Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden vows to ‘get right to work’

- BY STEVE PEOPLES AND WILL WEISSERT

WILMINGTON, Del. — Vowing “to get right to work,” President- elect Joe Biden on Tuesday shrugged off President Donald Trump’s refusal to accept the election outcome as “inconseque­ntial,” even as Democrats elsewhere warned the Republican president’s actions were dangerous.

Raising unsupporte­d claims of voter fraud, Trump has blocked the incoming president from receiving intelligen­ce briefings and withheld federal funding intended to help facilitate the transfer of power. Trump’s resistance, backed by senior Republican­s in Washington and across the country, could also prevent background investigat­ions and security clearances for prospectiv­e staff and access to federal agencies to discuss transition planning.

As some Democrats and former Republican officials warned of serious consequenc­es, Biden sought to lower the national temperatur­e as he addressed reporters from a makeshift transition headquarte­rs near his home in downtown Wilmington.

He described Trump’s position as little more than an “embarrassi­ng” mark on the outgoing president’s legacy, while predicting that Republican­s on Capitol Hill would eventually accept the reality of Biden’s victory. The Republican resistance, Biden said, “does not change the dynamic at all in what we’re able to do.”

Additional intelligen­ce briefings “would be useful,” Biden added, but “we don’t see anything slowing us down.”

The measured comments come as Biden prepares to confront dueling national crises that actively threaten the health, safety and economic security of millions of Americans irrespecti­ve of the political debate. Coronaviru­s infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths are surging, the economy faces the prospect of long-term damage, and the nation’s political and cultural divides may be worsening.

Biden is betting that his low-key approach and bipartisan outreach — a sharp reversal from the current president’s style — will help him govern effectivel­y on Day One. But just 71 days before he will be inaugurate­d, Trump and his allies seemed determined to make Biden’s transition as difficult as possible.

From his Twitter account on Tuesday, Trump again raised unsupporte­d claims of “massive ballot counting abuse” and predicted he would ultimately win the race he has already lost.

His allies on Capitol Hill, led by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have encouraged the president’s baseless accusation­s.

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