ways we can cooperate," said Guilbeault, who is a prominent figure in the fight against climate change. "I'm hoping that we can have open and frank conversations about a number of issues relating to climate change", he added.

Guilbeault's visit comes six weeks after Beijing and Washington agreed to resume collaboration on climate change - stalled for nearly a year amid geopolitical tensions - when John Kerry, US President Joe Biden's special envoy for climate change, visited Beijing.

Observers in China, however, were not optimistic about a breakthrough between Beijing and Ottawa.

The opposition Conservative Party has taken a hawkish approach toward China, saying it would be "difficult" for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Liberal government to seek a rapprochement with Beijing, according to Huang.

A recent poll showed that 61 per cent of respondents in Canada said the country should reduce its trade with China, its second largest trading partner after the United States. Only 20 per cent of respondents said Ottawa was doing either a very good, or good job of managing Chinese ties, a drop of 12 points since 2019, according to a Nanos Research Group survey for Bloomberg News in December.

In the latest blow to bilateral ties, the two countries exchanged tit-for-tat expulsions of diplomats in May, when Canada accused China of targeting Conservative lawmaker Michael Chong's family in Hong Kong and declared Chinese diplomat Zhao Wei "persona non grata". In response, Beijing expelled Canada's consul in Shanghai.

"Under these circumstances, it is difficult to expect the Trudeau government to do much to improve its policy towards China, and we should not expect too much from Guilbeault's visit to China," said Huang.

He said ties between the two countries would continue "to be cold" and risks of confrontations "will still be high".

"In the long run, an improvement in China-Canada relations will still require new opportunities, for which representatives of both countries should be fully prepared, work pragmatically and wait patiently."

Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
A Forced Kiss, and a Reckoning With Sexism in Spain

Jason Horowitz and Rachel Chaundler
Updated Mon, August 28, 2023 

FILE - Spain's Jennifer Hermoso, right, and head coach Jorge Vilda listens to reporters questions during a press conference at Eden Park ahead of the Women's World Cup semifinal match between Spain and Sweden in Auckland, New Zealand, Monday, Aug.14, 2023. Jenni Hermoso said Friday, Aug. 25, that ‘in no moment’ did she consent to a kiss on the lips by soccer federation president Luis Rubiales. Hermoso issued a statement through her union hours after Rubiales claimed in an emergency meeting of the Spanish soccer federation that the kiss was consensual. 
(AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, File) 

Laura Marqués has never been much interested in soccer. She doesn’t watch the Spanish league games or know the names of the players. She didn’t even watch the Spanish women’s team win the World Cup final this month. But after the president of Spain’s soccer federation forcibly kissed one of the players during the medals ceremony after the match, setting off a momentous national debate about feminism, equality and abuse, soccer is all she has been thinking about.

“We’ve been talking about soccer a lot this week,” Marqués, a 26-year-old lawyer, said as she walked in downtown Zaragoza with a friend. She said she considered the unwanted kiss an all-too-common act of casual aggression, an abuse of power by an authority figure and a shameful eclipsing of the women’s moment of glory by the country’s stubborn, if fading, culture of machismo, the often ingrained sense of masculine pride and entitlement.

“Everything that happened showed what the players have been complaining about for a long time, and nobody believed how serious it was,” she said. “It’s the straw that broke the camel’s back.”

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The celebratory and nonconsensual kiss on the lips that Luis Rubiales, the president of Spain’s soccer federation, pressed on Jennifer Hermoso, one of the team’s star players, has come to embody the generational and cultural fault line between deep traditions of machismo and the more recent progressivism that has put Spain in the European vanguard on issues of feminism and equality. Some commentators have taken to calling it Spain’s #MeToo moment.

On Monday, Spanish prosecutors said they had opened a preliminary investigation into whether Rubiales, 46, could be charged with committing a crime that could constitute sexual aggression. The group he heads, known formally as the Royal Spanish Football Federation, met for hours on Monday and into the night to discuss the issue, before calling on him to resign. In a statement, it cited “the unacceptable behaviors that have seriously damaged the image of Spanish football.”

Against the politically charged backdrop of recent Spanish elections that largely rejected the nostalgic and anti-gender identity politics of the chauvinistic far right, Spain’s establishment is clearly picking a side. Leading politicians on the left and right, the country’s top cultural figures and even an increasing number of voices from within the machismo culture of Spanish soccer have rallied to support Hermoso — who said she felt like a “victim of aggression” after a nonconsensual and sexist act — and to condemn Rubiales, who has decried “false feminism,” described himself as the victim of a “social assassination” and insisted Hermoso initiated the exchange.

“What happened last week was an epochal moment that will have important repercussions,” said Máriam Martínez-Bascuñán, a professor of political sciences at the Autonomous University of Madrid. She said the immediate condemnation of Rubiales — even by members of Spain’s main conservative party — reflected how far the country’s feminist movement had come. She noted that in the last 20 years, Spain had been a pioneer in gender and equality legislation.

In 2004, it recognized domestic violence as explicitly gender-based violence, and in 2022, after a horrific gang rape, the government passed a law that classifies any nonconsensual sex as rape.

The backlash to the kiss by Rubiales, Martínez-Bascuñán said, showed that the country has no intention of backsliding.

Martínez-Bascuñán said the incident presented “a magnificent opportunity” for Spain’s feminists and progressives to reveal and change the sexism in even the most male-dominated institutions. She said that there was a “generational and gender-based” fault line, but that most Spaniards understood why the kiss was inappropriate, and those who did not understand “were not the majority at all.”

Indeed, the denunciation of the kiss, videos and photographs of which proliferated in Spanish social media and across the country’s newspapers and television screens, came from across the political spectrum.

Pedro Sánchez, the country’s acting prime minister and leader of the Socialist party who bet big, and successfully, on his own record of progressive and feminist upheavals in last month’s elections, said that the kiss was “unacceptable” and the subsequent apology by Rubiales was “not enough.”

Irene Montero, the acting minister of equality, described the kiss as “sexual violence,” a statement that prompted Rubiales to threaten to sue her and other left-wing politicians for defamation.

Cuca Gamarra, the secretary of the conservative People’s Party, described the kiss as “shameful.” Isabel Díaz Ayuso, the regional president of Madrid, who is widely seen as a potential conservative prime minister, called it “disgraceful.” An editorial published on Saturday in La Razón, a conservative newspaper, described the episode as a “national monstrosity,” and said the progressivism of Sánchez’s government had created an environment that enabled Rubiales and his “vulgar and inappropriate behavior in the Women’s World Cup final.”

The far-right party Vox, which tanked in the election after portraying laws against gender-based violence as biased against men, has remained silent.

But Spanish society has erupted, seizing on the incident as a major moment of reckoning for its clubby and often sexist soccer culture. More than a dozen female players rebelled last year, long frustrated with unequal pay; what they considered overly harsh and controlling treatment by their current coach, Jorge Vilda, including allegations that he rifled through their personal belongings; and a general culture of sexism.

Many were kicked off the team and missed the World Cup, but one of those players, Lola Gallardo, told the newspaper El País on Monday that it was worth the pain of missing the glory. “Ideas are ahead of a medal,” she said.

The entire team and dozens of other players signed a joint statement late Friday saying they would not take the field to play for Spain “if the current managers continue.”

On Saturday, some of the members of the team’s coaching staff resigned, condemning Rubiales’ defensive response to the incident. Two of the women who signed the resignation letter sat in the front row at a Friday news conference where Rubiales announced he would not step down. They later said that they had been told to sit there in a forced show of support, but did not say by whom.

The players are seeking to end the days of machismo in Spanish soccer, and seal it with Rubiales’ kiss.

“It’s over,” Alexia Putellas, a star player, wrote in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, expressing solidarity with Hermoso. At a Spanish league match in Seville on Sunday night, the home players came on to the field wearing shirts reading “It’s over.” The crowd roared in approval and chanted calls for the resignation of Rubiales and for the federation to be scrubbed of corruption.

On Friday, Misa Rodríguez, a player on the national team, posted on social media a cartoon of a little girl asking her grandmother to tell her about how the team won the World Cup. “We didn’t just win the World Cup, little one,” the grandmother answers. “We won so much more.”

Lola Índigo, a Spanish singer, stopped a concert in Marbella to express indignation at the men who gave Rubiales a standing ovation after Rubiales’ speech on Friday.

But while the condemnation of Rubiales has been nearly uniform in politics, media and public life, there remains throughout Spain those who wonder if the incident was as bad as it was being made out to be, or if Rubiales’ lips are too thin to hang a movement on.

“If they want to get rid of him for what he did before, then they should, but the kiss is nonsense,” said Beatriz Pena, a 55-year-old soccer fan who was shopping for her grandson at her local soccer team’s store. “It’s not sexual harassment or anything.”

Oscar Duarte, 48, bought a soccer shirt for his son on Monday, the same day that Rubiales’ mother locked herself in a church and began a hunger strike to protest what she considered to be a witch hunt of her own son. Duarte said he and his son had made sure to support the women’s team, watching the games and cheering the players’ victory during the final match.

Like many Spaniards, Duarte was bothered that Rubiales grabbed his crotch in the vicinity of the Spanish queen and princess during the victory celebrations, but said he didn’t see anything so terrible about the kiss.

“It’s like a kiss I could have given to a friend,” he said, adding that it “was just a gesture of affection.”

But on Monday, Spanish prosecutors began looking into whether it was much more than that.

c.2023 The New York Times Company

Why one kiss caused an eruption of Spanish anger – and an anti-feminist backlash


Rosa Silverman
THE TELEGRAPH
Mon, August 28, 2023 



Spain's gender politics

It might have been a straightforward national triumph. When Spain won the Women’s World Cup, beating England’s Lionesses in last weekend’s football final, the mood in the country was jubilant. England’s defeat notwithstanding, there was a sense here, too, of pride in how far we had come.

But progress is not always linear, and what was almost an uncomplicated narrative – of another major stride forwards in gender equality – has been overshadowed in Spain, and beyond, by a bitter row over a kiss bestowed by Luis Rubiales, the 46-year-old president of the Spanish football federation, upon Spain’s leading women’s goalscorer, Jenni Hermoso.

The 33-year-old footballer has said the kiss was not consensual, and an internal investigation has been launched by the football federation. Rubiales, who has been suspended, has claimed he is the victim of a witch-hunt by “false feminists”.

The resulting storm has been characterised as Spain’s MeToo moment. “We are with you Jenni” has been trending on social media, along with the phrase “se acabó”. Translation: enough is enough. But the outpouring of anger is in fact a flare-up in an ongoing battle over gender politics in Spain.

Recent years have seen the rapid transformation of a patriarchal, macho society into one of Europe’s most feminist. This change, however, has been accompanied by a corresponding anti-feminist backlash from those who feel women’s progress has gone too far.


In the European Union’s 2022 Gender Equality Index, Spain was ranked as the member state with the sixth best score. This followed a series of recent legislative changes, with the Left-wing government rolling out a consent-based rape law, statutory menstruation leave and a parity rule for public bodies and companies, among other progressive measures.

It has been a remarkable turnaround for a country that was still a dictatorship less than 50 years ago, with what critics describe as a longstanding culture of “machismo”.

Under the regime of Francisco Franco, who ruled until his death in 1975, conservative Catholic values were venerated and a form of traditional femininity held up as the ideal, with women expected to play their “natural” role of wives and mothers in the home.

If they wished to work, they needed the permission of their father or husband. “Women could not take the power of men and women could not get angry,” says Nuria Capdevila-Argüelles, professor of Hispanic studies and gender studies at the University of Exeter.

While there were feminist movements agitating under Franco, it wasn’t until the country transitioned to democracy, from 1975, that major breakthroughs were made. Adultery was only decriminalised in 1978, divorce in 1981 and, in 1985, abortion in cases of rape or physical damage to the mother or infant was legalised.

Francisco Franco governed Spain from 1939 to 1975; under his dictatorship a form of traditional femininity was held up as the ideal 
- AFP/Getty Images

By comparison, adultery has not been a crime in the UK since 1857, when the Matrimonial Causes Act also allowed ordinary people to divorce. The Abortion Act in 1967 legalised abortion in the UK under certain conditions in 1967.

“Spain entered the modern era without having undergone the bourgeois revolutions of the 19th century,” says Rosa San Segundo, director of the University Institute for Gender Studies at the Carlos III University of Madrid.

“The Second Republic [1931-39] was at the vanguard of intellectual and feminist thinking of the time, but this was snuffed out by the Franco regime. But with the arrival of democracy, feminism became very organised.”

In the mid-2000s Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero declared himself “not just anti-machismo” but “a feminist”. Even, in an interview with the New York Times in 2004, a “radical feminist.”

“Zapatero introduced ground-breaking legislation in the fields of equality and gender violence and this helped to create an extensive body of activist consciousness,” says San Segundo.

Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero described himself as a ‘radical feminist’, but the advancement of feminism in Spain has not been straightforwardly linear
 - Karel Navarro/AP

After 2016, this consciousness took on a new momentum. In the early hours of July 7 that year, an 18-year-old woman who found herself alone on Plaza del Castillo in Pamplona, during the week-long running of the bulls festival, was raped by a gang of five men.

Known as the Wolf Pack case, after the name of the men’s WhatsApp group, this notorious episode saw hundreds of thousands of supporters of women’s rights take to the streets to protest against both the sexist cultural backdrop to the crime and its treatment by a judicial system that critics claimed did not take such offences against women seriously.

The men were controversially sentenced to nine years in jail for sexual abuse but acquitted of rape. Spain’s Supreme Court later reversed the verdicts and sentenced them to 15 years for rape.

The outraged response to the crime and initial verdict did not stop at street protests. Following the men’s conviction in 2018, women in Spain started posting their own stories of harassment on Twitter, accompanied by the hashtag #cuentalo, meaning “tell it”.

The coalition government took legislative action, too, but not without controversy. Last year, the new consent law was introduced, spearheaded by equality minister Irene Montero from the Unidas Podemos party.

Women hold banners reading 'it is not abuse, it is assault' during a demonstration against the verdict of the 'La Manada' (Wolf Pack) gang case 
- Gari Garaialde/Getty Images)

Known as “solo sí es sí” – or “only yes means yes” – the law stated that consent must be affirmative and cannot be assumed to have been given. It also, crucially, scrapped the distinction between the crimes of sexual abuse and sexual aggression, or rape. Previously, the latter – which involved the use of violence – carried heavier sentences.

But an unforeseen problem with the new legislation emerged: after it was passed, hundreds of previously convicted offenders were able to have their sentences reduced in line with the new sentencing guidelines, which could be applied retrospectively (something the Spanish legal system, as well as others, allows).

The wave of criticism this generated was seized on by vocal anti-feminists, who have risen in the shadow of Spain’s feminist revolution: opponents of the progressive remaking of Spanish society, who throw around the word “feminazi” and warn about women making false accusations against men.

There has also been annoyance about an app unveiled by the government in May to enable women to audit their husband’s housework and ensure chores are equally shared in a country where men typically do far less housework and caring.

A survey last year by Spain’s National Statistics Institute found 45.9 per cent of women performed the majority of domestic chores compared with 14.7 per cent of men.

The political wing of this movement in Spain is embodied by the far Right party Vox, which achieved success in the polls both regionally and nationally after 2018. As well as opposing regional separatism, Vox has led a fightback against so-called “gender ideology.”

As part of this, it has sought to reclassify domestic violence as “intra-family violence”, denying the existence of gender violence. It has also vowed to sweep away Spanish abortion laws and LGBTQ+ rights. This backlash has not been contained within the country’s borders.

An Ipsos UK survey of 32 countries for International Women’s Day this year found 54 per cent felt things had gone far enough in their country when it came to giving women equal rights with men – a gradual increase since 2019.

In Spain, notably, this figure was 72 per cent, the highest proportion of all the European countries surveyed.

“We are seeing an international backlash against feminism, from [former president] Donald Trump in the US to Brazil’s [former president] Jair Bolsonaro and parts of the far-Right in Europe,” says San Segundo.

There are signs, however, that in Spain this sentiment has perhaps already peaked. The country’s snap general election last month saw Vox lose support, with its vote count falling from 15 per cent in 2019 to 12 per cent, and its representation in parliament declining from 52 to 33 seats.

Although, as Prof Capdevila-Argüelles says, “there will always be voices against feminism,” support for the party’s extreme positions appears to be less widespread than it might have hoped.

Montero has, meanwhile, been defiant. “This is what happens when the feminist movement advances,” she told Time magazine earlier this year, in the wake of personal attacks on her.

“It’s a continuous strategy of harassment and tearing you down, of scrutinising your private life with the intention, in the end, to make it so it’s no longer worth it for the women who are temporarily at the forefront to continue.”


More than 5,000 high school and university students demonstrated against the controversial sentence in the wake of the rape of a young woman in Pamplona by five men

 - LightRocket via Getty Images

The ongoing football scandal might be seen as another indicator of where public opinion in Spain now lies, with a vocal majority uniting behind Hermoso, leaving Rubiales looking increasingly isolated.

“The discourse of equality has seeped into Spanish society. People can see that this is abuse of power,” says San Segundo. “Thirty years ago we encountered this kind of person and behaviour in all spheres, such as in academia.

“Now football has been shown to be one of the last vestiges of that world. I think it’s very positive that the poor conditions and harassment that sportswomen endure has been brought to light. Women have been made aware and said ‘enough of this toxic masculinity’.”


Mother of beleaguered Spanish soccer chief starts hunger strike as calls mount for his resignation

BY CIARÁN GILES
Updated Mon, August 28, 2023 a



RubialesThe president of the Spanish soccer federation Luis Rubiales speaks during an emergency general assembly meeting in Las Rozas, Friday Aug. 25, 2023. Rubiales has refused to resign despite an uproar for kissing a player, Jennifer Hermoso on the lips without her consent after the Women's World Cup final. Rubiales had also grabbed his crotch in a lewd victory gesture from the section of dignitaries with Spain's Queen Letizia and the 16-year old Princess Sofía nearby.
 (Real Federación Española de Fútbol/Europa Press via AP)


MADRID (AP) — The mother of the Spanish soccer federation president under fire for kissing a Women’s World Cup champion on the lips started a hunger strike Monday in defense of her son as calls grew for his resignation and prosecutors opened a preliminary investigation.

The leaders of the regional soccer bodies that make up the Spanish federation added their call for soccer chief Luis Rubiales' resignation on Monday. FIFA, the world soccer body, had already provisionally suspended him for 90 days after he gave a defiant speech refusing to step down.

The scandal surrounding the kiss — and Rubiales’ refusal to accept Jenni Hermoso’s insistence that it was not consensual — has overshadowed the Spanish team's 1-0 victory against England in the Women's World Cup final. Spain's national team players said last week they would not play any more games unless Rubiales resigns.

Rubiales also came under a storm of criticism for grabbing his crotch in a victory gesture while in the presidential box near Spain’s Queen Letizia and her teenage daughter, Princess Sofia.

Rubiales' mother, Ángeles Béjar told the state news agency EFE she would remain on hunger strike “night and day” at a church in southern Spain until what she called the “inhumane hounding” of her son ends. Speaking outside the church in the southern town of Motril, Rubiales’ cousin, Vanessa Ruiz, joined his mother in calling on Hermoso to “tell the truth.”

Hermoso has denied Rubiales' claim that she consented to what he called the “mutual” kiss during the Aug. 20 medal ceremony in Sydney, Australia.

In a statement last week, Hermoso said she considered herself the victim of abuse of power and accused the Spanish soccer federation of trying to pressure her into supporting Rubiales. The federation hit back by saying she was lying and that it would take legal action against her.

On Monday, leaders of the regional bodies within the Spanish federation called on Rubiales to resign “after the latest developments and the unacceptable behavior that has caused great damage to the image of Spanish soccer."

Earlier in the day, the National Court's Prosecutors Office said it was opening a preliminary investigation into whether the kiss was a sexual aggression offense and said it would give Hermoso 15 days to file a formal complaint as an alleged victim of sexual aggression.

Spain is hoping the country’s sports tribunal, which resolves legal issues in sports, will remove Rubiales definitively. Victor Francos, head of the government's sports body, said the tribunal has yet to inform it what it intends to do about Rubiales.

Francos also expressed concern over how the issue may affect Spain's bid to hold the 2030 World Cup with Portugal, Morocco and possibly Ukraine.

The scandal has caused a commotion in Spain and abroad.

On Monday, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric criticized what he called a “critical issue of sexism” in sports, adding: "We hope the Spanish authorities and the Spanish government deal with this in a manner that respects the rights of all female athletes.”

Acting deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Díaz met Monday with soccer union representatives with a view to removing Rubiales and changing the way equality issues are managed in Spanish soccer. “There has to be a profound renewal of the sporting structure in our country,” she said at a news conference.

Meanwhile, several hundred people waving purple women’s rights placards gathered in the center of Madrid for an anti-Rubiales protest and in support of Hermoso.

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AP writers Joseph Wilson in Barcelona, Spain, and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer