Biden to discuss coronavirus response as Thanksgiving holiday nears
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[November 25, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - U.S.
President-elect Joe Biden will give a speech on Wednesday highlighting
the challenges facing Americans as the Thanksgiving holiday approaches
and the nation faces a surge in coronavirus infections and a wave of
unpopular health restrictions.
The address is meant to encourage Americans and focus on the sacrifices
they are making during the holiday season, his office said, as officials
across the country plead with Americans to stay at home and avoid large
gatherings that can spread COVID-19.
Biden, who introduced his foreign policy and national security team on
Tuesday as he begins a formal transition to the White House after
defeating Republican President Donald Trump, has promised to make
fighting the pandemic his top priority in office.
The number of patients being treated for coronavirus infections in U.S.
hospitals surpassed 86,000, an all-time high, on Tuesday. The death toll
has passed 257,000. [L1N2IA1WD]
The soaring caseload has taxed healthcare providers and further strained
medical resources as 171,000 Americans test positive and another 1,500
or more perish from COVID-19 every day, on average.
Not everyone appears to be heeding the warnings against travel. Millions
of Americans have flocked to airports and highways in the days leading
to Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday, leading to the busiest U.S. travel
period since the early days of the pandemic in March, though well before
pre-pandemic holiday levels.
Biden, who plans to spend Thanksgiving at home in Delaware with a few
family members, said on Tuesday his team has been able to coordinate
with the Trump administration on the pandemic, vaccine distribution
plans and national security since getting the green light on Monday for
formal transition efforts.
The White House also gave the go-ahead for Biden to start receiving the
president's daily intelligence briefing.
"It's been offered," Biden told reporters on Tuesday. "I did not have it
today. We're going to do it on a regular basis."
Trump has waged a failing legal battle to overturn the election results,
falsely claiming it was stolen through widespread voting fraud. Critics
have said Trump's refusal to accept the results undercut Biden's ability
to combat the coronavirus pandemic and deal with national security
threats.
BIDEN BUILDS CABINET
Biden has moved swiftly to fill some top jobs in his administration. In
introducing his foreign policy team, he signaled he intended after
taking office on Jan. 20 to steer the United States away from the
unilateralist nationalism pursued by Trump and work together with the
nation's allies.
He said the team, which includes trusted aide Antony Blinken as his
nominee for U.S. secretary of state, would shed "old thinking and
unchanged habits" in its approach to foreign relations.
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Biden to discuss coronavirus response as Thanksgiving holiday nears
"It's a team that reflects the fact that America is back, ready to
lead the world, not retreat from it, once again sit at the head of
the table, ready to confront our adversaries and not reject our
allies, ready to stand up for our values," Biden said at a news
briefing in Wilmington, Delaware.
Biden also signaled that two former, more liberal, rivals for the
Democratic presidential nomination, Senators Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren, were not under consideration for Cabinet
appointments, saying he needed their votes in the closely divided
Senate.
Asked by NBC News about possibly nominating Sanders or Warren to his
Cabinet, Biden said nothing was off the table but signaled they
might be more needed in the Senate, where the party in power will
govern by a razor-thin margin.
Two runoffs in Georgia on Jan. 5 will determine which party has a
Senate majority. Democrats also saw their majority in the House of
Representatives narrow in the Nov. 3 election.
"Taking someone out of the Senate, taking someone out of the House,
particularly a person of consequence, is really a difficult
decision," Biden said. "I have a very ambitious, very progressive
agenda, and it's going to take really strong leaders in the House
and Senate to get it done."
Trump has told allies he plans to pardon his former national
security adviser Michael Flynn, who had pleaded guilty to lying to
the FBI during the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016
presidential election, a source familiar with the situation said on
Tuesday. [L1N2IB04B]
The source said Trump could still change his mind on the planned
pardon, which was first reported by Axios.
(Additional reporting by John Whitesides, Michael Martina, Susan
Heavey; Editing by Scott Malone and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
Date: 11/25/2020 05:05 AM
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