Looks like the router is having trouble setting the time w/ the NTP server. If that happens, you can't verify the expiry date of certs to common websites. But you can probably still ping a public IP explicitly.
If you can, then you do have internet access, but the problem is the inability to very certs and/or domain name resolution (since I don't see dnsmasq being started either).
Beware, sometimes ISPs will NOT accept a new router immediately. Your prior router's WAN MAC address may be "locked" to the ISP (administratively). This is done to prevent unauthorized devices and the allocating of multiple public IPs. That's why it's recommended you *release* the prior DHCP lease before changing routers. Or else clone the prior router's WAN MAC address over to the new router.
P.S. Of course, you could also wait for the old DHCP lease to expire, but who knows how long that might take. You might want to clone NOW, then disconnect overnight so you can use the new router's actual WAN MAC address in the morning.