Good news: A third COVID-19 vaccine candidate has reported strong results. The late-stage success fo AstraZeneca’s vaccine has given hope to public health officials looking for an option that is cheaper and easier to distribute than its rivals, the AP reports. See our updated look at vaccines under development.
When a president won’t leave: No American head of state has refused to relinquish power at term’s end. It’s unlikely to happen now, experts tell Nat Geo’s Amy McKeever. The Constitution doesn’t specifically address such a scenario, but it does protect against it, says NYU constitutional law prof Rick Pildes. On January 20, he said, the newly inaugurated president can order the military or Secret Service to physically remove the outgoing president from the White House.
Not winner take all: In all but two states in America, if your presidential candidate doesn’t win your state, your vote is lost in the Electoral College. Nebraska is different, in large part due to an iconoclast who fought for years to save an electoral vote for the winner of each congressional district in his state. Thanks to longtime lawmaker Ernie Chambers, one electoral vote in his red state went to Joe Biden, just as, halfway across the nation, one electoral vote in blue Maine went for Donald Trump. Chambers tells Nat Geo’s Oliver Whang that if we can't ditch the unrepresentative Electoral College, at least we should name electors proportionate to the vote.
A VP first, long before Kamala Harris: The vice president-elect is the first woman, African American, and South Asian American to become the nation’s No. 2. But she is not the first VP of color. That distinction belongs to Charles Curtis, a member of the Kaw Nation, who was elected in 1928 on the ticket with President Herbert Hoover. Curtis, who grew up in North Topeka, Kansas, was the great-great grandson of White Plume, a Kaw chief who offered to help the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804.
New memorial: The latest monument on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., is a tribute to Native American veterans. Native Americans, such as the Navajo “code walkers” of World War II, have made huge contributions, and a separate monument has been in the works for a quarter century, NPR reports. “We wish for this to be a sacred place, not just for Native Americas, but for all Americans,” says Kevin Gover, the director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian and a citizen of the Pawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. | | | |
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