Pompeo voices confidence for 'second Trump administration,' then softens
tone on post-election transition
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[November 11, 2020]
By Humeyra Pamuk
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo voiced confidence on Tuesday that once every "legal"
vote was counted, it would lead to a "second Trump administration,"
appearing to reject Democrat Joe Biden's election victory over President
Donald Trump.
But hours after withering criticism over his comments, Pompeo, a close
ally and appointee of Trump, in a Fox News interview appeared to soften
his tone.
"I am very confident that we will have a good transition, that we will
make sure that whoever is in office on noon on January 20th has all the
tools readily available so we don't skip a beat with the capacity to
keep Americans safe," Pompeo said.
Earlier at a State Department briefing, he said: "There will be a smooth
transition to a second Trump administration."
Those comments drew praise from Trump, who tweeted a video late on
Tuesday of Pompeo's comments, saying: "That's why Mike was number one in
his class at West Point!" referring to the U.S. Military Academy.
Biden said earlier that nothing would stop the transfer of power in the
U.S. government.
The former vice president secured more than the 270 votes in the
Electoral College needed to take the presidency by winning Pennsylvania
on Saturday.
But Trump and his allies insist "illegal" ballots may have been cast
despite no evidence of mass voter fraud, which is extremely rare in U.S.
elections.
The Republican president has so far refused to concede and is pursuing
lawsuits in several states in a long-shot bid to hold on to power. State
officials have said there were no significant irregularities in the Nov.
3 election
Pompeo did not make any comments in either set of remarks to suggest he
recognized Biden as the president-elect.
Asked during the Fox News interview if he was being "serious" regarding
his comments about a "second Trump administration," Pompeo did not say
either way but did not repeat the phrase.
He spoke as leaders of other countries, including Washington's close
allies the UK, France and Canada, have already congratulated Biden.
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo takes part in a briefing to the
media at the State Department in Washington, U.S., November 10,
2020. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS
'BASELESS AND DANGEROUS ATTACKS'
Representative Eliot Engel, chairman of the House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs Committee, said the State Department should begin
preparing for Biden's transition now.
"Secretary Pompeo shouldn’t play along with baseless and dangerous
attacks on the legitimacy of last week’s election," he said.
Richard Boucher, a retired diplomat who was the longest-serving
State Department spokesman, said Pompeo’s comment about a second
Trump administration could be passed off as a joke but also served
to protect him from White House criticism.
Pompeo played down suggestions that a delayed transition could
present a national security risk. "I was part of a transition on the
other side. ... It didn't take as much time as some might be
pretending that it's going to take," he told Fox News.
"I'm very confident that all the things that need to be done will be
done in an appropriate way, that we will deliver that."
Asked if Trump's refusal to concede hampered State Department
efforts to promote free and fair elections abroad, Pompeo declined
to address the specific question but said: "This department cares
deeply to make sure that elections around the world are safe and
secure and free and fair."
In his first official travel since the election, Pompeo is due to go
to France, Turkey, Georgia, Israel, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates
and Saudi Arabia from Nov. 13 to 23. The leaders of some of those
countries have already congratulated Biden.
(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk, Susan Heavey, Patricia Zengerle, Arshad
Mohammed and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Grant McCool and Peter
Cooney)
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