The New York Times - Your Thursday Briefing

Japan's next prime minister.
Author Headshot

By Melina Delkic

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering Japan’s next prime minister and the ripple effects of Vietnam’s factory closures.

Fumio Kishida, the former foreign minister, is offering a continuation of many of Shinzo Abe’s policies.Kyodo/Via Reuters

Japan’s next leader offers few bold solutions

Japan’s governing party elected Fumio Kishida, a former foreign minister and the candidate least likely to stray from the mainstream platform, as its choice for the next prime minister.

A moderate party stalwart, Kishida, 64, lagged in public opinion polls but had the backing of conservatives in the governing Liberal Democratic Party. He offered little to distinguish himself from the unpopular departing leader, Yoshihide Suga.

Kishida defeated his popular rival, Taro Kono, the outspoken U.S.-educated vaccine minister, 257 to 170, in a runoff vote on Wednesday.

Japan’s Parliament will hold a special session early next month to officially select the new prime minister. Given that the Liberal Democrats control the legislature, Kishida’s appointment is all but guaranteed. He will then lead the party in a general election to be held by the end of November.

What’s next: By going with the safe pair of hands, the party seemed to demonstrate its confidence that it could win the election despite choosing a leader with lackluster public support. Voters have become frustrated with the government’s handling of the pandemic.

Women waited to receive Covid vaccines in Mumbai, India, on Monday.Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters

India reports a sharp drop in Covid deaths

Health officials in the country recorded the lowest number of new daily coronavirus infections and deaths in about six months this week.

There were 179 Covid-related deaths on Tuesday, a far cry from the 4,000 recorded in May, when the country was overwhelmed by a devastating wave of infections. India reported 18,870 new infections on Wednesday. Though the figures have underestimated the virus’s toll in the past, the new figures suggest a positive trend.

The government has powered a vast vaccination drive, reaching remote areas. About 234 million people of India’s population of 1.4 billion are fully vaccinated, with another 409 million partly vaccinated.

Related: India is getting ready to produce its own mRNA-based Covid vaccine this year, The Wall Street Journal reports. Prime Minister Narendra Modi also announced that the country produced the world’s first DNA vaccine.

In other developments:

Picking up a package in a quarantined neighborhood in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, last week.The New York Times

Will Vietnam factory closures ruin Christmas in the U.S.?

Vietnam has grown in recent years to become the second-biggest supplier of apparel and footwear to the U.S. after China. Many retailers moved manufacturing there amid major tariffs on China.

While Vietnam was not hit hard during the first wave of the coronavirus, the surge of the Delta variant has forced factories to shut down. With the holiday season fast approaching, many American retailers are expecting shortages of goods, higher prices and higher shipping costs.

“We’re going to continue to see a high demand for goods from highly vaccinated countries or regions, but who are getting the goods from highly unvaccinated countries that could be struggling,” said one retail professional whose company helps with supply chain issues.

Details: The clothing retailer Everlane said it was facing delays of four to eight weeks. Nike cut its sales forecast last week. And Restoration Hardware pushed a new collection to next spring. All cited the factory closures.

THE LATEST NEWS

Asia and Australia
Evergrande sold about a 20 percent stake in Shengjing Bank.Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times
Around the World
A Morning Read
Manny Pacquiao at a press conference in Los Angeles in July.Michael Owens/Getty Images

The Philippine boxing great Manny Pacquiao, who won titles in a record eight weight classes over a 26-year career, is retiring and turning his attention to a bid for the presidency of the Philippines. He has openly feuded with the country’s current president, Rodrigo Duterte.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

Ivory-billed woodpeckers filmed in Louisiana in 1935.Arthur A. Allen/Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology

The global extinction crisis

More than 20 animals and one plant on the endangered species list are now extinct, U.S. wildlife officials said Wednesday. Their stories hold lessons about a growing global biodiversity crisis.

The ivory-billed woodpecker is gone forever, according to U.S. officials. So is the Bachman’s warbler, a yellow-breasted songbird that once migrated between the Southeastern U.S. and Cuba. The song of the Kauai O’o, a Hawaiian forest bird, exists only on recordings.

A million species face the threat of extinction — many within decades.

Human activities like farming, logging, mining and damming take habitat from animals and pollute much of what’s left. People poach and overfish. Climate change adds new peril.

Many of the species were likely extinct, or almost so, by the time the Endangered Species Act passed in 1973, so perhaps no amount of conservation would have been able to save them.

Scientists do not declare extinctions lightly. It often takes decades of fruitless searching. One federal biologist who declared the woodpecker extinct said, “That was probably one of the hardest things I’ve done in my career. I literally cried.”

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
David Malosh for The New York Times

Elevate your instant ramen: Gooey melted Cheddar and kimchi are game changers.

What to Watch

The latest James Bond adventure, “No Time to Die,” finds its hero in a somber mood, our reviewer writes.

Tech Tips

Here’s how to protect yourself from “stalkerware,” invasive apps that log what you type.

Now Time to Play

Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Bend out of shape, as wood (four letters).

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Melina

P.S. Katrin Bennhold, our Berlin bureau chief, joined Amanpour on CNN to talk about the legacy of Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel as she prepares to leave office after 16 years.

The latest episode of “The Daily” is about Britney Spears.

You can reach Melina and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

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