January 19, 2021 Trump-Biden transition news | CNN Politics

Biden prepares for inauguration on Trump’s last full day in office

US President-Elect wipes his eye as he speaks at Major Joseph R. "Beau" Biden III National Guard /Reserve Center in New Castle Airport on January 19, 2021, in New Castle, Delaware, before departing for Washington, DC. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
Biden gives emotional speech before departing for Washington
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What you need to know

  • President-elect Joe Biden arrived in DC today and participated in a national Covid-19 memorial service at the Lincoln Memorial ahead of his swearing-in ceremony tomorrow.
  • DC and states across the country have heightened security in preparation for possible new security threats on Inauguration Day.
  • Meanwhile, the Senate held several confirmation hearings today for Biden’s Cabinet nominees as Democrats raced to get key national security posts filled.

 Our live coverage has ended for the night. For the latest, follow CNN Politics.

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What Biden and Harris' first day in office will look like

President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ transition team announced that their first-day agenda will include the signing of executive orders.

The Biden-Harris transition team on Tuesday night released the daily schedule for their first day in office, which also includes a 7 p.m. White House press briefing from press secretary Jen Psaki.

Biden will also swear in “day one presidential appointees” in a virtual ceremony, according to a news release. 

Here’s a look at Wednesday’s schedule:

  • 8:45 a.m. ET: Biden, Harris and their spouses attend a church service at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle.
  • Noon: Biden and Harris are sworn in.
  • 2:25 p.m. ET: Biden and Harris visit the Tomb of the Unknown Solider at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
  • 5:15 p.m. ET: Biden signs executive orders and other presidential actions.
  • 5:45 p.m. ET: Biden swears in presidential appointees in a virtual ceremony.
  • 8:48 p.m. ET: Biden and Harris deliver remarks at the “Celebrating America” inaugural program.

Some of Biden's National Security Council staff scheduled to arrive at the White House before noon

A schedule sent to National Security Council staff Tuesday night, and obtained by CNN, shows more than three dozen members of Joe Biden’s incoming NSC staff plan will be in place by midday on Wednesday when the President-elect is sworn in. 

The schedule shows that some of the staffers will arrive at the White House as early as 10 a.m., two hours before the swearing in, a sign the work could begin from the first minute President-elect Joe Biden takes office. 

Among those with a 10 a.m. scheduled arrival time is Lisa Monaco who is serving as a homeland security adviser around the inauguration, overseeing high-level security coordination around the event.

Unlike those who have been tapped to run the federal agencies, NSC staff does not require Senate approval and can immediately get started.

Trump tells people he's decided to pardon Steve Bannon as one of his final acts in office 

Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon exits the Manhattan Federal Court on August 20, 2020 in the Manhattan borough of New York City.

President Trump has decided to pardon his former chief strategist Steve Bannon in a last-minute decision made only hours before he is scheduled to depart the White House for a final time.

Officials cautioned CNN that Trump’s decision was not final until he signed the paperwork. 

Trump told people that after much deliberation, he had decided to pardon Bannon as one of his final acts in office.

Read more here.

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins reports:

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Harris tells girls and boys to see themselves as future leaders at event honoring Black community

In this screengrab, Vice Presient-Elect Kamala Harris speaks during the "We Are One" celebration hosted by the Biden Inaugural Committee on January 19.

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, Sen.-elect Raphael Warnock and Stacey Abrams were among the speakers at tonight’s Presidential Inaugural Committee virtual inaugural ball honoring the Black community.

In her closing remarks in tonight’s “We Are One” event, Harris thanked her fellow alumni from Historically Black Colleges and Universities and spoke specifically to Black children who may be tuning into the virtual event.

“I especially want to thank my HBCU brothers and sisters, my beloved Alpha Kappa Alpha, and our divine nine family. I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for all of you and those who came before us. We are family. And though we cannot gather in person tonight, know that I carry each of you with me as I embark on this journey,” Harris said.

Abrams, former Georgia gubernatorial candidate and Fair Fight founder, also spoke about her state’s role in putting Joe Biden and Harris over the top in November, and her state’s historic runoff election that altered the balance of power in the US Senate.

“And what we are seeing happen in this nation today, what we saw happen in Georgia, first in November and again in January, is the compulsion to come together, the commitment to be one, to have a nation that sees us all that serves us all,” Abrams said. “And, so it was with incredible delight and pride that we delivered 16 electoral college votes from the great state of Georgia to Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, it was with extraordinary joy and deep personal pride that we are sending you Senator-elect Raphael Warnock who will be sworn in tomorrow, along with Senator Jon Ossoff,” Abrams continued.

Warnock, one of Georgia’s new senators-elect, opened the event with a prayer.

Here's Trump's final public schedule as President

President Donald Trump arrives in the early morning hours on Tuesday, January 5 at the White House in Washington.

The White House schedule is out for the last day of President Trump’s term and it’s somewhat vague, listing only the President’s departure time of 8 a.m. ET.

There is no mention of the send-off ceremony scheduled at Joint Base Andrews that is expected to take place shortly after he and first lady Melania Trump leave the White House aboard Marine One.

His schedule says, “The President and The First Lady will depart the White House at 8:00AM for Palm Beach, Florida.”

Trump has raised the idea of starting a new political party in recent days

President Trump has raised the idea of starting a new political party in recent days, a senior Trump adviser confirmed. The adviser immediately dismissed the idea as not serious. 

A separate White House adviser said the prospect of launching a new party was “lame.” Another aide noted Trump is disgusted with Senate Republicans who will soon decide whether the ex-president should be convicted during his impeachment trial. 

It’s unclear how determined Trump is to begin his own political party. In his farewell message video, Trump vowed his movement will carry on. The latest polls, including one from CNN, find Trump with the lowest approval ratings of his presidency. He is leaving office deeply unpopular.  

The Wall Street Journal first reported Trump’s interest in a new party, saying he would call it the “patriot party.”

CNN’s Jim Acosta reports:

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Filmmaker Ken Burns: Inauguration eve feels like "New Year's Eve"

On the eve of the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, filmmaker Ken Burns said he felt “like tonight is New Year’s Eve. I think we just got the dates wrong.”

“I think we got a new possibility of turning a new leaf,” Burns told CNN’s Anderson Cooper, reflecting on the upcoming administration. “There is a real optimism there.” 

Burns, an award-winning documentary filmmaker who spent most of his career documenting American history, went on to compare the President-elect to former President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

“You have to make sure that no one feels like they’re extraneous and so much of this is about people having their problems magnified in a negative way and Joe Biden is the opposite of that. He reminds you, we’re all in this together and that’s the only way we get through it and that’s how this American carnage ends.”

Watch:

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Harris thanks supporters during virtual ball: "I carry you all with me"

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris was among the speakers in tonight’s virtual inaugural ball celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander communities co-hosted by the Presidential Inaugural Committee.

Harris thanked the AAPI community for their support during the campaign and pledged to continue supporting them after she is sworn in as vice president on Wednesday.

“I am proud to be with you tonight as our nation’s first vice president-elect of Asian descent. My story is the story of millions of Americans, my mother Shyamala Gopalan arrived in the United States from India, she raised my sister Maya and made to know that though we may be the first, we should not be the last,” Harris said.

Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff will escort the Pences to their motorcade following inauguration 

The incoming second family — Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff — will walk the Pences to their motorcade after the inauguration ceremony at the US Capitol tomorrow, a source familiar with inauguration planning said.

Four years ago the Pences were the ones who walked the Bidens to the motorcade, as they took the office and the Bidens left Washington. 

This is in keeping with past protocol but is notable because the traditional walk with the first and second family to Marine One will not happen tomorrow as President Trump has decided to shun the inauguration and return to Florida before his term ends. 

Michigan nurse who sang "Amazing Grace" says her heart was filled with love after meeting Biden 

The Michigan nurse who sang “Amazing Grace” at this evening’s memorial service for the victims of Covid-19 described her brief encounter with President-elect Joe Biden before the performance, saying the meeting left her heart filled with love. 

“I just laughed,” Key continued. “I know that expression meant that in the nursing community, we are a compassionate population of people, just to hear him say that and just to talk to me, my heart was filled with just love … I still can’t believe that I got to meet the President[-elect.]”

Key also went on to reflect on how her rendition of “Amazing Grace” in the Covid-19 ward at St. Mary Mercy Hospital in Livonia, Michigan, brought her to perform on the National Mall in Washington, DC, the night before Biden’s inauguration. 

She said she was known to sing at work and at the bedside of patients who needed strength as they fought for their lives. 

“I am always on our unit singing, making sure everybody is having a good time… I just never would have imagined it would bring me to this moment,” she told Bash. 

“It gave [patients] so much strength just that try to make it another day, each day at time through what they were going through,” she said.

Watch Lori Marie Key’s interview:

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Blinken says Biden administration will keep embassy in Jerusalem and recognize it as capitol of Israel

President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the State Department told senators at his confirmation hearing that the incoming administration recognizes Jerusalem as the Capitol of Israel and said it would leave the US embassy in the contested holy city.

Asked if he recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capitol, Antony Blinken said, “yes.” And asked if the US embassy would remain in Jerusalem, Blinken again said, “yes.”

Both moves by the Trump administration were deeply controversial, as both Israelis and Palestinians claim the holy city as their capitol. The status of Jerusalem is such a thorny issue that international consensus was to leave discussion about it to the end of Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. Previous peace negotiations had included the idea that each side would claim a different part of the city as its capitol.

The Trump administration abandoned those internationally accepted parameters, stopped engaging with Palestinians, unilaterally moved its embassy to Jerusalem and recognized the city as Israel’s capitol. 

At Tuesday’s hearing, Blinken indicated that he believes the Trump administration policies have pushed Israelis and Palestinians farther from a peace deal than they have been in decades. He stressed he believes that a “two-state solution, however distant it may appear, is still the best and probably the only way to truly assure Israel’s future as a Jewish and democratic state and of course to give the Palestinians the state to which they are entitled.”

“The challenge, of course, is how to move forward on that at a time when … it seems more distant than it’s ever been, at least since Oslo,” Blinken said. Offering some praise for the Abraham Accords, the normalization agreements the Trump administration brokered between Israel and Gulf countries, Blinken said he hopes those agreements create progress toward an Israeli-Palestinian agreement.

“I hope that might also might create a greater sense of confidence and security in Israel as it considers its relationship with the Palestinians,” Blinken said, “because whether we like or not, whether they like or not, it’s not just going away.”

Former White House officials are passing on Trump's departure ceremony

Former administration officials invited to President Trump’s departure ceremony are taking a pass, some due to their disgust with Trump.

“Is there a disappointment factor, yes!” said one former senior White House official.

“Sending the mob was a red line,” a senior White House adviser said. 

Another former senior White House official noted that invitees can bring five guests, describing that as a sign of desperation.

Vice President Mike Pence won’t be attending Trump’s departure ceremony tomorrow, according to his public schedule.

Sources close to Pence have blamed the logistical challenge of having the vice president attend both the departure ceremony and participate in Joe Biden’s inauguration. But aides to the vice president have made their frustrations with Trump clear, ever since the President didn’t check in on Pence who was fleeing pro-Trump rioters during the Capitol siege. 

Defense secretary nominee calls China the "ascending" threat

Retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to be Defense secretary, called China the “ascending” threat facing the United States, describing it as the “pacing threat” to the military.

He then described Russia as a threat “in decline,” but one still capable of doing damage “as we’ve seen here in recent days,” referencing the hack of SolarWinds

The answer came in response to Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who asked about the focus of the next National Defense Strategy, which will be formulated under the next Defense secretary’s tenure.

“China presents the most significant threat going forward because China is ascending. Russia is also a threat, but it’s in decline. It can still do a great deal of damage as we’ve seen here in recent days, and it’s a country that we have to maintain some degree of focus on. But China is the pacing threat,” said Austin. “It is the pacing issue — the pacing threat currently and I fully expect that it will remain so going forward.”

Austin says he will recuse himself from matters concerning Raytheon, where he served on the board

Retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to be Defense secretary, agreed to recuse himself from matters concerning defense contractor Raytheon, where he previously served on the board of directors, in response to questions by Sen. Elizabeth Warren at his confirmation hearing.

“Raytheon is one of the world’s largest defense contractors, and I’m sensitive to the appearance, concerns that you raise in this particular situation,” said Austin.

He said he did not expect for there to be a circumstance that would arise that would compel him to seek a waiver from his recusal, but if such a circumstance came up, he said, “I would consider available alternatives to a waiver before seeking one, and would consult very carefully with agency ethics officials.”

Austin further said he did not intend to seek employment as a lobbyist or to sit on the board of a defense contractor after his service.

UK prime minister says he looks forward to working closely with Biden administration

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said, in a statement issued Tuesday ahead of US President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration Wednesday, that he is looking forward to working closely with the new administration.

“In our fight against Covid and across climate change, defense, security and in promoting and defending democracy, our goals are the same and our nations will work hand in hand to achieve them,” the prime minister added.

“I look forward to welcoming him to Carbis Bay for the G7 and Glasgow for COP as we join forces to protect our planet. Only through international cooperation can we truly overcome the shared challenges which we face,” the statement continued.

Blinken says Biden intends to extend US-Russia arms treaty

Antony Blinken said Tuesday that President-elect Joe Biden intends to seek an extension of the New START Treaty, but suggested he has not made a decision on the length of that extension. A full extension is five years. 

The landmark US-Russia arms treaty expires just 16 days after the inauguration.

The secretary of state-designate noted that Biden “couldn’t really engage” on the issue during the transition because he was “very cognizant of the fact we have one president at a time.”

Blinken told lawmakers that he believes “this is something that we will be coming to you on pretty much immediately as soon as the president is sworn-in, and I know that he does intend to seek an extension, and he’ll have to make a decision as President about what duration he would seek.”

The Trump administration went back and forth with the Russians on the terms of the longstanding treaty after efforts to create a new trilateral treaty with Russia and China failed.

McConnell and Schumer still at odds over power-sharing agreement

Mitch McConnell and Chuck Schumer are still trying to hash out an agreement on their power-agreement, which will detail how committees are structured and provide general guidance of how the 50-50 Senate will operate.

There are still several sticking points, according to multiple sources.

One sticking point: ensuring that the filibuster remains intact, which McConnell is demanding.

Schumer doesn’t have the votes to gut the filibuster, since several centrist Democrats have rejected calls to use the nuclear option to reduce the threshold from 60 votes to 51.

But as part of these talks, McConnell is asking Schumer to reassure the GOP that they won’t seek to do away with the potent stall tactic in the Democratic majority.

Schumer, in a statement from his spokesperson, indicated that he wants the power-sharing agreement to mirror the 2001 deal that was struck to govern how the 50-50 Senate operated. Schumer’s spokesperson asserted that the Democratic leader wants to keep “extraneous changes” out of the power-sharing agreement.

The State Department has to be non-partisan, Blinken says

Secretary of State nominee Antony Blinken said the State Department “has to be” a non-partisan institution, breaking sharply from his predecessor Secretary of State Mike Pompeo who has repeatedly engaged in political activity while serving as America’s chief diplomat.

Blinken noted that he started his career in Washington at the State Department and he was never able to tell if the State Department officials he worked with were Democrats, Republicans or independents.

“They are simply professionals who are working to advance the national interest,” Blinken said of the State Department staff. “If the person who purports to lead them is not doing the same thing I think we’ve got a problem.”

Kaine said that Pompeo has turned the secretary of state into a “partisan political position,” by doing things such as speaking at the Republican National Convention which violated policy he had laid down for the rest of the department. He read Blinken the words of former Secretary of State Colin Powell who said he would not engage in political debates in his role as secretary. Blinken agreed.

“I strongly agree with Secretary Powell. And that is the model I would follow,” Blinken said.

Kaine said he will be “extremely disappointed” if he sees Blinken partake in campaign events for any Democrats including the president or the vice president.

“I would welcome you holding me to that,” Blinken said.

Biden administration intends to join global vaccine effort, secretary of state nominee says

Secretary of State-designate Antony Blinken said that the Biden administration intends to join the global vaccine effort spurned by the Trump administration.

That effort, known as COVAX, is led by the World Health Organization. President Trump cut ties with WHO, but President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to rejoin it.

“We believe strongly that we can do that ensure that every American gets the vaccine, but also help make sure that others around the world who want it have access to it,” Blinken said during his Senate confirmation hearing.

400 lights illuminate the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in tribute to Covid-19 victims

There are 400 lights illuminating the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in tribute to the more than 400,000 people who have died from Covid-19 in the US.

Hundreds of towns, cities and communities across the country plan to join in the solemn tribute with lighting ceremonies of their own at buildings from the Empire State Building in New York to the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington.

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