After delay, Trump signs agreement with Biden White House to begin
formal transition handoff
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[November 27, 2024]
By ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday reached a
required agreement with President Joe Biden’s White House to allow his
transition staff to coordinate with the existing federal workforce
before taking office on Jan. 20.
The congressionally mandated agreement allows transition aides to work
with federal agencies and access non-public information and gives a
green light to government workers to talk to the transition team.
But Trump has declined to sign a separate agreement with the General
Services Administration that would have given his team access to secure
government offices and email accounts, in part because it would require
that the president-elect limit contributions to $5,000 and reveal who is
donating to his transition effort.
The White House agreement was supposed to have been signed by Oct. 1,
according to the Presidential Transition Act, and the Biden White House
had issued both public and private appeals for Trump’s team to sign on.
The agreement is a critical step in ensuring an orderly transfer of
power at noon on Inauguration Day, and lays the groundwork for the White
House and government agencies to begin to share details on ongoing
programs, operations and threats. It limits the risk that the Trump team
could find itself taking control of the massive federal government
without briefings and documents from the outgoing administration.
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As part of the agreement with the White House, Trump’s team will have to
publicly disclose its ethics plan for the transition operation and make
a commitment to uphold it, the White House said. Transition aides must
sign statements that they have no financial positions that could pose a
conflict of interest before they receive access to non-public federal
information.
Biden himself raised the agreement with Trump when they met in the Oval
Office on Nov. 13, according to the White House, and Trump indicated
that his team was working to get it signed.
Trump chief of staff-designate Susie Wiles met with Biden's chief of
staff Jeff Zients at the White House on Nov. 19 and other senior
officials in part to discuss remaining holdups, while lawyers for the
two sides have spoken more than a half-dozen times in recent days to
finalize the agreement.
“Like President Biden said to the American people from the Rose Garden
and directly to President-elect Trump, he is committed to an orderly
transition,” said White House spokesperson Saloni Sharma.
“President-elect Trump and his team will be in seat on January 20 at 12
pm – and they will immediately be responsible for a range of domestic
and global challenges, foreseen and unforeseen. A smooth transition is
critical to the safety and security of the American people who are
counting on their leaders to be responsible and prepared.”
Without the signed agreement, Biden administration officials were
restricted in what they could share with the incoming team. Trump
national security adviser-designate Rep. Mike Waltz met recently with
Biden national security adviser Jake Sullivan, but the outgoing team was
limited in what it could discuss.
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President Joe Biden meets with President-elect Donald Trump in the
Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
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“We are doing everything that we can to effect a professional and an
orderly transition,” White House national security spokesman John
Kirby told reporters on Monday. “And we continue to urge the
incoming team to take the steps that are necessary to be able to
facilitate that on their end as well.”
“This engagement allows our intended Cabinet nominees to begin
critical preparations, including the deployment of landing teams to
every department and agency, and complete the orderly transition of
power,” said Wiles in a statement.
The Trump transition team says it would disclose its donors to the
public and would not take foreign donations.
A separate agreement with the Department of Justice to coordinate
background checks for vetting and security clearances is still being
actively worked on and could be signed quickly now that the White
House agreement is signed. The agency has teams of investigators
standing by to process clearances for Trump aides and advisers once
that document is signed.
That would clear the way for transition aides and future
administration appointees and nominees to begin accessing classified
information before Trump takes office. Some Trump aides may hold
active clearances from his first term in office or other government
roles, but others will need new clearances to access classified
data.
Trump's team on Friday formally told the GSA that they would not
utilize the government office space blocks from the White House
reserved for their use, or government email accounts, phones and
computers during the transition.
The White House said it does not agree with Trump’s decision to
forgo support from the GSA, but is working on alternate ways to get
Trump appointees the information they need without jeopardizing
national security. Federal agencies are receiving guidance on
Tuesday on how to share sensitive information with the Trump team
without jeopardizing national security or non-public information.
For instance, agencies may require in-person meetings and document
reviews since the Trump team has declined to shift to using secure
phones and computers. For unclassified information, agencies may ask
Trump transition staff to attest that they are taking basic
safeguards, like using two-factor authentication on their accounts.
“The signing of this agreement is good news, and a positive step
toward an effective transfer of power," said Max Stier, the
president and CEO of the Partnership for Public Service. "This
agreement unlocks direct access to information from federal
agencies, which is vital for the incoming administration to be ready
to govern on Day One and critical to the transition’s success.”
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