New law makes dueling presidential transitions possible
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[October 31, 2024]
By WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) — There will be 77 days between Election Day and
inauguration, a period in which the president-elect may ready his or her
administration to take over power from President Joe Biden.
Long built on tradition and bipartisanship, the presidential transition
exploded into a point of political contention four years ago, after
then-President Donald Trump made baseless claims to dispute his loss and
his administration delayed kicking off the transition process for weeks.
This year, a new law is meant to start the transition sooner, no matter
who wins. But, if neither major party candidate concedes after Election
Day, the updated rules allow both sides to get additional government
funding and logistical support to begin working toward transitioning to
power. That could lead to both Vice President Kamala Harris and Trump
potentially assembling dueling, governments-in-waiting for weeks.
“Rules can only take you so far, and ultimately you need to have the
players in the system working to shared objective,” said Max Stier,
president and CEO of the nonprofit Partnership for Public Service, which
has worked with candidates and incumbents on transitions. “Everyone
should have the shared objective of making sure that the handoff of
power is smooth and effective. And that requires a cooperation that law
can’t alone enforce.”
Here’s a look at how changes meant to fix the problems of four years ago
may not solve coming issues this time, and where the coming transition
stands in the meantime:
What happened in 2020?
Trump lied about widespread voter fraud that didn't occur, delaying the
start of the 2020 transition from one administration to the next from
Election Day on Nov. 3 to Nov. 23.
The Trump-appointed head of the General Services Administration, Emily
Murphy, consulted the transition law dating to 1963 and determined that
she had no legal standing to determine a winner — and start funding and
cooperating with a transition to a Biden administration — because Trump
was still challenging the results in court.
GSA essentially acts as the federal government's landlord, and it wasn't
until Trump’s efforts to subvert free and fair election results had
collapsed across key states that Murphy agreed to formally “ ascertain a
president-elect ” and begin the transition process. Trump also
eventually posted on social media that his administration would
cooperate.
What's different this time?
Enacted in December 2022, the Presidential Transition Improvement Act
now mandates that the transition process begin five days after the
election, even if more than one candidate hasn't conceded.
That avoids long delays and means “an ‘affirmative ascertainment’ by the
GSA is no longer a prerequisite for gaining transition support
services,” according to agency guidelines on the new rules.
But the new law also effectively mandates federal support and
cooperation for both candidates to begin a transition. It states that
such support should continue until “significant legal challenges” that
could alter electoral outcomes have been “substantially resolved,” or
when electors from each state meet in December to formally choose an
Electoral College winner.
That means the government potentially bestowing enough backing that both
sides can prepare an administration until mid-December — only about a
month before Inauguration Day on Jan. 20.
Derek Muller, a University of Notre Dame law professor and presidential
transition expert who testified in favor of the legislation, said it
ensures that potentially two candidates get backing for transitions,
with one eventually falling away. He said that's preferable to having a
situation where no transition support is released to either side — which
can spark delays leading to national security lapses.
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The White House is seen before Democratic presidential nominee Vice
President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign rally on the Ellipse in
Washington, Oct. 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)
“In the past, it was neither candidate gets the funding. Now it's
both,” Muller said.
He pointed to the contested 2000 election, when GSA didn’t determine
the winner until the Florida recount fight was settled on Dec. 13 —
raising questions about national security gaps that may have
contributed to the U.S. being underprepared for the Sept. 11 attacks
the following year.
“It can last into mid-December. There’s no question that’s a risk,”
Muller said of potential dueling transition efforts after this
year's election. “But I think it’s a risk that they want to take.
And even mid-December is still a month away from inauguration, so at
least you have some certainty.”
Even today, though, Trump continues to falsely claim he won in 2020
and only says he'll accept this November’s results if they are fair,
making it easy to imagine him doing so only if he wins — and
potentially putting the new law to the test.
How are both sides preparing?
The sprawling transition process starts around 4,000 government
positions being filled with political appointees — people who are
specifically tapped for their jobs by the president-elect's team.
That often begins with key Cabinet departments.
Harris’ team already has reached an agreement with the Biden
administration to use government office space in Washington and
other resources, and to begin vetting potential key national
security hires.
Trump's team has signed no transition agreements, missing deadlines
to agree with GSA on logistical matters like office space and tech
support and with the White House on access to agencies, including
documents, employees and facilities.
Stier, of the Partnership for Public Service, said the Trump
administration's disregard for the transition process dates to 2016,
when the then-president-elect fired his transition coordinator,
former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and then spent months of his
early administration trying to catch up on basic staffing issues.
Stier said the agreements to prepare transition are merely “the
starter's pistol — it isn't actually the race." The full process, he
said, “requires a deep understanding of our government and a
willingness to appreciate the importance of process."
What will transition look like?
Neither side will be starting totally from scratch. While Harris
will build her own government, she might tap some holdovers from the
Biden administration, where she was vice president. Trump will bring
in a new team, but he built an entirely new administration in 2017
and can do it again.
Harris could also opt to keep Senate-confirmed Biden appointees as
acting Cabinet secretaries, just in case it is hard to get her
nominations through a post-election, GOP-controlled Congress. She's
promised to appoint a Republican to her Cabinet, with an early
favorite being former Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney — once the
third-ranking member of the House GOP and the daughter of a
Republican vice president — who has campaigned with Harris.
Trump said he may tap former independent presidential hopeful and
anti-vaccination activist Robert Kennedy Jr. on health issues and
make South African-born Elon Musk a secretary of federal
“cost-cutting.”
Either way, John Kirby, Biden's national security spokesman, said
the current administration is set for a proper transition, ″no
matter how things play out in the election."
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