The Phnom Penh Post

Biden to sign dozen orders on Day 1 amid tight security

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JOE Biden’s top aide said on Januar y 16 t he incoming president would sign about a dozen executive orders on his first day in of fice, as police fear v iolence from Trump supporters who staged a nationw ide securit y operation ahead of t he inaugurati­on.

Authoritie­s in Washington, where the Januar y 20 inaugurati­on will take place, said they arrested a man with a loaded handgun and more than 500 rounds of ammunition at a security checkpoint, underscori­ng the tension in the US capital which is resembling a war zone.

However, the man said it was “an honest mistake”, and that he was a private security guard who got lost on n his way to work near the Capitol. itol.

Incoming Biden chief of staff Ron Klain said in a memo to new White House e senior staff that the executive ve orders would address the pandemic, ndemic, the ailing US economy, omy, climate change and racial ial injustice in America.

“All of these crises demand urgent action,” Klain n said in the memo.

“In his first 10 days in office, President-elect Biden en (pictured, AFP) will take decisive action to address these ese four crises, prevent other urgent and irreversib­le harms, s, and restore America’s place ce in the world,” Klain added. ed.

As he inherits the White hite House from Donald ld Trump, Biden’s plate e is overflowin­g with acute challenges.

The US is fast approachin­g 400,000 dead from the Covid19 crisis and logging well over a million new cases a week as the coronaviru­s spreads out of control.

The economy is ailing, with 10 million fewer jobs available compared to the start of the pandemic. And millions of Americans who back Trump refuse to recognise Biden as the legitimate president.

Biden last week unveiled plans to seek $1.9 trillion to revive the economy through new stimulus payments and other aid, and plans a blitz to accelerate America’s stumbling Covid vaccine rollout effort.

On Inaugurati­on

Biden, as previously promised, will sign orders including ones for the

US to rejoin the Paris climate accord and reverse

Trump’s ban on entry of people from certain Muslim majority countries, Klain said.

“President-elect

B i d e n w i l l

Day,

take action – not just to reverse the gravest damages of the Trump administra­tion – but also to start moving our country forward,” Klain

said.

500 rounds of a m m u n i t i o n

M e a n w h i l e , Washington was under a state of high alert after a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6. The assault left five people

dead, including a police officer.

Security officials have warned that armed proTrump extremists, possibly carry carrying explosives, pose a threa threat to Washington as well as sta state capitals over the coming w week.

Tho Thousands of National Guard troop troops have been deployed in Wash Washington and streets have been blocked off downtown with concrete barriers.

On the night of Januar y 15, p police arrested a Virginia man at a security checkpoint wher where he tried to use an “unautho authorised” credential to access the restricted area where Biden will be inaugurate­d.

As officers checked the cred credential, one noticed decals on the back of Wesley Be Beeler’s pick-up truck that sa said “Assault Life,” with an i image of a rifle, and another with the message: “If they come for your guns, give ‘em your bullets first,” according to

a document filed in Washington, DC Superior Court.

Under questionin­g, Beeler told officers he had a Glock handgun in the vehicle. A search uncovered a loaded handgun, more than 500 rounds of ammunition, shotgun shells and a magazine for the gun, the court document said.

Beeler was arrested on charges including possession of an unregister­ed firearm and unlawful possession of ammunition.

“It was an honest mistake,” Beeler told the Washington Post after being released from jail.

“I pulled up to a checkpoint after getting lost in DC because I’m a country boy,” he said. “I showed them the inaugurati­on badge that was given to me.”

Beeler told the newspaper he works as a private security guard near the Capitol, and presented a credential provided by his employer.

He said he was licensed to carry his gun in Virginia, but

forgot to take it out of his car before leaving home for his overnight shift in Washington.

Prosecutor­s did not object to Beeler’s release from jail, the Washington Post said, though he was ordered to stay out of Washington except for court-related matters.

In addition to the heavy security presence in the US capital, law enforcemen­t was out in force at statehouse­s around the country to ward off potential political violence.

Mass protests that had been planned for the weekend did not materialis­e on January 16, with security far outnumberi­ng Trump supporters at several fortified capitols, US media reported.

In St Paul, Minnesota, for example, hundreds of law enforcemen­t officers, some armed with long guns, ringed the Capitol with National Guard troops providing backup.

The number of protesters totalled about 50.

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 ?? AFP ?? Members of the DC Police and the US National Guard maintain security near the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Saturday, four days before US President-elect Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on as the 46th president.
AFP Members of the DC Police and the US National Guard maintain security near the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Saturday, four days before US President-elect Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on as the 46th president.

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