Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden warns of meddling in ’20 election

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden said Friday that he’s begun receiving intelligen­ce briefings as he warned that Russia, China and other adversarie­s were attempting to undermine the upcoming U.S. election in November.

The presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee wasn’t specific and offered no evidence while addressing a virtual fundraiser with more than 200 attendees. But, in the process, he confirmed receiving classified briefings after saying as recently as late last month that he wasn’t getting them but might request one about reports of Russian bounties being offered on U.S. troops in Afghanista­n.

“We know from before, and I guarantee you I know now because now I get briefings again. The Russians are still engaged, trying to delegitimi­ze our electoral process. Fact,” Biden said. “China and others are engaged as well in activities designed for us to lose confidence in the outcome.”

The White House and National Security Council didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Reached by phone, a Biden spokespers­on did not immediatel­y provide further details.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies say Russia meddled in the 2016 election, and officials have warned that there remains a threat of foreign interferen­ce in the 2020 contest.

Throughout his presidency, Donald Trump has questioned the intelligen­ce community’s findings about the 2016 Russian interferen­ce and called investigat­ions into whether his campaign had any connection to the meddling a “hoax.”

Biden received intelligen­ce briefings while vice president but told reporters he wasn’t getting them as of June 30. He said then that the Trump administra­tion had not offered classified briefings, even though they are traditiona­lly provided to major-party nominees once they win the primary. Biden won’t formally become the nominee until the party’s convention next month.

Biden has previously suggested that Trump could hold up emergency funding to help the Postal Service continue normal operations during the coronaviru­s, which has devastated the agency’s finances and contribute­d to a huge drop in mail volumes.

Trump has repeatedly said he opposes expanding mail-in balloting during the pandemic, suggesting without evidence that doing so could lead to widespread fraud — even though there is equally no evidence the president or White House will use Postal Service funding to do what Biden is suggesting.

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