Biden to meet with U.S. workers hit by coronavirus pandemic
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[December 02, 2020] By
Andy Sullivan and Brad Heath
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President-elect Joe Biden on Wednesday will meet
with American workers and business owners hit by COVID-19 as he prepares
to confront the pandemic that has taken a heavy human and economic toll
when he takes office next month.
The Democrat is urging Congress to resolve a months-long standoff over
coronavirus aid and has promised to act quickly to provide more
resources to fight a health crisis that has killed more than 268,000
Americans so far.
Biden has selected many of his top national-security and economic
advisers, though it unclear how many will win confirmation in a closely
divided U.S. Senate, control of which will be determined by a pair of
January run-off elections.
One potential bright spot: Top U.S. health officials say they plan to
begin vaccinating Americans against the disease as soon as mid-December.
Health-care workers and long-term care residents are expected to be
first in line.
Biden is due to hold a socially distanced discussion with workers and
small-business owners who have suffered during the economic upheaval
brought on by the pandemic. He and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris
also will receive national-security briefings from U.S. government
officials.
Those briefings are a tacit sign from outgoing President Donald Trump's
administration that Biden and Harris will take power on Jan. 20, though
Trump himself has refused to concede in a sharp break from U.S.
tradition.
Trump's lawyers, meanwhile, continue to file legal challenges in a bid
to overturn the results of the Nov. 3 election, which Biden won by more
than 6.8 million votes.
The legal effort has spawned dozens of lawsuits, all of which have come
up short. But Trump's baseless claims of widespread fraud have gained
traction among his followers, and election officials in several states
say they have been subject to harassment and threats.
State and federal election officials have repeatedly said there is no
evidence of widespread fraud.
A top election official in Georgia implored Trump to tell his followers
that he lost fair and square to avoid violence.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden gestures to reporters as he arrives
to announce nominees and appointees to serve on his economic policy
team at his transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.,
December 1, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
"It's time to look forward. If you want to run for re-election in four years,
fine, do it. But everything we're seeing right now, there's not a path," said
Gabriel Sterling, a Republican who manages the state's voting systems.
Lawyer Sidney Powell, dismissed from Trump's legal team last week, on Tuesday
filed a new lawsuit asking a federal judge to declare the president the victor
in Wisconsin.
A plaintiff in that lawsuit told Reuters he did not know he was involved.
"I had one conversation with a lawyer. I said that's interesting, get back to
me, and that was it," Derrick Van Orden, a military veteran who ran
unsuccessfully for Congress, told Reuters. "I was added to the lawsuit without
my knowledge."
Powell told Reuters that there had been a miscommunication. "We will take
appropriate action to clear that up," she said.
One potential ally has not come to Trump's aid: Attorney General William Barr.
The nation's top law enforcement official told the Associated Press on Tuesday
that the Justice Department has found no evidence of widespread fraud.
The Justice Department also is investigating a potential crime related to
funneling money to the White House in exchange for a presidential pardon,
according to court documents unsealed in federal court.
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell on Tuesday released a heavily redacted order
that described what she called a "bribery-for-pardon" investigation, but
identify none of the people under investigation. A Justice Department official
said no government official is or was a target.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Brad Heath; Editing by Scott Malone and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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