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What challenges does Joe Biden face ahead as President of the US?

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From SkyNews:

Joe Biden wants to "reassure America he can create a bipartisan future and unity", US correspondent Cordelia Lynch says.

"He hopes he is able to create a new era in America after four years of ranker, division and polarised Congress."

She continued: "But there are deep challenges ahead for Joe Biden. Yes, he has secured more votes than anyone in US political history, but Donald Trump also secured three million more than he did in 2016.

"This election was not a repudiation of what Donald Trump stands for – in fact people looked at what he had to offer over the past four years and decided they wanted to sign up for another four more."

Lynch says Biden "faces technical challenges and demographically America has changed over the past year – deep with racial unrest."

She added: "The streets filled with protests this summer when people took that discontent around the states, across America. But there is a determination expressed from Joe Biden since election night that he wants to get ahead of this, telling America, 'don’t worry, we will get there'".
 
Obviously COVID - he has to slow down the 100K+ new cases every day somehow.

Trying to pull American society back together after Trump so cynically aggravated the culture war.

Climate change - he wil rejoin the Paris Agreement soon.

Pulling together and international trading culture / trade bloc against the coming power China.
 
Right, now the reality TV fool has gone it's time to get serious again.

1) Coordinate a federal response to COVID-19. LISTEN to the scientists, and rebuild the CDC which has been politicised under Trump. Step up testing and contact tracing, and ensure speedy distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine.

2) One of the few areas where cooperation with the Senate Republicans is possible is infrastructure. Biden was always more comfortable than Obama in legislative dealmaking. This will help stimulate the economy.

3) Re-enter the Iran nuclear deal. No ifs, no buts. Iran was complying with the deal until Trump destroyed it.

4) Re-enter the Paris Accords.

5) End support for the Saudi campaign in Yemen. The Saudi airforce, entirely dependent on foreign logistical support, can be grounded if Washington pulls the plug. Both Democrats AND Republicans voted to do so, but Trump vetoed it. Time to end the Yemenis suffering.

6) Re-establish aid and diplomatic relations to the Palestinian Authority.

7) Finalise the peace deal in Afghanistan.

Congress isn't needed for 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 so make good on your promises Mr President Elect.
 
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The Senate, the House, Trumpism, and most importantly, his health.

He's a lame duck President before his inauguration.
 
Getting the country on one page. This election has once again proved how divided US is.
 
Probably will start bombing the middle east again from next year on to get the American economy running.

Trying to get the American forces out of the middle east was the only good thought Trump ever had in his life for humankind.
 
Climate Change. He will rejoin the Paris Agreement but it doesn't and shouldn't stop there. We don't have any time to waste.

Thank God that Trump is out of the office. Imagine the damage he would have done in another four years.
 
Climate Change. He will rejoin the Paris Agreement but it doesn't and shouldn't stop there. We don't have any time to waste.

Thank God that Trump is out of the office. Imagine the damage he would have done in another four years.

Hmmmmm I wonder which is the bigger threat to mankind. In one corner you have Trump who denies climate change but also initiated peace deal in Afghanistan and for better or worse tried to solve the Middle East problem. In the other corner you have Biden who recognizes climate change but was the architect of Iraq war that saw millions dead and is again appointing Dick Cheney as an advisor. You can google Dick Cheney and what he has done previously. I won't be surprised if the US does not start bombing some middle east country on trumped up charges in the next couple of years.



Like I said heartfelt condolences for people who have hopes with Biden.
 
De Trumpification of USA. Too much racism in the country, need to arrest punish people with harsh punishments to discourage racism in the country
 
Biden has a long history of being a war-monger. Those thinking any good from him are delusioned by mainstream media campaign in recent years.

He will take US- Russia rivalry to next level and when that happens it would be too late for those celebrating.
 
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So Biden will not be signing the Iran deal. Well, that's the first lie exposed, and he's not even inaugurated yet, let alone official winner. Perhaps he forgot?
 
US President-elect Joe Biden will work towards providing a roadmap to American citizenship for nearly 11 million undocumented immigrants, including over 500,000 from India, and will also establish a minimum admission number of 95,000 refugees annually.

As a largely immigrant community, but in some cases with American roots reaching back generations, Indian-Americans know firsthand the strength and resilience that immigrants bring to the United States of America, according to a policy document issued by the Biden campaign.

"He (Biden) will immediately begin working with Congress to pass legislative immigration reform that modernises our system, with a priority on keeping families together by providing a roadmap to citizenship for nearly 11 million undocumented immigrants -- including more than 500,000 from India," it said.


The Biden administration will support family-based immigration and preserve family unification as a core principle of the US's immigration system, which includes reducing the family visa backlog, it said.

"And, he will increase the number of refugees we welcome into this country by setting the annual global refugee admissions target to 125,000 and seek to raise it over time commensurate with our responsibility, our values, and the unprecedented global need. He will also work with Congress to establish a minimum admissions number of 95,000 refugees annually," the policy document said.

Biden will remove the uncertainty for Dreamers by reinstating the DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) programme and explore all legal options to protect their families from inhumane separation. And, he will end workplace raids and protect other sensitive locations from immigration enforcement actions, it said.

Launched by the Obama administration, the DACA is an immigration policy that allows some individuals with unlawful presence in the US after being brought to the country as children to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and become eligible for a work permit in the US. DACA recipients are often referred to as Dreamers. To be eligible for the programme, recipients cannot have felonies or serious misdemeanours on their records.

The Trump administration moved to end the DACA programme in 2017 and was ultimately blocked by the Supreme Court from doing so this year. Even so, his administration scaled back the programme and pledged to end it, leaving thousands of the programme's beneficiaries in limbo.

Biden will also restore and defend the naturalisation process for green card holders, the policy document said.

Employment-based visas, also known as green cards, allow migrants to gain lawful permanent residence in the US in order to engage in skilled work.

"He (Biden) will increase the number of visas offered for permanent, work-based immigration based on macroeconomic conditions and exempt from any cap recent graduates of PhD programmes in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) fields," it said.

"He will support first reforming the temporary visa system for high-skill, speciality jobs to protect wages and workers, then expanding the number of visas offered and eliminating the limits on employment-based green cards by country, which have kept so many Indian families in waiting for too long," the document stated.

The Biden administration, it said, will also repeal President Donald Trump's "Muslim ban".

President Trump had imposed a controversial travel ban, often referred to by critics as a "Muslim ban", on several Muslim majority countries, including Iran and Syria, through a series of executive orders.

“Biden will rescind Trump’s “Muslim ban” on day one and reverse the detrimental asylum policies that are causing chaos and a humanitarian crisis at our border,” the policy document said.

https://www.outlookindia.com/websit...-us-citizenship-to-over-500000-indians/363805
 
Biden will work for illegals, but has no mercy on H1B people waiting for green cards. Hope he does something for legal immigrants.
 
Joe Biden is preparing to name his new team of coronavirus advisers and deliver on a promise to get the pandemic under control in the US.

The president-elect's first order of business will be trying to bring down COVID-19 cases and deaths, which have totalled more than 9.9 million and over 237,000 in the US respectively - the highest of any country in the world.

While he will not formally enter the White House until 20 January 2021, he and vice president-elect Kamala Harris have already set up a transition team to get planning under way so action begins immediately after their inauguration.

Mr Biden has said he will also reverse a number of Donald Trump's foreign policies, including taking the US back into the Paris climate agreement and World Health Organisation.

He will make the changes by signing executive orders within days of taking office, according to reports by NBC.

Mr Biden made coronavirus a major feature of his victory speech at a drive-in rally in Delaware on Saturday night, after finally being projected to win the 2020 election earlier in the day.

"We cannot repair the economy, restore our vitality, or relish life's most precious moments - hugging a grandchild, birthdays, weddings, graduations, all the moments that matter most to us - until we get this virus under control," he said.

From Monday, he revealed a group of leading scientists and experts will be recruited to "help take the Biden-Harris COVID plan and convert it into an action blueprint".

He pledged: "That plan will be built on a bedrock of science. It will be constructed out of compassion, empathy, and concern. I will spare no effort - or commitment - to turn this pandemic around."

The president-elect's website says his administration will double up drive-through testing centres, increase PPE provision and expand the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's monitoring of China to prevent incoming threats.

It is a markedly different tone from outgoing President Donald Trump, who is still refusing to concede the election and has been criticised for his actions and comments on COVID-19.

He caught the disease in October, following a White House event to announce the nomination of a new Supreme Court justice where most attendees sat packed together not following social distancing rules nor wearing masks.

One of Mr Trump's top scientific advisers, Dr Anthony Fauci, was also deeply critical of his handling of the pandemic in the run up to the election, warning the US "could not possibly be positioned more poorly".

The head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases added Mr Biden "is taking it seriously from a public health perspective", whereas Mr Trump is "looking at it from a different perspective".

To tackle the economic crisis, Mr Biden promises to "mobilise manufacturing" to create jobs, provide extra coronavirus funding so key workers keep their jobs, and work to end the racial wealth gap.

On race, the Biden administration is pledging to reform the police, including a nationwide ban on chokeholds, end racial disparities in prison sentences, and introduce a national oversight commission to improve accountability.

After signing up to the Paris accords again, Mr Biden wants to focus on investing in green agriculture and infrastructure.

And on healthcare, the Biden-Harris team wants to build on the Affordable Care Act brought in by Barack Obama, protecting it from "attacks" and attempts to dismantle it by the Republicans.

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On his first day of business as president-elect, Mr Biden travelled to church on Sunday, to visit the grave of his deceased son, wife and daughter.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump returned for a second day to the golf course, and fired off more tweets promoting his unsubstantiated allegations of mass electoral fraud and ballot stuffing, insisting the election is not over.

He will swing into full battle mode on Monday though, when he has promised "our campaign will start prosecuting our case in court to ensure election laws are fully upheld and the rightful winner is seated".

Image:Mr Biden visited the grave of his son, wife and daughter on Sunday

Image:Donald Trump spent a second day on the golf course

Counting is still continuing in four states - with Mr Biden ahead in Arizona and Georgia and Mr Trump in the lead in North Carolina and Alaska.

Even though the final results have yet to be declared, Mr Biden has already won the most votes for a presidential candidate in history - on at least 75 million and has at least 279 Electoral College votes.

Mr Trump is behind on 214, but has surpassed the total number of votes for him at the last election by 3 million.
 
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I wonder if he will move the Embassy back to Tel Aviv.

The Jerusalem Embassy Act was passed by the Senate and House in 1995 but Clinton, Bush 43 and Obama declined to sign it into law.
 
Joe's biggest challenge is going to be controlling the hate that the dems have sown over the last 4 years. His supporters are full of hate and thats not good for the country.
 
I am guessing Biden will probably reverse some of Trump's decisions (border wall, Iran deal, climate change etc.).

Biggest challenge for Biden now is to unite the country. Also, reversing some of Trump's decisions may become tricky.
 
I am guessing Biden will probably reverse some of Trump's decisions (border wall, Iran deal, climate change etc.).

Biggest challenge for Biden now is to unite the country. Also, reversing some of Trump's decisions may become tricky.

I doubt he will reverse Iran but we will see
 
Joe's biggest challenge is going to be controlling the hate that the dems have sown over the last 4 years. His supporters are full of hate and thats not good for the country.

Do they sell Kleenex over in Australia ?

Didn't know there were 75m (and counting) members of Antifa and BLM.
 
Now it seems the first challenge for Biden is for the Electoral College to send their votes to Senate before the 14th Nov.

Look up the process. While the media may have declared Biden the winner, the Electoral College has not, and will not, until legal appeals are concluded.

By then, Biden will have forgotton he was President 'elect'.
 
Hmmmmm I wonder which is the bigger threat to mankind. In one corner you have Trump who denies climate change but also initiated peace deal in Afghanistan and for better or worse tried to solve the Middle East problem. In the other corner you have Biden who recognizes climate change but was the architect of Iraq war that saw millions dead and is again appointing Dick Cheney as an advisor. You can google Dick Cheney and what he has done previously. I won't be surprised if the US does not start bombing some middle east country on trumped up charges in the next couple of years.



Like I said heartfelt condolences for people who have hopes with Biden.

Dick Cheney is going to be an adviser ? Where on earth have you got that from ? Stop pulling facts from thin air.

Trump murdered the top Iranian General in January. A rough equivalent would be killing Bajwa or the head of the SSG. It was an act of terrorism that could've easily triggered a fresh war in the Middle East.
 
Joe's biggest challenge is going to be controlling the hate that the dems have sown over the last 4 years. His supporters are full of hate and thats not good for the country.

Spot on.

Obama's failure of 'change' is one of the reasons why Trump was elected President. The lefty looney snowflakes failed to realise Obama's post 2008 bailout of the banks etc lead to an even wider gap between rich and poor. More so blacks and whites as Obama was a complete abject failure when it came to black Americans. Austerity breeds facism and crime.

There's a reason why more Black Americans voted for Trump, cos Trump did more for Blacks - and minorities - then Obama ever did.

Finally, the Muslim ban for example, it was Obama's administration that had blocked immigration from 8 Muslim countries. Trump extended the ban and was labelled an Islamophobe etc. The truth is, the reason why the 8 Muslim majority countries were banned was because the said nations would not share information on passengers, nothing to do with faith.

Obama signs an EO, no probs, a black geezer is signing, thus a matter of security. Trump extends the same courtesy as Obama, and is labelled a racist.

Sickening.
 
Joe Biden's coronavirus taskforce to meet as Trump urged to cooperate

Joe Biden will convene a coronavirus taskforce on Monday to confront one of the biggest problems vexing the US, as the president-elect and his running mate, Kamala Harris, move ahead with their transition process.

On Sunday night, Biden and Harris released their first public schedule as “president-elect” and “vice-president-elect”.

Biden is due to meet with a 12-member advisory board led by former the surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, and the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner, David Kessler, to examine how best to tame a pandemic that has killed more than 237,000 Americans.

He will speak in Wilmington, Delaware, about his plans for tackling the coronavirus pandemic and rebuilding the economy later in the day.

Biden has spent much of the campaign criticising Donald Trump’s handling of the crisis and has vowed to listen to scientists to guide his own approach.

There are questions over whether Trump, who has not publicly recognised Biden’s victory and has falsely claimed the election was stolen, will impede Democrats as they try to establish a government.

The transition cannot shift into high gear until the US General Services Administration, which oversees federal property, certifies the winner.

Emily Murphy, the Trump appointee who runs the agency, has not given the go-ahead for the transition to begin, and on Sunday night a GSA spokeswoman gave no timetable for the decision.

Until then, the GSA can continue providing Biden’s team with offices, computers and background checks for security clearances, but they cannot yet enter federal agencies or access federal funds set aside for the transition.

The Biden campaign on Sunday pressed the agency to move ahead.

“America’s national security and economic interests depend on the federal government signalling clearly and swiftly that the United States government will respect the will of the American people and engage in a smooth and peaceful transfer of power,” the campaign said in a statement.

There is little precedent in the modern era of a president erecting hurdles for his successor. The stakes are especially high this year because Biden will take office amid a raging pandemic, which will require a comprehensive government response.

The advisory board of the nonpartisan Center for Presidential Transition also urged the Trump administration to “immediately begin the post-election transition process and the Biden team to take full advantage of the resources available under the Presidential Transition Act”.

Biden’s taskforce will be responsible for executing the promises he made on the campaign trail for tackling Covid-19, which include doubling the number of drive-through testing sites, establishing a US public health job corps to mobilise 100,000 Americans on contact tracing; and ramping up production of masks, face shields and other PPE equipment.

Trump has no public events scheduled for Monday, and he has not spoken in public since Thursday. Vice-president Mike Pence is due to meet with the White House coronavirus taskforce on Monday for the first time since 20 October.

As part of a public campaign to question the election results, he is planning to hold rallies to build support for his fight over the outcome, Trump’s campaign spokesman, Tim Murtaugh, said.

The US recorded more than 127,399 cases on Saturday, bringing the total recorded to nearly 9.9m, according to Johns Hopkins University. More than 1,000 deaths were recorded, bring the national toll close to 237,000. America has reported over 100,000 infections five times in the past week, according to a Reuters analysis, which found that the latest seven-day average in the US is more than the combined average for India and France, two of the hardest hit countries overseas.

Biden’s transition effort now has a website, BuildBackBetter.com, and a Twitter account, [MENTION=5816]trans[/MENTION]ition46. Biden’s team is also expected to move forward with efforts to choose the officials who will serve with him in his administration. He has not offered a timeline for cabinet picks, but he and Harris have pledged that his administration leaders will reflect the country, with representation of women and people of colour.

He is also reportedly planning a series of urgent orders that would roll back some of Trump’s agenda, in some cases fulfilling his campaign promises. That includes repealing the travel ban against Muslim-majority countries (one of Trump’s first actions); rejoining the international climate accord; rejoining the World Health Organization; taking action to protect “Dreamers” from deportation; revoking “the global gag rule”, which blocks the US government from funding groups that conduct abortions or advocate abortion rights; and reestablishing Obama-era environmental regulations.

But Trump has not yet acknowledged defeat and has launched an array of lawsuits to press claims of election fraud for which he has produced no evidence. State officials say they are not aware of any significant irregularities. Since the race was called, the president has been golfing and tweeting a steady stream of election misinformation that has forced Twitter to acknowledge his allegations are disputed and that mail-in voting is safe and secure.

Murtaugh said Trump will hold a series of rallies to build support for the legal fights challenging the outcome, though he did not say when and where they would take place.

Trump will seek to back up his as-yet-unsubstantiated accusations of voting fraud by highlighting obituaries of dead people the campaign said voted in the election, Murtaugh said.

Trump also announced teams to pursue recounts in several states. Experts said that effort, like his lawsuits, are unlikely to meet with success.

“The chances of a recount flipping tens of thousands of votes across multiple states in his favour are outside anything we have seen in American history,” William Antholis, the director of the University of Virginia’s Miller Center thinktank, wrote in an essay on Sunday.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...rce-to-meet-as-first-public-schedule-released
 
President-elect Joe Biden has implored all Americans to wear face masks as he warned of a "dark winter" in the US due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Expressing a message of unity, he said: "I implore you, wear a mask. Do it for yourself. Do it for your neighbour. A mask is not a political statement. But it is a good way to start pulling the country together."

Mr Biden also said claimed that many lives could be saved if this happened.

He said: "It doesn't matter who you voted for, we can saved tens of thousand of lives if everyone wears a mask in the next few months."

Mr Biden, who was frequently seen wearing a mask during the presidential campaign in stark contrast to his rival Donald Trump, said the challenge facing the country over COVID-19 is still "immense" and "growing" despite news of a vaccine breakthrough.

Mr Biden, who won't officially become America's next leader until his inauguration in January, has been briefed on the epidemic by his newly-appointed taskforce of medical experts.


He has welcomed the news about a breakthrough by pharmaceutical giant Pfizer in the race for an effective COVID-19 vaccine.

But he cautioned that Americans still need to take mask wearing and social distancing seriously.

And he said any vaccine would not be widely available for many months to come.

He and vice president-elect Kamala Harris took notes during the virtual briefing at a theatre in Wilmington, Delaware, as the members introduced themselves.

The taskforce of more than a dozen experts has been set up to provide advice to the soon-to-be commander-in-chief about how to tackle soaring COVID-19 infections and deaths in the US.

They have totalled more than 9.9 million and over 237,000 respectively - the highest of any country in the world.

The first to speak at the briefing was Dr David Kessler, a former Food Drug Administration commissioner under ex-presidents George H W Bush and Bill Clinton.

He is co-chairing the taskforce with Dr Vivek Murthy, who served as surgeon general under former president Barack Obama.

Dr Marcella Nunez-Smith, a Yale University associated professor and associate dean, is also a co-chair. Her research focuses on promoting health care equality for marginalised populations.

Also part of the group is Rick Bright, a whistleblower who was demoted after hitting out at the Trump administration's response to the pandemic. Mr Bright had been head of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority.

Mr Biden has said the experts will "help take the Biden-Harris COVID plan and convert it into an action blueprint".

He pledged: "That plan will be built on a bedrock of science. It will be constructed out of compassion, empathy, and concern. I will spare no effort - or commitment - to turn this pandemic around."

Mr Biden made coronavirus a major feature of his victory speech at a drive-in rally in Delaware on Saturday night, after finally being projected to win the 2020 election earlier in the day.

"We cannot repair the economy, restore our vitality, or relish life's most precious moments - hugging a grandchild, birthdays, weddings, graduations, all the moments that matter most to us - until we get this virus under control," he said.

The president-elect's website says his administration will double the number of drive-through testing centres, increase PPE provision and expand the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's monitoring of China to prevent incoming threats.

It is a markedly different tone from outgoing President Donald Trump, who is still refusing to concede the election and has been criticised for his actions and comments on COVID-19.

He caught the disease in October, following a White House event to announce the nomination of a new Supreme Court justice where most attendees sat packed together not following social distancing rules nor wearing masks.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...nd-growing-despite-new-vaccine-hopes-12128662
 
WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - President-elect Joe Biden's transition team is considering legal action over a federal agency's delay in recognizing the Democrat's victory over President Donald Trump in last week's election, a Biden official said on Monday.

The General Services Administration (GSA) normally recognizes a presidential candidate when it becomes clear who has won an election so that a transition of power can begin.

That has not yet happened despite U.S. television and news networks declaring Biden the winner on Saturday after he secured enough electoral votes to secure the presidency.
 
Taking over seems to be a big one!

==

President-elect Joe Biden has said Donald Trump's refusal to concede is an "embarrassment", and told his supporters: "Nothing's going to stop us."

Asked if he had a message for Donald Trump, Mr Biden said: "Mr President, I look forward to speaking with you."

He added: "I think it's an embarrassment, the only thing... how can I say this tactfully... I think it will not help the president's legacy."

He said "nothing is going to stop" his administration moving forward and assuming power on 20 January 2021, despite President Donald Trump's refusal to concede the race for the White House.

Mr Biden said that his transition is "well under way" and that he is reviewing potential cabinet picks and other positions.

He referenced telephone calls with six world leaders, including Boris Johnson, saying the response had been "very fulsome and energetic".

"I'm confident we will be able to put America back in a place of respect it had before," he added.

Mr Trump has reportedly blocked his Democratic rival from receiving the intelligence briefings traditionally shared with incoming presidents.

But Mr Biden downplayed the impact of the Republican resistance, which he said "does not change the dynamic at all in what we're able to do".

In the major speech Mr Biden set out his ambitions for US healthcare, saying the Affordable Care Act is a "matter of life and death", and reiterating his commitment to protecting the legislation.

Mr Biden was joined by vice president-elect Kamala Harris for the talk in Wilmington, Delaware, on the Trump administration's lawsuit to overturn the act, and his plan to expand access to quality, affordable healthcare.

She said Mr Biden "won the election decisively", and that "every vote for Joe Biden was a statement that health care in America should be a right, not a privilege".

Can Trump stop Biden becoming president?

Mr Biden said the Trump Administration's efforts to repeal the 10-year-old law, popularly known as Obamacare, would "rip" healthcare away "in the middle of the worst pandemic in a century", leaving millions of people who have pre-existing conditions without coverage.

Nevertheless he promised a "dramatic expansion" of healthcare provision and said his team is "fleshing out the details" on a plan to provide universal and cheaper care "as soon as humanly possible".

"I will protect your healthcare like I protect my own kids, my own family," he said.

Earlier, the Supreme Court indicated it was likely to leave in place the bulk of the act, including key protections for pre-existing health conditions and subsidised insurance premiums that affect tens of millions of Americans.

Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh appeared in two hours of arguments to be unwilling to strike down the entire law - a long-held Republican goal that has repeatedly failed in Congress and the courts.

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A week after the 2020 election, the justices heard arguments by telephone in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic in the court's third major case over the act.

Republican attorneys general in 18 states and the administration want the whole law to be struck down.

The case represents the latest Republican legal attack on the 2010 law, which was the signature domestic policy achievement of Democratic former president Barack Obama, under whom Mr Biden served as vice president.

The Supreme Court fended off legal challenges to it in 2012 and 2015.

It has a 6-3 conservative majority after the Republican-led Senate last month confirmed Mr Trump's third appointee, Amy Coney Barrett.

https://news.sky.com/story/mr-presi...supporters-nothings-going-to-stop-us-12129497
 
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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said "there will be a smooth transition to our second Trump administration" - despite the president having lost the election to Joe Biden.

The remarks reflected the existing administration's ongoing refusal to accept the result of the 3 November vote.
 
Trump murdered the top Iranian General in January. A rough equivalent would be killing Bajwa or the head of the SSG. It was an act of terrorism that could've easily triggered a fresh war in the Middle East.

Most people forget about this when they say Trump didn't start wars. He, against the advise of his circle, went ahead with it still, not to mention targeting him in another foreign country while he was on a state visit. Heck, if you look back at the threads that were opened regarding this situation, a lot of posters thought war was looming :))
 
Hmmmmm I wonder which is the bigger threat to mankind. In one corner you have Trump who denies climate change but also initiated peace deal in Afghanistan and for better or worse tried to solve the Middle East problem. In the other corner you have Biden who recognizes climate change but was the architect of Iraq war that saw millions dead and is again appointing Dick Cheney as an advisor. You can google Dick Cheney and what he has done previously. I won't be surprised if the US does not start bombing some middle east country on trumped up charges in the next couple of years.



Like I said heartfelt condolences for people who have hopes with Biden.

fake news bud
https://www.politifact.com/factchec...-didnt-say-dick-cheney-will-be-foreign-polic/
 
Hmmmmm I wonder which is the bigger threat to mankind. In one corner you have Trump who denies climate change but also initiated peace deal in Afghanistan and for better or worse tried to solve the Middle East problem. In the other corner you have Biden who recognizes climate change but was the architect of Iraq war that saw millions dead and is again appointing Dick Cheney as an advisor. You can google Dick Cheney and what he has done previously. I won't be surprised if the US does not start bombing some middle east country on trumped up charges in the next couple of years.
.

Come again? That was Bush / Cheney / Rumsfeld / Rove.
 
Since Biden is not officially declared the winner, he is not receiving any security briefings etc as an official president elect should do.

Even so, Biden is not going to ease sanctions on Iran, will not the sign the Iran agreement, will not reverse the ban on Huawei or Tiktok, or tariff on China, and of course unlike Trump, will declare was in the ME. All to appease his zionist masters.
 
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Summary

US President-elect Joe Biden announces the teams he will use to ensure a smooth transition in January

Some 500 staff will work with federal agencies to prepare for the Biden White House

President Donald Trump still refuses to admit defeat, making unsubstantiated claims of fraud

Biden says Trump's refusal to accept defeat is an "embarrassment"

Results from the states of Georgia, Arizona, North Carolina and Alaska are still outstanding
 
US President-elect Joe Biden has picked veteran operative Ron Klain to be White House chief of staff, his team say.

Mr Klain has served as a top aide to Mr Biden since the 1980s in the Senate and later when he was vice-president.

The ultimate Washington insider, Mr Klain was also a senior White House aide to Barack Obama and chief of staff to Vice-President Al Gore.

He was played by actor Kevin Spacey in the movie Recount, about the presidential election of 2000.

The White House chief of staff - who manages the president's daily schedule and is often described as his gatekeeper - is a political appointee that does not require confirmation by the Senate.
 
State Department is preventing Biden from accessing messages from foreign leaders

Washington (CNN)A stack of messages from foreign leaders to President-elect Joe Biden are sitting at the State Department but the Trump administration is preventing him from accessing them, according to State Department officials familiar with the messages.

Traditionally, the State Department supports all communications for the President-elect, which is why many countries began sending messages to State over the weekend. But with Biden prohibited from accessing State Department resources by the Trump administration, because President Donald Trump refuses to accept Biden's victory, dozens of incoming messages have not been received.

Biden's team is in touch with foreign governments without State Department involvement, and he has held numerous calls with leaders, including Germany's Angela Merkel and Canada's Justin Trudeau. But they are operating without the logistical and translation support that the State Department operations center provides.

"They would prefer to be using the State Department resources," said a source familiar with the situation, who noted that the Biden team is having to deal with the unexpected challenge of facilitating these calls.

Not only is Biden being blocked by the State Department from receiving messages and assistance facilitating and from preparing for calls, on Tuesday Secretary of State Mike Pompeo refused to acknowledge Biden's victory, saying that "there will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration," igniting a furor and roiling diplomats.

Biden is also being blocked from getting the same intelligence briefings as the President, known as the President's Daily Brief, and should the Trump administration continue to block a typical transition close to Inauguration Day on January 20, there are concerns Biden's administration will be playing catch-up the day he takes office.

Foreign leaders have begun to figure out that State cannot get them in touch with the President-elect and their teams have reached out to former Obama-era diplomats for their assistance on how to send congratulatory messages to Biden's team, sources told CNN. Some foreign governments feel they are navigating an unfamiliar maze, foreign diplomats have told CNN.

CNN has asked the State Department and the Biden transition team for comment.
In the past, the State Department has facilitated a smoother process.

"It was helpful to have State ops place the calls and to provide translation services, and we were grateful for the cooperation from the Bush administration for making that happen," said Denis McDonough, who served in the Obama administration and worked with Obama during the transition.

Calls aren't highly sensitive

The calls taking place right now are not highly sensitive, and even during a well-oiled transition period they are not normally conducted on secure lines, multiple sources explained.

"These calls in the past have been handled on open lines. They are congratulatory calls," McDonough said, adding that both sides are providing readouts, which is consistent with protocol.

Barack Obama often made these calls to foreign leaders on his cell phone when he was President-elect, explained a State Department official who worked on setting up those calls at the time. But they all went through the operations center, which meant there is a government record of the calls he made.
Career officials at the State Department are ready to help the Biden team when the time comes.

"The agencies implemented the law faithfully prior to the election. The materials are ready, the offices are ready, everything is ready; they are waiting for the green light," said David Marchick, the director of the Center for Presidential Transition at the Partnership for Public Service.

Operating without State Department support right now, the Biden team -- made up of many experienced former government officials -- has sent out readouts of all of the calls, which help with record keeping. They are making an effort to formalize the process and will use State Department resources when they are available, said a source familiar with the unfolding situation.

This is a stark contrast with the transition between the Obama and Trump administrations. At the time, President-elect Trump opted not to use State Department resources. Instead, he made his calls out of Trump Tower and resisted using the government support and coordination system, which meant that translators and staff sat waiting without any work while Trump made calls on his own, a State Department official told CNN at the time.

At any other point since Biden left the White House, he would have been able to call into the State Department operations center to place a call to a foreign leader, State Department officials told CNN. Former presidents and vice presidents are allowed to use the resource whenever they wish. But now, as he is President-elect, Biden is being prevented from using that facility by the Trump administration.

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/11/11/politics/state-department-biden-messages/index.html
 
US election: China congratulates Biden after long silence

China has finally congratulated Joe Biden on his projected win in the US presidential election, breaking a frosty period of silence.

"We respect the choice of the American people. We extend congratulations to Mr Biden and Ms Harris," a foreign ministry spokesman said on Friday.

The China-US relationship is crucial to both sides, and the wider world. Tensions have soared in recent times, over trade, espionage and the pandemic.

Russia is yet to offer well wishes.

Four years ago, the Russian leader Vladimir Putin was among the first to congratulate Donald Trump on his election victory, but there has been no tweet, telegram or phone call to Mr Biden this time.

"We believe the correct thing to do would be to wait for the official election result," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Mr Biden has taken calls from a string of global leaders in recent days. Congratulations began to pour in from Saturday, when US networks projected the result and he declared victory.

President Trump has continued to make unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud without providing clear evidence. On Thursday, a group of federal and state election officials directly rebutted such claims, saying the vote was "the most secure in American history".

https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2020-54871890
 
Barack Obama: One election won't stop US 'truth decay'

The US faces a huge task in reversing a culture of "crazy conspiracy theories" that have exacerbated divides in the country, Barack Obama says.

In a BBC interview, the former president says the US is more sharply split than even four years ago, when Donald Trump won the presidency.

And Mr Obama suggests Joe Biden's victory in the 2020 US election is just the start of repairing those divisions.

"It'll take more than one election to reverse those trends," he says.

Tackling a polarised nation, he argues, cannot be left only to the decisions of politicians, but also requires both structural change and people listening to one another - agreeing on a "common set of facts" before arguing what to do about them.

However he says he sees "great hope" in the "sophisticated" attitudes of the next generation, urging young people to "cultivate that cautious optimism that the world can change" and "to be a part of that change".

https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2020-54910344
 
Europe aims for cooperation with U.S. against pandemic under Biden: Germany

BERLIN (Reuters) - Europe hopes for a closer cooperation with the U.S. in tackling the coronavirus pandemic and the global distribution of a vaccine once U.S. President-elect Joe Biden takes office, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Thursday.

Europe and the United States should also coordinate more closely in the fight against climate change, Maas said ahead of the first meeting with his European Union counterparts since the U.S. election.

“There is almost no issue where we are not very much dependent on each other,” he added. “We are convinced that Europe and the U.S. need a new transatlantic deal."

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...st-pandemic-under-biden-germany-idUSKBN27Z110
 
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