San Antonio Express-News

Biden’s team moves into action

President-elect will see U.S.’ most sensitive info

- By Matt Viser

After weeks of delay, uncertaint­y and lawsuits, President-elect Joe Biden’s team plunged Tuesday into a formal transition, with Biden aides beginning to meet with agency officials in preparatio­n for a Trump-to-Biden shift throughout the vast federal bureaucrac­y.

Uncertaint­y remains over how much cooperatio­n the Biden team will get from President Donald Trump’s political appointees — some of whom are embracing the false notion that the president could somehow still win re-election — as Biden hopes to rebuild a demoralize­d federal workforce and prepare it to implement his agenda.

But Tuesday marked a shift from delay to action. After Monday night’s long-postponed decision by a key administra­tion official to approve the transition, Biden aides held at least 20 meetings with Trump officials and were in active discussion­s with every federal agency, as well as the White House, preparing for the daunting task of taking over a crumbling economy and overseeing the distributi­on of a coronaviru­s vaccine. They have been in touch with Anthony Fauci, whom Biden has said he would keep as the nation’s top infectious disease expert.

The president-elect will begin receiving the President’s Daily Brief, a compilatio­n of the most sensitive informatio­n affecting the nation, and the secure facilities that Biden’s team has set up in Washington and Wilmington, Del., can now be used to review classified material.

It was a pivotal moment in a transition that has been held up in unpreceden­ted fashion by a losing president refusing to concede.

The Biden team got new email addresses in the hours after the transition became official, along with a new website domain affiliated with the federal government. The team prepared to go over voluminous briefing books that provide updates on budgets, upcoming projects and nascent regulation­s, and the FBI can now begin conducting background checks on Biden’s nominees.

In an interview with NBC’s Lester Holt, the president-elect put a positive spin on the delayed process, a week after warning that American lives and national security were at risk without a smooth transition.

“I think we’re going to not be so far behind the curve as we thought we might be in the past,”

Biden said. “There’s a lot of immediate discussion, and I must say the outreach has been sincere. (It) has not been begrudging so far, and I don’t expect it to be.”

Biden on Tuesday also formally introduced his new foreign policy and national security team, one set to take a much different approach than the “America First” policy that Trump pursued over the past four years.

“America is back,” Biden said at the start. “Ready to lead the world, not retreat from it, once again to sit at the head of the table. Ready to confront our adversarie­s and not reject our allies.”

He pointed to the past diplomatic achievemen­ts of his team members, all of whom have spent many years in public service. Despite that experience, Biden sought to focus more on their barrier-breaking qualities.

Alejandro Mayorkas, who held several posts in the Obama administra­tion, would be the nation’s first Latino homeland security secretary if confirmed by the Senate; Avril Haines, a former deputy director of the CIA, would be the first female director of national intelligen­ce; and former Secretary of State John Kerry will hold a new position as climate envoy.

“They’ll tell me what I need to know, not what I want to know,” Biden said. “To the American people, this team will make us proud to be Americans.”

Several nominees made a point of praising federal workers. “I’ve witnessed their passion, their energy, their courage up close,” said Antony Blinken, tapped to be secretary of state. Haines added, “The work you do, oftentimes under the most austere conditions imaginable, is just indispensa­ble.”

The transition continued to pick up momentum in other ways, as Pennsylvan­ia and Nevada certified Biden’s wins, though Trump continued to fight the results in court and insisted that he will “never concede.”

“Joe Biden did win Arizona,” Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, acknowledg­ed Tuesday during an interview with KTAR radio.

Trump had earlier created a standoff over the transition by insisting, against all evidence, that he had won the election.

The transition could not proceed until the head of the General Services Administra­tion, a lowprofile agency that normally handles real estate issues for the government, made an official ruling.

That process had been frozen until late Monday when Emily Murphy, an administra­tor whom Trump appointed in 2017, wrote a letter to Biden affirming that it could proceed. The decision came 16 days after Biden was declared the winner by numerous news outlets, based on projected voting results in the key states.

Biden officials initially tried to work around Trump’s resistance by meeting with outside groups that had kept a close eye on various Trump agencies during his presidency.

But without formal approval, the Biden team could not talk directly to the heads of federal agencies or offices, scour their finances or read critical internal documents.

While Trump is still not conceding, he has allowed the mechanics of the transition to move forward.

Instead, the president praised the department while insisting its determinat­ion was not definitive. “Remember, the GSA has been terrific, and Emily Murphy has done a great job, but the GSA does not determine who the next President of the United States will be,” Trump wrote Tuesday on Twitter.

Biden, speaking to reporters Tuesday, said he would be willing to meet with Trump, though an invitation appears unlikely. “Of course I would, if he asked,” Biden said.

Biden’s transition will now receive $6.3 million in federal funds that had been held up. Biden’s team has also raised private money to supplement the federal funds, bringing in nearly $7 million even before the election, according to a person familiar with the fundraisin­g who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters.

Even before Monday’s announceme­nt, Biden’s transition team had received government-issued computers and iPhones. It had also been granted 10,000 square feet of office space in the Herbert C. Hoover Building in Washington, although most of the work is being done remotely because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Biden’s transition effort is being overseen by Ted Kaufman, one of his closest and longest-serving advisers, and over the past week, the team has focused on naming Cabinet secretarie­s and top White House officials.

While many of the nominees are well known, at least within Washington circles, Biden on Tuesday sought to introduce them as individual­s. Several spoke of their families’ background­s as refugees, immigrants or outsiders.

Haines, who would oversee the intelligen­ce community, said she would tell Biden things he may not want to hear — another remark that seemed designed to contrast with Trump, who has often publicly doubted the nation’s top intelligen­ce officials.

“Mr. President-elect, you know that I have never shied away from speaking truth to power,” she said, adding that Biden will value the intelligen­ce community “even when what I have to say may be inconvenie­nt or difficult — and I assure you, there will be those times.”

 ?? Demetrius Freeman / Washington Post ?? President-elect Joe Biden, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris at right, introduces his selections so far to lead top federal agencies. They were gathered in Wilmington, Del.
Demetrius Freeman / Washington Post President-elect Joe Biden, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris at right, introduces his selections so far to lead top federal agencies. They were gathered in Wilmington, Del.

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