| President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris say they will forge ahead with transition plans today while President Trump contests ballot counts in court and withholds a concession of defeat. Much of official Washington and allies in international capitals quickly pivoted to a pending Biden administration, even as pro-Trump supporters demonstrated their displeasure with an electoral count that on Saturday propelled Biden and Harris past the threshold of 270. Several states remain too close to call (The Associated Press and The New York Times). The New York Times and The Washington Post: The international reaction to Biden’s victory was relief. Biden, who made Trump’s response to the worsening COVID-19 crisis a centerpiece of his bid for the White House, said he will begin his transition planning by naming a team of experts to lead a new 12-member coronavirus task force. Trump’s coronavirus team has not met since October. “Now is when the hard work begins,” Harris said on Saturday. The former vice president named three of his campaign advisers, Vivek Murthy, a former surgeon general during the Obama administration; David Kessler, a former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration; and Marcella Nunez-Smith, an associate professor of internal medicine, public health and management and the founding director of the Equity Research and Innovation Center at Yale to be co-chairs. Biden also named Rick Bright, the ousted Trump administration chief of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority; Zeke Emanuel, a physician and former adviser to the Obama administration on the Affordable Care Act (and brother of former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel); and Atul Gawande, a surgeon and author who advised both the Clinton and Obama administrations (CNN and Politico). The task force, with a nod to scientific expertise and diversity, is to be part of a weeklong focus on health care and the pandemic as urgent priorities in the new administration (The New York Times and Axios). Reuters: Biden team held COVID-19 talks with Operation Warp Speed drugmakers before election.  © Getty Images The Associated Press: Biden team sets to work amid limbo. The Hill: Biden is expected to hold public coronavirus briefings from now through the inauguration to help steer the country through what is expected to be a deadly winter season as COVID-19 surges through most states. "On Monday, I will name a group of leading scientists and experts as transition advisers to help take the Biden-Harris COVID plan and convert it into an action blueprint that will start on Jan. 20, 2021," Biden said on Saturday. "That plan will be built on bedrock science." The Associated Press: Biden moves quickly. The former vice president is required by law to begin a transition process (his website is buildbackbetter.com), and the Trump administration is also required to lend assistance to the incoming administration. Although former President Clinton focused on his Cabinet picks at the outset of his transition in 1992-1993, the consensus view since then among transition experts is that it’s preferable to begin by naming incoming White House senior staff and continue with speed from there to announce nominees who must clear the Senate confirmation process to lead departments and agencies. There is a hitch, however. General Services Administration Administrator Emily Murphy has no immediate plans to sign over federal office space and resources to the Biden team for the transition. “An ascertainment has not yet been made,” said a spokeswoman for GSA. The refusal could create a delay in a cooperative shift in power (The Washington Post). GSA’s pause for “ascertainment” raised new questions about whether Trump and his appointees will try to impede Biden and his team (The Associated Press). By law, GSA is to provide support “beginning on the date on which such candidate becomes President-elect.” Inside the Trump administration, agencies and departments have been advised to prepare for a hand-off since September, alerted to legal requirements outlined by the Office of Management and Budget. The Associated Press: Transition challenges await Biden. Reuters: Biden likely to rely on a trusted inner circle as he staffs a new administration. Bloomberg News: Biden embarks on a transition, but Cabinet picks are weeks away. The former vice president has outlined an ambitious 100-day agenda for legislation and executive action. Observers are closely watching to see how Biden decides to order his priorities and whether his to-do list responds to uncertainties about whether the Senate remains under Republican control in January. During his campaign, Biden promised a swift federal response to the coronavirus, the resulting economic wreckage and inequities COVID-19 exposed as well as a bipartisan push for more stimulus funding. He also promised to reverse Trump’s push to jettison the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and to create a pathway to citizenship for applicants. Biden vowed the United States will reenter the Paris climate accord and rejoin international alliances. The former vice president said he would name a new task force focused on reuniting migrant children separated by the Trump administration from their parents, and appoint a presidential commission to study judicial reforms and the effects of decades-old crime bills. Biden promised his supporters that his administration will move quickly to unwind a slew of Trump executive orders (The Washington Post). It is not uncommon for an incoming president to make a show of abandoning the policies of a predecessor with replacement orders signed on Jan. 20. NBC News: From COVID-19 to climate change, Biden laid out a comprehensive agenda. The New York Times: Community college professor Jill Biden says she will continue to teach while in the White House, a first. NBC News: How Black voters in key cities helped deliver the election for Biden. The Hill’s roundup from Sunday talk shows: Biden’s win reverberates. This morning, Trump’s allies continue to insist the president is in no mood to embrace defeat while some GOP lawmakers said gently over the weekend that the president is within his rights to pursue claims of voting irregularities in court — where there is evidence and if lawsuits could make a material difference to the outcome rather than simply serve as public relations. Trump maintains through protests on Twitter that “illegal” ballots in key states helped Biden win. Some believe the president’s next move may be shaped by his assessment of what might prove most helpful to his ambitions in his post-presidency, either in business or in politics (or both) (The Associated Press). ABC News: Inside the Trump campaign as it grapples with defeat while plowing forward with legal fight. The Hill: Former President George W. Bush says the election winner is “clear” and that Biden “has won his opportunity to lead and unify our country.” USA Today: Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who was his party’s presidential nominee in 2012, said during Sunday interviews on CNN and Fox News that there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud. "I think it's important for us to recognize that the world is watching," he said. AZ Central: Cindy McCain, widow of the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the GOP presidential nominee in 2008, joined the Biden-Harris transition board after endorsing the former vice president before the election. New York Post: Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani on Sunday teased the possibility of up to 10 new election lawsuits. … Republicans on Saturday dropped a lawsuit in Arizona over the use of Sharpie pens on ballots (The Hill). … The Trump campaign on Saturday filed a lawsuit in Arizona alleging that in-person ballots were improperly rejected in Maricopa County (The Hill). The Hill: Washington braces for an unpredictable post-election period. The New York Times: In Pennsylvania, Trump voter fury foretells a nation still divided. The Hill’s Niall Stanage: The Memo: Trump lost but is not vanquished.  © Getty Images |