Biden transition kicks into gear, as Trump acknowledges dwindling legal
options
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[November 30, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) -
President-elect Joe Biden is expected to unveil his picks for several
top economic positions as early as Monday when he will also finally
receive his first classified intelligence briefing, an essential step
towards taking control of national security.
While Biden's transition to the White House appeared to be hitting its
stride, the president-elect was hobbling after fracturing his foot while
playing with his dog on Sunday.
The incoming administration has been hampered for weeks by President
Donald Trump who has refused to concede claiming, without evidence, that
Biden's Nov. 3 electoral victory was due to fraud.
Biden was expected to name leading members of an economic team that will
have to combat the crushing blows to U.S. workers and businesses from
the coronavirus pandemic.
In contrast to Trump, who largely picked white men for key positions,
Biden's early appointments were shaping up to be highly diverse,
including an all-women communications team unveiled on Sunday night.
Biden was expected to announce Janet Yellen, who was the first woman to
chair the Federal Reserve, as his Treasury secretary, and Adewale
Adeyemo, who would be the first Black deputy Treasury secretary.
Other members of his economics team are expected to be announced include
Neera Tanden, chief executive of the progressive Center for American
Progress think tank, as director of the White House Budget Office, who
would be the first woman of color to lead that agency, Reuters and other
media outlets reported. [nL1N2IF0JC}
Brian Deese, who helped lead Obama's efforts to bail out the automotive
industry during the 2009 financial crisis, will head the National
Economic Council, the New York Times reported on Sunday, sparking some
criticism from progressives for his ties to Wall Street.
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President-elect Joe Biden delivers a pre-Thanksgiving speech at his
transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., November 25,
2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris were also set to
receive their first classified presidential daily briefing on
Monday, which the Trump administration had previously refused to
provide. The briefing is the first step toward transfer of
responsibility for the most sensitive intelligence to a new
administration.
Trump, for his part, kept up his unfounded fraud claims in an
interview with Fox News on Sunday and with Sunday evening Tweets
that the social media service flagged as disputed. But the
Republican president, who on Thursday said he would vacate the White
House if Biden were formally declared winner by the Electoral
College on Dec. 14, appeared to retreat from his combative legal
stance, telling Fox that he did not see a path toward making his
case to the Supreme Court.
While most of Trump's fellow Republicans have followed his lead and
refused to refer to Biden as President-elect, one Republican member
of the House of Representatives appeared on Twitter late on Sunday
to have lost patience.
In a Tweet addressing Trump, Representative Paul Mitchell said:
"Please for the sake of our Nation, please drop these arguments
without evidence or factual basis. #stopthestupid," he wrote.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Simon Lewis and Patricia Zengerle;
Writing by Patricia Zengerle; editing by Michelle Price and Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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