The Jerusalem Post

Trump bows to reality as Biden shapes historical­ly diverse Cabinet

- • By EVAN HALPER, TRACY WILKINSON and DON LEE

WASHINGTON ( Los Angeles Times/ TNS) – The Trump administra­tion yielded to the reality that the presidenti­al election will not be overturned, finally authorizin­g the start of formal transition proceeding­s, as President- elect Joe Biden moved to make good his vow to appoint a historical­ly diverse Cabinet.

Soon after Michigan certified its vote for Biden on Monday, a major blow to President Donald Trump’s efforts to contest the vote, the General Services Administra­tion official who blocked the start of the formal transition for three weeks formally recognized Biden as the winner of the election and said she would provide office space, access to government officials and other logistical resources to assist his team.

In a two- page letter to Biden, GSA Administra­tor Emily Murphy wrote that she decided “independen­tly” to withhold the official nod until now and was not pressured “directly or indirectly” by the White House as Trump unsuccessf­ully fought the election in court with false claims of fraud. She denied she had withheld the aid “out of fear or favoritism.”

“To be clear, I did not receive any direction to delay my determinat­ion,” Murphy wrote. “I did, however, receive threats online, by phone and by mail directed at my safety, my family, my staff and even my pets in an effort to coerce me into making this determinat­ion prematurel­y. Even in the face of

thousands of threats, I always remained committed to upholding the law.”

Soon after, Trump tweeted that he had recommende­d that Murphy “do what needs to be done... and have told my team to do the same.” Trump notably did not concede, however.

The start of the formal transition means Biden and his top aides will be given classified briefings on national security threats, among other assistance. They are also able to coordinate with federal health officials on the widening pandemic and a possible national

vaccinatio­n campaign next year.

The latest twist in one of the nation’s strangest elections came hours after Biden announced that he will nominate the first Latino to run the Department of Homeland Security and the first woman to lead the nation’s vast intelligen­ce apparatus.

Biden is also reportedly poised to nominate Janet Yellen, former chair of the Federal Reserve, as the first woman to ever run the Treasury. A respected figure with progressiv­es and Wall Street alike, Yellen would help lead Biden’s response to the economy- wrecking pandemic if confirmed by the Senate.

The nominees signal a wide- ranging White House national security and foreign policy leadership team. Unlike many in Trump’s ever- shifting Cabinet, Biden chose known advisers with long records of public service and expertise.

Biden chiefly tapped trusted confidants and establishm­ent figures for his inner circle, packing his Cabinet with former senior Obama administra­tion officials with whom he had worked closely.

Absent from Biden’s initial round of Cabinet picks are any partisan warriors. The list is defined by deliberate­ly nonpartisa­n and noncontrov­ersial insiders who reinforce the president- elect’s inclinatio­n to project competence and unity over settling political scores.

The most controvers­ial figure may be Alejandro Mayorkas, Biden’s pick for secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. As a deputy secretary of DHS under president Barack Obama, the Cuban- born Mayorkas was a primary architect of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and a primary negotiator of the thaw in then- frozen US- Cuban relations.

DACA and the opening to Cuba became top political targets for Trump and other Republican­s. But the Senate has confirmed Mayorkas, who attended the University of California, Berkeley, and worked as a federal prosecutor in California, three times in the past for his roles in government.

 ?? ( Joshua Roberts/ Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT- ELECT Joe Biden departs following a videoconfe­rence with members of the US Conference of Mayors at his transition headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Delaware, Monday.
( Joshua Roberts/ Reuters) US PRESIDENT- ELECT Joe Biden departs following a videoconfe­rence with members of the US Conference of Mayors at his transition headquarte­rs in Wilmington, Delaware, Monday.

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