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MARTES 3 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2020NÚMERO 7594$15.00 -AÑO 21 -
www.milenio.com
DIARIOPeriodismo con carácter
NACIONAL
La improbable extradición de Cienfuegos no impide que México dé un manotazo de dignidad. PAG. 7
EL ASALTO A LA RAZÓN
Por elemental sentido del honor
CARLOS MARÍ[email protected]
Martin Wolf“Las 10 formas en que
el covid moldeará la vida a largo plazo” - P. 20
Roberta Garza“Piden el voto por ese
que nos llamó narcos y violadores” - P. 10
Roberto Blancarte“Sin olvidar a los
muertos, privilegiemos a los vivos” - P. 12
Dan ventaja a Biden en seis estados que defi nirán la elección
Y llegó la hora. En medio del debate por las medidas contra el confi namiento, la alerta trumpista de fraude y temores de violencia, hoy deciden los estadunidenses
MICHAEL MATHES/AFP, WASHINGTON
Las elecciones presiden-ciales en EU hoy se decidirán en seis estados clave en los que el presidente republicano, Donald Trump, se impuso en 2016. Hace
cuatro años se aseguró la victoria al ganar en Florida, Pensilvania, Míchigan, Carolina del Norte, Wisconsin y Arizona, de los cuales cuatro habían votado al demócra-ta Barack Obama en 2012. PAG. 6
Proyecciones en MéxicoAnalistas de BBVA y Monex prefi eren a un demócrataK. GUZMÁN Y S. RODRÍGUEZ - PAG. 7
Ajustes de última horaAmurallan la Casa Blanca con herrería y concreto ALEJANDRO DOMÍNGUEZ - PAG. 8
Tradiciones. Conmemoración y protestaUnas cien mujeres y 10 niños marcharon por diversas vías de Ciudad de México en protesta por la vio-lencia cotidiana contra ellas y el abuso sexual a menores. El grupo que mantiene ocupada la sede de la CNDH en la calle Cuba se quejó de acoso policiaco y videovigilancia las 24 horas. ARACELI LÓPEZ PAG. 12
CECILIA RÍOS Y GILBERTO LASTRA
Un hospital de la Ssa en Ta-basco es el más letal con 17 docto-res, tres enfermeras y otros nue-ve trabajadores muertos. PAG. 10
En Tabasco, el hospital más letal para personal médico; Durango, a semáforo rojo
Sputnik V, a ArgentinaHasta marzo llegará aquí la vacuna de AstraZenecaEFE - PAG. 10
España. Avanza el proyecto Ley Trans para cambiar de sexo en identifi cación
P. 22-23
JOSÉ ROMERO MATA, LOS ÁNGELES
Un juez federal ordenó el traslado del general Salvador Cienfuegos a Nueva York, donde afrontará cuatro cargos. PAG. 12
Ordena un juez federal traslado de Cienfuegos a una cárcel en NY
¿Qué sejuega?
DonaldTrump
JoeBiden
DEPP PIERDE JUICIO POR DIFAMACIÓN Un juez consideró que el diario británico The Sun no mintió al calificar al actor de la saga Piratas del Caribe como “marido golpeador”.
FUNCIÓN | PÁGINA 2
MARTES 3 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2020 • AÑO CIV TOMO VI, NO. 37,680 CIUDAD DE MÉXICO 48 PÁGINAS $15.00
BUSCAN ARREBATARLE 276 MDP
La FGR y autoridades judiciales de la CDMX, Estado de México, Guanajuato y Jalisco esperan la resolución de 43 juicios de extinción
de dominio para impactar el patrimonio del crimen organizado
POR LETICIA ROBLESDE LA ROSA
La Fiscalía General de la Re-pública (FGR) y las autorida-des judiciales de la Ciudad de México, Estado de México, Guanajuato y Jalisco prepa-ran un golpe por 276 millo-nes de pesos a las finanzas del crimen organizado.
En un informe al Sena-do de la República, la FGR y la Conferencia Nacional de Procuración de Justicia detallan que entre agosto de 2019 —cuando entraron en vigor las nuevas reglas de extinción de dominio— y julio de 2020 se inicia-ron 45 juicios en materia de extinción de dominio para quitarle a los grupos delin-cuenciales bienes producto de actividades ilícitas como
PAVLOVICH DA POSITIVO A CORONAVIRUS Tras dar a conocer que tiene síntomas leves de covid-19, la gobernadora de Sonora explicó que continuará trabajando desde casa. Con ella suman 13 mandatarios estatales que se han contagiado del virus SARS-CoV-2.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 8
DURANGO VUELVE A LA LUZ ROJAEl estado cambió su nivel de alerta debido a un alza en el número de contagios de coronavirus. En tanto, Chihuahua reportó que ya no cuenta con capacidad hospitalaria para atender a pacientes de covid-19.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 8
CONGRESO SE PREPARA PARA REPUNTE El Senado y la Cámara de Diputados implementarán sesiones y votaciones semipresenciales y virtuales como una forma de mantener el ritmo del trabajo legislativo y evitar contagios de covid-19.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 6
EUROPA
CRECEN MEDIDAS RESTRICTIVAS Ante una segunda ola de contagios de covid-19, esta semana países europeos como Francia y Alemania endurecieron sus medidas para limitar la movilidad, por lo que calles, comercios y sitios turísticos lucen vacíos. En el continente han muerto más de 282 mil personasa causa del coronavirus.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 10
POR ABRAHAM NAVA
El confinamiento a raíz de la pandemia de covid-19 ha provocado que las afecta-ciones sicosociales de las víctimas colaterales del fe-minicidio y violencia de gé-nero se agudicen.
El aislamiento ha orillado a familiares de las víctimas a alejarse de las redes de apo-yo que las ayudan a enfrentar
Pandemia agudiza efectos de la violencia feminicida
AFECTACIONES A LA PROCURACIÓN DE JUSTICIAFoto: AFP
ECONOMÍA MEXICANA, LIGADA A ELECCIÓN El PIB de nuestro país podría crecer entre 2.9 y 6.5% en 2021, dependiendo de quién gane las elecciones en Estados Unidos. De acuerdo con un análisis de UBS, el mejor escenario para nuestro país es que Biden arrase.
DINERO
Pascal Beltrán del Río 2Federico Reyes Heroles 6Lorena Rivera 15
Con dos pases de anotación, para sumar 561, el quarterback impulsó el triunfo de Tampa Bay frente a Los Gigantes y arrebató el récord a Drew Brees.
ADRENALINA
BRADYVUELVE A LA CIMA
NFL
RESULTADO QUEDARÁ EN SUSPENSO Debido a que millones de estadunidenses decidieron votar por correo para evitar contagios de covid-19, es difícil que esta misma noche se conozca al ganador de la contienda.
FAKE NEWS OPACAN CAMPAÑAS Cuentas falsas, bots y fotos manipuladas invadieron las redes durante el proceso electoral de EU. Contrario a 2016, esta vez tuvieron origen estadunidense.
Para los negocios (entre México y EU) es bueno y positivo que Trump sea el próximo presidente.”
LARRY RUBINREPRESENTANTE REPUBLICANO EN MÉXICO
LAS CIFRAS EN MÉXICO:
PRIMERA PÁGINA 11
933,155 CONTAGIOS
92,100 DECESOS
CITA HISTÓRICAEN LAS URNAS
el duelo por la pérdida, ase-guró Ana Yeli Pérez Garrido, asesora jurídica del Obser-vatorio Ciudadano Nacio-nal del Feminicidio (OCNF).
“Las redes de apoyo que se construyen entre ellas son sanadoras y les hacen más ligero el ca-minar; ahora, enfrentar-se (solas) a sus procesos de duelo o a aquéllos que habían suspendido por-que estaban en búsqueda de justicia, también ge-nera estos impactos si-coemocionales”, señaló la especialista.
Detalló que otros efec-tos de la pandemia son el recorte a los recursos que se destinan a investigar los casos de feminicidio, así como el retraso en la pro-curación de justicia en los casos de violencia de gé-nero, ya que gran parte de los servidores públicos que indagan los casos de fe-minicidio no puede asis-tir a sus centros de trabajo, al ser parte de la pobla-ción de riesgo, por lo que los avances en el tema han menguado.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 8
narcotráfico, corrupción, huachicol, extorsión, se-cuestro de personas y lava-do de dinero. Sin embargo, en dos casos no se presentó
Los candidatos a la Presidencia de EU, Donald Trump y Joe Biden, cerraron ayer sus campañas con reproches y acusaciones mutuas. El actual presidente
de EU tildó a su contrincante de corrupto, mientras que el aspirante demócrata llamó a poner fin a un periodo de irresponsabilidad y fracaso.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 20
PRIMERA | PÁGINAS 20 Y 21
“Un voto por Biden es un voto para ceder el control del gobierno a los globalistas, comunistas, socialistas, los liberales ricos hipócritas.”DONALD TRUMPCANDIDATO REPUBLICANO
“Es hora de que Donald Trump haga
sus maletas y se vaya a casa. ¡Tuvimos suficiente con el caos,
con los tuits, la ira, el odio, el fracaso, la
irresponsabilidad!”JOE BIDEN
CANDIDATO DEMÓCRATA
Alistan golpe millonario a la delincuencia
CARRANZA ANTE EL ESPEJO En un nuevo libro sobre el revolucionario, el investigador Felipe Ávila muestra a un padre amoroso y apasionado de la historia.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 22
76.4MDPbuscan quitar al crimen las autoridades federales y de cuatro estados.
9.3MDDtambién implican los juicios de extinción de dominio que están en proceso.
un interés económico para el Estado, por lo que sólo procedieron 43.
El documento detalla que los juicios en proceso implican 76 millones 402 mil 883.64 pesos y nueve millones 385 mil 556 dó-lares. De acuerdo con la conversión hecha por este diario con el tipo de cam-bio peso-dólar de 21.27 pe-sos del 1 de noviembre, los nueve millones 385 mil 556 dólares se traducen en 199 millones 630 mil 776.12 pesos.
La Fiscalía debe entre-gar dicho informe cada año, como parte de las acciones para combatir la delincuen-cia organizada mediante el ataque a su estructura financiera.
PRIMERA | PÁGINA 4
NFL
Tampa Bay NY Gigantes
25-23Foto: ReutersFoto: Reuters
Fotos: AP y Reuters Fotoarte : Erick Zepeda
La gobernadora de Sonora, Claudia Pavlovich, da positivo al SARS-CoV-2; inicia aislamiento,
asegura que tiene síntomas leves
HOY ESCRIBEN Javier SolórzanoUna elección incierta pág. 2
Guillermo HurtadoLa paz y la concordia pág. 6
Montserrat SalomónEl día del juicio pág. 19
ELIGEN 210 millones presidente por voto indirecto; en juego, continuidad de régimen disruptivo; mandatario ha advertido posibilidad de no aceptar resultados
ENCUESTAS favorecen a Biden, pero en elección pasada fallaron; 6 estados clave en decisión final; Mé-xico sigue de cerca proceso: Cancillería págs. 5 y 18
Por L. López y J. Gerardo Mejía
Alianza Federalista define su batalla: va a ser por el PEFPlantean los 10 gobernadores en carta a AMLO posponer debate fiscal; exi-gen que ningún estado reciba menos recursos que en 2020; proponen fondo de estabilización, otro para compensar gastos por la pandemia… pág. 4
Tabasco en crisis por tormentas, huracanes… y amenaza no cesa pág. 8
Advierte FMI cicatrices profundas por Covid y difícil recuperación pág. 11
-5.5%Sería la baja en gasto federalizado para 2021
Durango vuelve al rojo para proteger salud y frenar contagiosP R E S E N C I A E N M É X I C O
El gobernador Javier Corral afirma que en Chihuahua ya no
tienen capacidad hospitalaria; ocu-pación de camas supera el 90%
Héctor Astudillo, mandatario de Guerrero, alista consulta para saber si endurecen medidas sani-
tarias de cara a diciembre
La CDMX, con ligero respiro en internamientos; descienden 1.9% en los últimos tres días y aumen-
tan altas de pacientes pág. 12
Está en la “etapa más difícil”, dice Rosas Aispuro; desde hoy sólo
permiten actividades esenciales; es segundo estado en ese color pág. 3
TRUMP ¿SE VA O SE QUEDA?
EU define su futuro y el del mundo en
una elección incierta
Una persona informada siempre tiene La Razón
MAPA INTERACTIVO CON RESULTADOS EN TIEMPO REAL
ACONTECIMIENTOS RELEVANTES MINUTO A MINUTO
C O B E R T U R A E S P E C I A L razon.com.mx Diario La Razón @LaRazon_mx
#Elecciones2020
TRUMP cierra en Pensilvania, Mi-chigan, Carolina del Norte, Wis-consin...; arreme-te contra Biden el “corrupto”.
JOE BIDEN rea-liza 5 mítines;
dice que es hora de que Trump
recoja sus cosas y se vaya; recibe apoyo de
Lady Gaga.
¿Qué tanto esperan el triunfo de Biden o de Trump?
POLONIA4126
RUSIA3625
INDIA3639
R. UNIDO3031
C. DEL SUR2450
ALEMANIA2340
JAPÓN1932
MÉXICO1651
TrumpBiden
Fuente•Ipsos Cifras en porcentaje
Fotos•AP
Frenético sprint de
campañas
www.razon.com.mx MARTES 3 de noviembre de 2020 » Nueva época » Año 12 Número 3553 PRECIO » $10.00
01Lr_final.indd 201Lr_final.indd 2 03/11/20 1:3103/11/20 1:31
MARTES 3 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2020 // CIUDAD DE MÉXICO // AÑO 37 // NÚMERO 13032 // Precio 10 pesosDIRECTORA GENERAL: CARMEN LIRA SAADEDIRECTOR FUNDADOR: CARLOS PAYÁN VELVER
El voto latino, clave para definir hoy los comicios en EU
Es el sector minoritario con más fuerza con 32 millones de electores
l Se concentran en estados que son considerados ejes para el resultado
l Trump siguió con su estrategia de que demócratas realizarán fraude
l Biden cierra su campaña con actos de apoyo de Obama y Sanders
l Persiste el temor de violencia; movilizaciones de la Guardia Nacional
DAVID BROOKS, CORRESPONSAL / P 21 Y 22
Crece la ola para echar al magnate de la Casa Blanca
▲ Ante las amenazas de violencia electoral promovidas por el presidente Donald Trump, varias organizaciones se han movilizado (en la imagen en Florida) para exigir que se respeten resultados, al tiempo de
promover el voto masivo. A unas horas de los comicios, las encuestas indicaban que el candidato demócrata Joe Biden mantenía una ventaja de ocho puntos sobre su adversario republicano. Foto Ap
Durango regresa al semáforo rojo ante el alza en contagios ● En Chihuahua, listas de espera para quienes requieren hospitalización
● La gobernadora de Sonora da positivo
● Se rebasaron 92 mil decesos en el país; suman 933 mil casos confirmados
● AstraZeneca: a finales de marzo podría estar la vacuna para distribución CORRESPONSALES, ÁNGELES CRUZ Y AGENCIAS / P 3, 4 Y 24
Cero recortes al gasto, exigencia de la alianza de gobernadores ● ‘‘La posición es que ninguna entidad reciba menos recursos en 2021’’, exponen en carta a AMLO
ANGÉLICA ENCISO / P 8
OPINIÓN
Un escándalo, una obscenidad
ROBERT FISK ✝ / P 23
Arturo Lona: el profeta del Istmo
ABEL BARRERA H. / P 14
Tres jefes de Emilio Zebadúa terminaron en la cárcel ● La FGR define hoy si es testigo colaborador en el caso de la estafa maestra
● El ex allegado de Robles habría firmado los contratos fraudulentos
A. CANO, E. MURILLO, C. ARELLANO / P 5
EN LA CIMA DEL ARTE
#OPINIÓN
ENCIFRAS
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SCO
LA
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ESPE
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SOLDADO DE LA 4T,
AFIRMA MIER P6
EL INSABI, SIN REGISTRO
DE 3 MMDPPOR GERARDO SUÁREZ/P4
SE OMITIÓ LA INFORMACIÓN DE 59 MIL 570 BENEFICIARIOS, A QUIENES SE LES CUBRIÓ ALGÚN TIPO DE INTERVENCIÓN MÉDICA, DICE LA ASF
#SIGUEENCRISIS
DURANGO REGRESA A SEMÁFORO ROJO P10
PLUMASHOMENAJEAN
#PADRONESINEXISTENTES
ALHAJERO / MARTHA
ANAYA / P5
EL DEDO EN LA LLAGA /
ADRIANADELGADO / P6
INVITADO / DAVID
MONREAL / P2
● REPORTES DE DEFUNCIONES
● PERSONASCONTAGIADAS
● SOSPECHOSOSTOTALES
92,100
933,155
349,568
#LÍDERDEDIPUTADOSDEMORENA
NUEVA ERA / AÑO. 04 / NO. 1246 /
MARTES 3 DE NOVIEMBRE
DE 2020
a la muerte
TRUMP VS. BIDEN...
HOY ES EL DÍA
P22
#BLINDANLACASABLANCA
C M Y K Nxxx,2020-11-03,A,001,Bs-4C,E1
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ANXIETY MOUNTS WITH RACE AT A BITTER END
CLEVELAND Joseph R. Biden Jr. focusing on Ohio on Monday.ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES
PITTSBURGH Mr. Biden hopes to flip Pennsylvania this year.ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. President Trump in the battleground state.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES
TRAVERSE CITY, MICH. The president aims to hold Michigan.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES
adopt statewide.And everywhere, in a year that
has seen record levels of early vot-ing and a huge surge in use of vot-ing by mail, Republicans are gear-ing up to challenge ballots withmissing signatures or unclearpostmarks.
In his last days of campaigning,Mr. Trump has essentially admit-ted that he does not expect to winwithout going to court. “As soon asthat election is over,” he told re-porters over the weekend, “we’regoing in with our lawyers.”
Trailing consistently in thepolls, Mr. Trump in that momentsaid out loud what other Republi-cans have preferred to say quietly,which is that his best chance ofholding onto power at this pointmay rest in a scorched-earth cam-paign to disqualify as many votesas possible for his Democratic op-ponent, Joseph R. Biden Jr.
If there is a clear-cut outcomeon Tuesday night that could notplausibly be challenged via legalaction, all of the planning on bothsides could become moot. But ifthere is no decisive result, the fol-lowing days would likely see an in-tensifying multifront battle foughtin a variety of states.
After months of claiming thatany election outcome other than avictory for him would have to havebeen “rigged,” the president usedhis final days on the campaigntrail to cast doubt on the veryprocess of tabulating the count,suggesting without any evidencethat any votes counted after Tues-day, no matter how legal, must besuspect.
Both sides expect Mr. Trumpand his allies to try again to dis-qualify late-arriving ballots in theemerging center of the legal fight,Pennsylvania, after the state’shigh court rejected a previous at-tempt and the Supreme Court re-
With the election coming to aclose, the Trump and Biden cam-paigns, voting rights organiza-tions and conservative groups areraising money and dispatching ar-mies of lawyers for what could be-come a state-by-state, county-by-county legal battle over which bal-lots will ultimately be counted.
The deployments — involvinghundreds of lawyers on both sides— go well beyond what has be-come normal since the disputedoutcome in 2000, and are the re-sult of the open efforts of Presi-dent Trump and the Republicansto disqualify votes on technicali-ties and baseless charges of fraudat the end of a campaign in whichthe voting system has been se-verely tested by the pandemic.
In the most aggressive movesto knock out registered votes inmodern memory, Republicanshave already sought to nullify bal-lots before they are counted inseveral states that could tip thebalance of the Electoral College.
In an early test of one effort, afederal judge in Texas on Mondayruled against local Republicanswho wanted to compel state offi-cials to throw out more than127,000 ballots cast at newly creat-ed drive-through polling places inthe Houston area. The ruling,which Republicans said theywould appeal, came after a statecourt also ruled against them.
In key counties in Nevada,Michigan and Pennsylvania, Re-publicans are seeking, with mixedresults so far, to force electionboard offices to give their electionobservers more open access sothey can more effectively chal-lenge absentee ballots as they areprocessed, a tactic Republicans inNorth Carolina are seeking to
As Americans Surge to Polls, Trump Contests Some Ballots, Setting Up
Fight Over Which Ones Count
This article is by Jim Rutenberg,Michael S. Schmidt, Nick Corasani-ti and Peter Baker.
Continued on Page A22
GENEVA — On a cold weekendin mid-February, when the worldstill harbored false hope that thenew coronavirus could be con-tained, a World Health Organiza-tion team arrived in Beijing tostudy the outbreak and investi-gate a critical question: How didthe virus jump from animals to hu-mans?
At that point, there were onlythree confirmed deaths fromCovid-19 outside China, and scien-tists hoped that finding an animalsource for the coronavirus wouldunlock clues about how to stop it,treat it and prevent similar out-breaks.
“If we don’t know the sourcethen we’re equally vulnerable inthe future to a similar outbreak,”Michael Ryan, the World Health
Organization’s emergency direc-tor, had said that week in Geneva.“Understanding that source is avery important next step.”
What the team members did notknow was that they would not beallowed to investigate the sourceat all. Despite Dr. Ryan’s pro-nouncements, and over the adviceof its emergency committee, theorganization’s leadership had qui-etly negotiated terms that side-lined its own experts. They wouldnot question China’s initial re-sponse or even visit the live-ani-mal market in the city of Wuhanwhere the outbreak seemed tohave originated.
Nine months and more than1.1 million deaths later, there isstill no transparent, independentinvestigation into the source of thevirus. Notoriously allergic to out-side scrutiny, China has impededthe effort, while leaders of the
W.H.O. Ceded Control to China In Murky Hunt for Virus Origin
This article is by Selam Gebreki-dan, Matt Apuzzo, Amy Qin andJavier C. Hernández.
Continued on Page A8
A man collapsed and died in Wuhan, China, as the crisis began.HECTOR RETAMAL/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES
SCRANTON, PA. The president made Pennsylvania a priority.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES
MONACA, PA. Mr. Biden visited a community college on Monday.ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES
PLANO, Texas — Facing thetoughest race of his Senate career,John Cornyn warned a smallcrowd of supporters from the sec-ond floor of his campaign bus lastweek that his party’s long-helddominance in this historicallyruby-red state was at risk.
But while the three-term Texassenator demonized Democrats atlength, he did not spend muchtime talking up the obvious alter-native: President Trump, theleader of his party, the man at thetop of his ticket on Tuesday.
Asked whether Mr. Trump, theman who redefined Republican-ism, was an asset to Mr. Cornyn’sre-election effort, the senator wassuddenly short on words.
“Absolutely,” he said, stone-faced.
Mr. Cornyn’s gentle distancingfrom Mr. Trump foreshadows a far
less genteel battle to come. Thisyear’s election seems likely toplunge Republicans and Demo-crats into a period of disarray nomatter who wins the White House.With moderates and progressivespoised to battle each other on theleft, and an array of forces lookingto chart a post-Trump future onthe right (be it in 2021 or in fouryears), both parties appear des-tined for an ideological wildernessin the months ahead as each triesto sort out its identities and priori-ties.
The questions facing partisanson both sides are sweeping, andremain largely unresolved despite
For the Next Battle, Two PartiesWill Be Taking On Themselves
By LISA LERER
Continued on Page A15
Challenge to ReconcileCompeting Visions
President Trump arrives atElection Day on Tuesday tog-gling between confidence andexasperation, bravado and griev-
ance, and marinat-ing in frustrationthat he is trailingJoseph R. BidenJr., whom he con-
siders an unworthy opponent.“Man, it’s going to be embar-
rassing if I lose to this guy,” Mr.Trump has told advisers, a la-ment he has aired publicly aswell. But in the off-camera ver-sion, Mr. Trump frequently ex-claims, “This guy!” in referenceto Mr. Biden, with a salty adjec-tive separating the words.
Trailing in most polls, Mr.Trump has careened through amarathon series of rallies in the
last week, trying to tear downMr. Biden and energize his sup-porters, but also fixated oncrowd size and targeting per-ceived enemies like the newsmedia and Dr. Anthony Fauci,the federal government’s infec-tious disease expert whom hesuggested on Sunday he mighttry to dismiss after the election.
At every turn, the presidenthas railed that the voting systemis rigged against him and hasthreatened to sue when the elec-tion is over, in an obvious bid toundermine an electoral processstrained by the coronaviruspandemic. It is not clear, howev-er, precisely what legal instru-
President, in His Own Bubble, Makes Mad Dash to the FinishThis article is by Maggie Ha-
berman, Alexander Burns and Jon-athan Martin.
Chafing Over His Foesbut Acting Upbeat
POLITICALMEMO
Continued on Page A21
NEW HOPE, Pa. — Voters onboth sides of the nation’s wideningpolitical divide prepared on Mon-day to render a verdict on Presi-dent Trump’s four tumultuousyears in the White House and, inparticular, his management of thecoronavirus pandemic that hasupended American life for thepast eight months.
As Mr. Trump and Joseph R. Bi-den Jr. raced across the most im-portant battleground states in afrenzied final push for votes, the
2020 election was unfolding in acountry with urgent problems: anuncontrolled public health crisis, abattered economy, deep ideolog-ical divisions, a national reckon-ing on race and uncertainty aboutwhether the outcome of the votewill be disputed.
Undeterred by the pandemic,Americans have already dis-played an uncommon determina-tion to have their voices and votesheard this year. Nearly 100 millioncast their ballots in advance ofElection Day, shattering recordsas they endured long lines at earlyvoting sites or sent in their ballots
by mail.Much of the country felt on
edge, as if the often-predicted“most important election of a life-time” had finally arrived. Aheadof the polls opening on Tuesday,businesses in cities from Denverto Detroit to Washington, D.C.,
were boarding up their windowswith plywood as they readied forthe possibility of civil unrest.Some governors were readyingthe National Guard.
“Everyone is starting to panic,”Fernando Salas, a constructionworker, said as he pounded nailsinto a plywood frame at a store-front in a trendy shopping districtnear Los Angeles.
Election administrators bracedthemselves to pull off the twinchallenges of holding an electionduring a pandemic and fending off
Pandemic Shadows the Final Appeals From Trump and BidenBy SHANE GOLDMACHER A Country in Turmoil
Sees a Stark Displayof Differences
Continued on Page A19
Twenty years after three astronautsreported for duty at the InternationalSpace Station, we’ve compiled a historyof our home in the heavens. PAGE D1
SCIENCE TIMES D1-8
Lots of Life in SpaceThe photographer Priscilla Rattazzibrings to life the amazing Hoodoo rocksculptures of southern Utah. PAGE C5
ARTS C1-6
A Fantasia in StoneAt least one person was killed and 15wounded after men with rifles openedfire in the heart of the city. PAGE A11
INTERNATIONAL A10-12
Terrorists Strike in Vienna
HBO’s “How To With John Wilson”managed to make a mundane subjecthilarious and topical all at once. PAGE C1
The Best Scaffolding Jokes EverProtests calling for more constitutionaloversight of the monarchy resurrecttalk of a military coup. PAGE A10
A Familiar Refrain in Thailand
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is caughtbetween fellow party members whooppose his national lockdown and oppo-nents who say it’s not enough. PAGE A4
TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-9
Revolt on Limits in BritainMembers of the Atlanta Falcons areworking with local high school studentsto support voter participation on Elec-tion Day. PAGE B5
SPORTSTUESDAY B5-7
Recruiting Future Voters
If symptomatic, they were more likelyto develop complications and die thanother women with symptoms. PAGE A6
Risks for Pregnant Women
Amy Coney Barrett asked assured andprobing questions in a Freedom ofInformation Act case. PAGE A29
NATIONAL A13-29
Justice Hears First Argument
How Facebook, Twitter and YouTubeplanned to handle the communicationand information challenges facing thembefore, on and after Tuesday. PAGE B1
BUSINESS B1-4
Social Media on Election Day
Harry Belafonte PAGE A31
EDITORIAL, OP-ED A30-31
Late Edition
VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 58,866 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2020
Today, sunshine and some clouds,breezy early, high 50. Tonight, clear,chilly, low 39. Tomorrow, plenty ofsunshine, seasonble, high 58.Weather map appears on Page B10.
$3.00
After a campaign of enor-
mous consequence — waged
amid a deadly pandemic, an
economic collapse and a raw
debate over race and justice
— Americans on Tuesday
will render their verdict on
the most divisive and tumul-
tuous four years in modern
history.
At bottom, the contest
amounts to a referendum on
President Trump, his pro-
vocative behavior and the
upheaval that has turned off
more than half the country,
polls show, while delighting
supporters who welcome
the shock to the political sys-
tem.
“We could say it’s the pan-
demic, it’s the economic
crash, it’s racial justice, it’s a
Supreme Court nomination
just days before an election,”
said Amy Walter, an analyst
for the nonpartisan Cook
Political Report, ticking off
seismic events of the last
year, which also included
Trump’s impeachment for
pressuring Ukraine to dig up
dirt on Democratic presi-
dential nominee Joe Biden.
“All of those things have
had an impact,” Walter said.
“But at its core, this election
is about the same thing ...
which is Donald Trump and
your opinion of him.”
Voter interest has been
extraordinarily high.
Nearly 99 million Ameri-
cans have cast ballots even
before polling places open
on election day, surpassing
70% of all the votes counted
in 2016.
Tens of millions more
were expected to brave long
waits and the risk of
COVID-19 to vote in person
on election day; experts
projected overall turnout
could top a record 160 mil-
lion.
Polls have consistently
given Biden the lead
nationwide and in most
battleground states, but
there was enough uncer-
tainty to leave the election
outcome in doubt. With an-
ticipated delays in counting
ballots and Trump threat-
ening to go to court to con-
test the result, it was not
even clear how soon a winner
will be declared.
It is not unusual for a
presidential race to be de-
cided after election day.
That has happened half a
dozen times since 1960, in-
cluding four years ago when
Trump’s victory did not
become apparent until
Wednesday morning on the
East Coast.
Along with the White
House, control of the Senate
is up for grabs Tuesday, with
Democrats hoping a pro-
Biden wave could deliver the
three seats they need to win
a majority. (The vice presi-
dent breaks ties, meaning
Democrats would need to
Andrew Harnik Associated Press
JOE BIDEN, left, and President Trump deliver their final pitch as they race through a handful of battle-ground states on Monday. True to the contest’s churlish form, the candidates hurled accusations and invective.
Evan Vucci Associated Press
After 4 yearsof upheaval,voters weigh inTrump and Bidenwrap up tumultuouscampaigns. It’s unclearwhen presidential raceresults will be known.
By Mark Z. Barabak
$2.75 DESIGNATED AREAS HIGHER © 2020 latimes.comTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2020
BUSINESS INSIDE: Don’t expect debt collectors to stop hounding you after you die. A8
Supreme Courtblocks injuredofficer’s lawsuit
The justices set asidean appeals court rulingby a panel of conserva-tive judges that theleader of a Black LivesMatter protest couldbe sued. NATION, A4
L.A.’s reopeninghopes fade asvirus cases rise County officials stressthe importance ofadhering to health andsafety protocols aheadof the holiday season.CALIFORNIA, B1
WeatherPartly sunny.L.A. Basin: 79/58. B10
Printed with soy inks onpartially recycled paper.
A death certificate is a fi-
nal marker in someone’s life
— an official accounting of
the end.
The legal forms are used
by families to settle estates
and by public health officials
to assess whether the
healthcare system is ad-
dressing the actual reasons
for our demise.
Despite their impor-
tance, study after study has
shown that as many as half
of them are wrong.
Faced with SARS-CoV-2,
a highly contagious co-
ronavirus that scientists
had never seen before, fed-
eral officials at the Centers
for Disease Control and Pre-
vention issued guidance this
spring aimed at improving
the accuracy of what doctors
identify as the cause of
Virus reshaping death certificates
DEATHS FROM viruses, lethal bacteria and other infections have long beenoverlooked on death certificates. Above, Phoebe Memorial Hospital in Albany, Ga.
Ben Roberts
By Melody Petersen
[See Certificates, A9]
Michael Williams
stepped out of his apart-
ment in downtown Long
Beach on Monday to buy a
couple of midday Red Bulls
for himself and his girlfriend.
He was unsettled, thinking
of an image he saw on Twit-
ter of a man waiting for elec-
tion results holding an
AK-47. Now he noticed the
streets were eerily empty —
and the shopkeepers were
boarding up for election day.
He watched in disbelief
and texted photos to his
friends in North Carolina.
“This is disturbing,” he re-
called thinking.
In this historic year of
plague, fire and unrest in
California, the notion that
the United States electoral
process could devolve into
disarray and violence has
cranked up the anxiety even
Boarded up and stressed out in L.A.
GREGG DONOVAN makes a video as Tiffany & Co. on Rodeo Drive is boarded upby workers before election day. Businesses and residents are bracing for the worst.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times
By Joe Mozingo,
Lila Seidman
and Andrew J. Campa
In a year of plague, fire and unrest, election adds to the anxiety
[See Anxiety, A7]
PITTSBURGH — Presi-
dent Trump unleashed a lit-
any of bitter grievances — in-
cluding complaints about
polls that suggest he may
lose Tuesday’s election —
while Joe Biden vowed “an
end to a presidency that’s di-
vided this nation,” as the two
rivals made impassioned
pleas to voters Monday in a
whirl of last-minute rallies.
Trump spent the final
campaign day in a marathon
of five raucous rallies, but
they were all in states that he
won in 2016, showing him
fully on the defensive.
Biden held his three final
events in Ohio and Pennsyl-
vania, battleground states
that he hopes will return to
the Democratic column and
blunt any late Trump surge.
The two campaigns also
deployed their running
mates, spouses and other
surrogates, including former
President Obama and Lady
Gaga for Biden, in an effort
to prod or convince the
shrinking number of voters
still left after weeks of early
voting and a record-break-
ing onslaught of advertising.
As it has been all year, the
two campaigns could not
look and sound more differ-
ent as the final day of voting
approached.
Speaking at mostly
small, carefully socially dis-
tanced rallies in Cleveland
and Pittsburgh, Biden ham-
mered Trump for his han-
dling of the COVID-19 pan-
demic, staying on script and
banking that voters will see
his sober approach as a re-
turn to normality after four
years of tumult under
Trump.
At his first four boister-
ous rallies — in Fayetteville,
N.C.; Avoca, Pa.; Traverse
City, Mich.; and Kenosha,
Wis. — the president repeat-
edly veered off his scripted
Grades of D and F have
increased in the Los Angeles
Unified School District
among middle and high
school students in a trou-
bling sign of the toll that dis-
tance learning — and the co-
ronavirus crisis — is taking
on children, especially those
who are members of low-in-
come families.
The drop in grades,
which also is affecting other
school systems, was dis-
closed Monday when L.A.
Unified released a chart
based on 10-week interim as-
sessments. Poor grades
surged in the district’s lower-
income communities, which
also is where student attend-
ance rates are lower and
where the COVID-19 pan-
demic has hit especially
hard.
“The attendance figures
and interim assessments
don’t reflect the desire or ca-
pability of students,” said
L.A. schools Supt. Austin
Beutner in remarks broad-
cast Monday. “They’re eager
to learn and every bit as ca-
pable as they were before
school facilities closed. But
the struggle to cope with
COVID-19 and online learn-
ing for children and their
families is very real.”
The data on grades made
another announcement all
the more painful, even
though school board leaders
foreshadowed it last week:
Campuses will not reopen
for most students before
January, the superintendent
said. And even that timing
could prove doubtful, Beut-
ner said, unless the co-
ronavirus pandemic sub-
sides and unless state and
local agencies offer more
guidance and resources.
The drop in grades sug-
gests that “traditional ways
of measuring learning need
rethinking,” said Janelle
Scott, a professor in the
Distance learning failing poorest studentsBy Howard Blume
and Julia Barajas
■■■ ELECTION 2020 ■■■
What to expect on election nightA presidential winnermight not be declaredtonight. PERSPECTIVES, A2
Texas voting suitrejected by judgeGOP had asked court toinvalidate drive-throughballots. NATION, A4
Social media’s teston disinformationRumors and lies aboutvoting have shaken trustin platforms. BUSINESS, A8
Trump,Bidenfire lastvolleysThe president unfurlsgrievances, includingcomplaints about thepolls, while his rivalcalls him a ‘disgrace.’
By Noah Bierman,
Melanie Mason
and Evan Halper
[See Campaigns, A6]
[See Students, A12]
[See Voters, A6]