The Day

Trump official acknowledg­es Biden win

- By PAUL SONNE

White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien said former Vice President Joe Biden appears to have won the 2020 presidenti­al election and pledged to oversee a “very profession­al transition” on the National Security Council to the new administra­tion once he is determined to be the winner.

O’Brien’s comments came with a caveat but appeared to mark one of the first public admissions of defeat from President Donald Trump’s inner circle. Other top aides, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, have publicly suggested Trump will secure a second term, even though Biden is on track to win 306 electoral college votes, compared to Trump’s 232. There is no evidence of voter fraud that would impact the result, despite the president’s attempts to cast doubt on the validity of the Nov. 3 vote.

“If the Biden-Harris ticket is determined to be the winner, and obviously things look that way now, we’ll have a very profession­al transition from the National Security Council. There’s no question about it,” O’Brien said at the Global Security Forum, an annual forum that usually takes place in Qatar but was held virtually due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

O’Brien said the Biden team was planning to bring in “very profession­al folks” to take positions on the

National Security Council, many of whom understand the job and have worked in previous administra­tions.

The national security adviser’s pledge comes amid concerns that the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to trigger the formal transition process could jeopardize national security by giving the incoming team fewer resources to prepare.

The administra­tor of the General Services Administra­tion, a federal agency that handles leases for government facilities and other administra­tive tasks, is supposed to issue the determinat­ion after an apparent winner emerges. Emily Murphy, the Trump-appointed administra­tor, has refused to do so.

O’Brien also addressed Trump’s recent firing of his defense secretary, Mark Esper, who was replaced in an acting capacity by Christophe­r Miller, a former Green Beret who served on O’Brien’s staff as senior director for counterter­rorism and transnatio­nal threats. As O’Brien began promoting his vision for the future of the U. S. Navy earlier this year, some in the defense world saw him as gunning for Esper’s job in a second term or seeking to take over his portfolio.

“There was a lot written about Mark Esper and myself. I never wanted Mark Esper’s job,” O’Brien said. “I just wanted to see Mark Esper succeed and do a great job as secretary of defense.”

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