Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY meet with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday. Photo: AP
By Susan Cornwell, Doina Chiacu and Simon Lewis – Japan Today
WASHINGTON/WILMINGTON, Del
More Republicans on Thursday broke with President Donald Trump’s refusal to cooperate with Joe Biden, saying Biden is entitled to intelligence briefings even if they were not ready to recognize the Democrat as the winner of the Nov 3 election.
Most Republican officials and lawmakers publicly remained behind the Trump campaign’s push to contest the result through lawsuits challenging vote counts in individual states as the president, without evidence, claims widespread voting fraud.
State election officials have said no widespread fraud occurred.
Biden, meanwhile, moved ahead with the work of preparing to govern, as his fellow Democrats in Congress blasted Republican election “shenanigans” and urged action on the coronavirus pandemic.
With a few states still counting ballots, Biden has won enough of election battleground states to surpass the 270 electoral votes needed in the state-by-state Electoral College that determines the next president. Biden is also winning the popular vote by more than 5.2 million votes, or 3.4 percentage points.
A growing number of Republican senators, including John Cornyn, Ron Johnson, James Lankford, Chuck Grassley and Lindsey Graham, urged Trump’s administration to allow Biden access to presidential daily intelligence briefings.
The president-elect traditionally receives such briefings from the intelligence community to learn of threats facing the United States before taking office.
“I don’t see it as a high-risk proposition. I just think it’s part of the transition. And, uh, if in fact he does win in the end, I think they need to be able to hit the ground running,” Cornyn told reporters. He refused to acknowledge that Biden had won, however.
When reporters asked Graham, a vocal Trump defender, if the briefings should proceed, he responded, “I think so, yeah.”
The top House Republican, Kevin McCarthy, opposed the idea.
“He’s not president right now. I don’t know if he’ll be president January 20th,” McCarthy said, also refusing to concede Biden’s victory.
The two top Democrats in Congress – House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer on Thursday urged Republicans to join them in passing legislation to address the pandemic and buttress the battered economy.
“The Republicans should stop their shenanigans about an election that President Trump has already lost and focus their attention on the immediate issue at hand – providing relief to a country living through the COVID health and economic crisis,” Schumer said.
Pelosi said Biden, who has spent five decades in public life as a senator and vice president, “knows the territory” and will be “just fine” in the transition.” But she added: “It’s most unfortunate that the Republicans have decided that they will not respect the will of the people.”
Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer urged renewed negotiations over a multitrillion-dollar coronavirus aid proposal, but the top Republican immediately rejected their approach as too expensive, continuing a months-long impasse.
Pelosi and Schumer ticked off a litany of grim data about the spread of the coronavirus in the United States, with eight straight days of over 100,000 new coronavirus cases being reported each day.
“It’s like the house is burning down and they just refuse to throw water on it,” Pelosi said of Republicans.
She and Schumer told a news conference that Biden’s victory strengthened the Democratic position, which is to spend at least $2.2 trillion on another round of coronavirus aid, on top of $3 trillion Congress has approved since the pandemic began.
“We’re willing to sit down and talk; they haven’t wanted to talk,” Schumer said, referring to the post-election session of Congress that lasts until the end of the year.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, speaking to reporters in a hallway a few minutes later, said he preferred previous Republican proposals in the range of $500 billion, which he said would be aimed at the “residual problems.”
“I gather she (Pelosi) and the Democratic leader in the Senate still are looking at something dramatically larger. That’s not a place I think we’re willing to go,” McConnell said.
“But I do think there needs to another package,” the Republican said. “Hopefully we can get past the impasse.”
Pelosi and Schumer spoke with Biden on Thursday by phone and the three “discussed the urgent need for the Congress to come together in the lame duck session on a bipartisan basis” to pass more coronavirus relief, a statement from Biden’s transition team said.
The bill should include resources to fight the pandemic, relief for working families and small businesses, support for state and local governments, expanded unemployment insurance, and affordable healthcare for millions of families, the statement said.
The Democratic-majority House in May approved an additional$3.4 trillion in coronavirus aid, but it went nowhere in McConnell’s Senate, where Schumer’s Democrats blocked less expensive Republican proposals from floor action.
PANDEMIC IN FOCUS
Biden has focused on planning his administration, with attention expected to shift to his selections for key cabinet posts ahead of taking office. His team said Biden was meeting with transition advisers on Thursday in Delaware.
He named longtime adviser Ron Klain on Wednesday as White House chief of staff, his first major appointment. Klain is expected to take a leading role in Biden’s response to the intensifying pandemic that has killed about 242,000 Americans, with a record 142,000 new COVID-19 cases registered on Wednesday.
Trump, who has flouted public-health recommendations on mask-wearing and social-distancing, was hospitalized with COVID-19 last month. Many Trump associates have become infected, with close adviser Corey Lewandowski on Thursday becoming the latest.
In a sign of weakening support for Trump’s efforts to claim widespread election fraud, Ohio’s Governor Mike DeWine, a Republican who endorsed Trump, on Thursday told CNN “we need to consider the former vice president as the President-elect.”
The Las Vegas Review-Journal, owned by major Republican donor Sheldon Adelson, ran an editorial saying Trump “seeks to delay the inevitable.”
“There is no evidence that fraud cost Mr Trump the election, no matter how much the president tweets the opposite and his supporters wish it,” the editorial said.
Karl Rove, White House deputy chief of staff to Republican former President George W Bush, wrote in the Wall Street Journal that “once his days in court are over, the president should do his part to unite the country by leading a peaceful transition and letting grievances go.”
A group of prominent former world leaders known as The Elders, chaired by former Irish President Mary Robinson, has also urged Trump to accept defeat, fearing he was “putting at risk the functioning of American democracy.”
Since major news organizations projected Biden as the winner on Saturday, Trump has maintained a minimal public schedule, preferring instead to air his grievances on Twitter.
Biden, who is set to become the first Roman Catholic U.S. president since John Kennedy in the 1960s, spoke with Pope Francis on Thursday, thanking him for his “blessing and congratulations,” his transition team said.
Biden told the pontiff he wanted to work together on issues including caring for the poor, addressing climate change, and welcoming immigrants and refugees, it said.