Los Angeles Times

President- elect to move ahead without Trump

Biden plans to name more Cabinet picks Tuesday, despite the president continuing to deny that he lost.

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden will unveil his f irst Cabinet picks Tuesday, his chief of staff said Sunday, a tangible sign that a new administra­tion is moving ahead despite President Trump’s continuing efforts to stymie it and to overturn the election result.

On the eve of deadlines in the battlegrou­nd states of Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia to certify their vote outcomes, a few prominent Republican­s again urged the president to abandon his crusade, now in its third week of near- daily setbacks in courtrooms and election offices across the country.

“We’re beginning to look like we are a banana republic,” Maryland’s Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, a frequent Trump critic, said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” That prompted the president to jeer him on Twitter as an “Anti- Trump Hero,” and Hogan tweeted back: “Stop golfing and concede.”

Most elected Republican­s have remained silent or defended Trump’s right to bring lawsuits. A few, seemingly fearing the president’s wrath, have inched toward acknowledg­ing that Biden won even while supporting Trump’s choice to wage quixotic court fights.

Yet his legal team repeatedly has failed to provide evidence of fraud in state and federal courts, let alone of a scale that would overturn Biden’s victory.

Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that it was “past time” for the White House to order that federal agencies

cooperate on a transition with Biden’s team. But he also said, “Everyone ought to just relax” and let the legal efforts play out.

More than 30 of the Trump campaign’s lawsuits have been withdrawn or thrown out. The merits of a case in Pennsylvan­ia, where counties face a Monday deadline to certify the results so that the secretary of state can follow suit, prompted a rebuke Saturday from a federal judge.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Trump ally interviewe­d on ABC’s “This Week,” called the sometimes bizarre behavior of the president’s legal team, headed by former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, a “national embarrassm­ent.”

Trump also has demonstrat­ed his willingnes­s to personally meddle in states’ voting certificat­ions, which are a prelude to the convening of the electoral college next month to make the election result official.

“Fight hard Republican­s,” Trump wrote Sunday on Twitter, two days after summoning some top Republican state legislator­s from Michigan to the White House, in a highly unusual move as the state moved to formally acknowledg­e Biden’s win Monday.

In Michigan, the state GOP, together with the Republican National Committee, on Saturday called for the state canvassing board — split between Republican­s and Democrats — to move Monday to delay the certificat­ion.

Two of Trump’s former national security advisors — he f ired both unceremoni­ously — warned that the president’s actions questionin­g the vote’s legitimacy could have negative ramificati­ons for the Republican Party and the country.

H. R. McMaster, on CBS

News’ “Face the Nation,” said Trump was harming national security by playing into “the hands of our adversarie­s.” Russia, he said, “really doesn’t care who wins our elections, as long as a large number of Americans doubt the legitimacy of the result.”

John Bolton, on CNN, likened Trump to a “street rioter” who was “throwing rocks through windows.”

He suggested that Trump’s underminin­g of the presidenti­al election could damage Republican­s’ prospects in runoff elections next month for Georgia’s two Senate seats, contests that will decide which party controls the Senate.

Bolton used imagery that evoked the f inal desperate refuge of the late Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in 2003, when he was hunted down by U. S. troops.

“Look, the Republican Party is not going to be saved by hiding in a spider hole,” Bolton said. “We need all of our leaders to come out and say the election is over.”

The political tumult coincides with the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, which this year is shadowed by the raging COVID- 19 pandemic.

More than 12 million Americans have been infected, and more than a quarter- million have died of COVID- 19.

“We’re in a very, very difficult situation at all levels,” the government’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said on “Face the Nation.”

Biden’s aides again pressed Sunday for the Trump administra­tion to allow the president- elect’s team access to crucial informatio­n from federal agencies about the planned rollout of coronaviru­s vaccines in coming months.

A Trump appointee who heads the General Services

Administra­tion, Emily Murphy, has refused to sign paperwork that would unlock transition funds and allow Biden’s team to begin coordinati­ng with government officials.

Murphy’s failure to formally acknowledg­e Biden’s victory and start the transition also will prevent the FBI from conducting background checks for Cabinet nominees.

Ron Klain, the incoming White House chief of staff, declined on ABC’s “This Week” to identify which appointmen­ts Biden would announce starting Tuesday; Biden last week said he’d selected a nominee for Treasury secretary.

Klain said that for the Biden transition team’s efforts, the “impacts escalate every day” because of Murphy’s refusal to disregard Trump and formally begin the transition. He called Trump’s stance a “corrosive” attack on the U. S. electoral process.

“The voters rejected his leadership,” Klain said. “Since then, Donald Trump has been rejecting democracy.”

Although Biden has taken care to avoid a public fight

with Trump, choosing instead to project calm confidence and a desire to work with Republican­s, he has allowed surrogates to voice more explicit warnings.

Rep. Cedric Richmond ( D- La.), who will leave Congress to hold a senior White House post in the new administra­tion, said the incoming team would “explore every avenue” if the GSA continues to withhold the necessary “ascertainm­ent” letter.

Biden advisors have declined to warn of legal action, but Richmond said on “Meet the Press,” “We won’t take any avenues off the table.”

For all of Trump’s intransige­nce, planning for Biden’s inaugurati­on on Jan. 20 — one of the grand events on the capital’s political calendar — is proceeding. But it will be dramatical­ly altered nonetheles­s because of the pandemic’s restrictio­ns on gatherings.

Inaugurati­on Day typically is an hours- long commemorat­ion marked by the new president’s swearing- in at the Capitol before assembled dignitarie­s and the public, an elaborate luncheon with lawmakers in the Capitol rotunda, a parade on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue past a White House reviewing stand, and a whirlwind of inaugural balls.

Biden and Harris, who made a point of campaignin­g in line with disease prevention protocols of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are expected to preside over a muted affair; details have not been released.

“They’re going to try to have an inaugurati­on that honors the importance and the symbolic meaning of the moment, but also does not result in the spread of the disease,” Klain said in his ABC interview. “That’s our goal.”

Russia ‘ really doesn’t care who wins our elections, as long as a large number of Americans doubt the legitimacy of the result.’

— H. R. McMaster, former national security advisor

 ?? Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT- ELECT Joe Biden is scheduled to name more Cabinet appointees Tuesday. Speaking on Sunday news programs, several Republican­s rebuked President Trump’s refusal to help with the transition of power.
Alex Brandon Associated Press PRESIDENT- ELECT Joe Biden is scheduled to name more Cabinet appointees Tuesday. Speaking on Sunday news programs, several Republican­s rebuked President Trump’s refusal to help with the transition of power.

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