US election 2020: Latest news on the Trump-Biden transition | CNN Politics

The latest on Biden’s transition

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Kamala Harris: 'I will be a full partner' with Joe Biden
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What you need to know

  • President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris sat down with CNN’s Jake Tapper for their first joint interview since winning the election.
  • Biden vowed that his Cabinet will “look like the country” following increasing pressure to further diversify his administration. Here’s who he’s selected so far.
  • He also said that on the day he is inaugurated he plans to ask the public to wear a mask for 100 days.

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the Biden transition here.

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Harris says Americans deserve a president "who puts the people of the country first"

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris closed out her interview alongside Joe Biden tonight by telling the American people they “are all very fortunate” that he is going to be their next president.

Watch here:

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Biden: "We have to restore the soul within this country"

President-elect Joe Biden shared words of hope to all Americans struggling under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic which has killed more than 275,000 people in the US, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Biden’s comments were made today during his first joint interview with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris since winning the election.

Biden added: “We have to rebuild the backbone in this country, the middle class, that and this time bring everybody along.”

Watch here:

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Biden thinks Trump should attend the inauguration

As Jan. 20 approaches, President-elect Joe Biden said he thinks President Trump should attend his inauguration because it will show a “peaceful transfer of power with the competing parties standing there, shaking hands, and moving on.”

More context: Republicans and aides to Trump are encouraging him to at least consider attending Biden’s swearing-in, hoping his presence will both reflect well on his character and help preserve his future influence but also convince Americans the election was fair.

“I hope the President is there on Inaugural Day,” Sen. Roy Blunt, the Missouri Republican who is responsible for overseeing January’s inauguration, told CNN last weekend.

Watch here:

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Biden on Trump's possible pardons for family: "It concerns me"

President-elect Joe Biden speaks during an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper on December 3.

President-elect Joe Biden told CNN’s Jake Tapper that he was concerned about reports that President Trump is considering a host of preemptive pardons for his adult children and lawyer Rudy Giuliani, as well as the possibility of one for himself.

“It concerns me in terms of what kind of precedent it sets and how the rest of the world looks (at) us as a nation of laws and justice,” Biden said during his first joint interview with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris since winning the election. The full interview will air at 9 p.m. ET.

He added that his Justice Department will “operate independently on those issues” and how to respond to any Trump pardons.

“I’m not going to be telling them what they have to do and don’t have to do,” Biden said. “I’m not going to be saying, ‘go prosecute A, B or C’, I’m not going to be telling them. That’s not the role, it’s not my Justice Department, it’s the people’s Justice Department. So the persons or person I pick to run that department are going to be people who are going to have the independent capacity to decide who gets prosecuted, who doesn’t.”

Biden concluded that his administration would not approach pardons in the same way as Trump, adding, “It’s going to be a totally different way in which we approach the justice system.”

Biden has yet to select an attorney general, but is considering a range of names, including former deputy attorney general Sally Yates; Doug Jones, the soon to be former senator from Alabama who was defeated in November; and Jeh Johnson, the Homeland Security secretary under Obama; among others.

Harris echoed the sentiment of Biden’s remarks on the Department of Justice.

Biden interjected: “And I guarantee you, that’s how it will be run.”

Watch here:

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These are the 4 crises that Biden says are affecting Americans

President-elect Joe Biden described what he believes are the four crises affecting Americans in his first joint interview with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris. They are…

  1. Coronavirus
  2. The economy
  3. Racial inequity
  4. Climate change

Biden recently named John Kerry as his special presidential envoy for climate to address the issue of climate change.

Harris described their agenda on climate change as “pretty progressive.” 

“But we — the American people and, frankly, the world can’t afford anything less. The clock is ticking rapidly on this issue,” she said.  

Harris went on to say that tackling climate change won’t be easy.

“It will require a convening. But as the President-elect always says, look, this as much as anything is also about jobs. It’s about investing in research and development.  It’s about investing in the American worker with jobs that are well-paying jobs, good union well-paying jobs,” she said.

Biden says several Republican senators called him privately to congratulate him

President-elect Joe Biden told CNN’s Jake Tapper that Republican senators have privately called him to congratulate him.

Biden went on to say that he has spoken to several senators about key issues.

He acknowledged that the work is “going to be hard.”

“I’m not suggesting it’s going to be easy. It’s going to be hard. But I’m confident that on the things that affect the national security and the fundamental economic necessity to keep people employed, to get people employed, to bring the economy back, there is plenty of room we can work,” Biden said.

Watch here:

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Biden vows that his Cabinet will "look like the country"

President-elect Joe Biden vowed today that his Cabinet will “look like the country” following increasing pressure to further diversify his administration.

Activists and elected officials have insisted that Biden is not doing enough to meet his promise of creating an administration that reflects the nation’s diversity.

The latest effort comes from members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, who in a letter obtained by CNN, requested that Biden appoint either California Attorney General Xavier Becerra or Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez to serve as the US Attorney General.

“We are confident that either would lead the Department with distinction, champion equal protection under the law, and advance the cause of justice for all Americans,” the letter read.

So far, Biden has named four people of color to his Cabinet:

  • UN Ambassador nominee Linda Thomas-Greenfield, a Black woman
  • Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas, a Cuban American man who would be the first Latino to serve in the position if confirmed by the Senate
  • Neera Tanden, who is the first woman of color and first South Asian person nominated to lead the Office of Management and Budget
  • Cecilia Rouse, a Black woman, was nominated to chair the Council of Economic Advisers, a position which Biden announced last week he will elevate to the Cabinet level

Biden, however, named White nominees to two of the highest-profile Cabinet positions – secretary of state and treasury secretary. Black and Latino leaders are concerned that people of color are primarily being nominated to second-tier positions in Biden’s administration and urging Biden to choose diverse candidates fill the remaining high-profile positions, saying it will give underrepresented groups a voice in the nation’s leadership.

Their demands come as the nation reels from police killings of Black people, massive protests calling for racial equality this year and President Trump’s anti-immigration policies.

Leaders from seven Black-led civil rights groups say they requested a meeting to discuss the need for more Black nominees to Biden’s Cabinet.

Biden said he is meeting with members of the NAACP on Tuesday.

“My job is to keep my commitment and to make the decisions.  And when it’s all over, people will take a look and say, I promise you, you’ll see the most diverse cabinet, representative of all folks, Asian-Americans, African-Americans, Latinos, LGBTQ, across the board,” he said

“And so, I think — and they are forthcoming in the next month or so,” Biden added.

Watch here:

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Harris says she and Biden "are full partners in this process"

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris speaks during an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper on December 3.

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris discussed how she and President-elect Joe Biden will work together through the transition and in the White House during her first joint interview today with Biden today.

She added: “And so, on every issue that impacts the American people, I will be a full partner to the President-elect and the President. And whatever our priorities are, I will be there to support him and support the American people.”

Biden said he and Harris have become friends and “are simpatico on our philosophy of government and simpatico on how we want to attack — approach these issues that we’re facing. … and when we disagree it will be just like — so far it has been just like when Barack and I did.”

Watch here:

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Biden says a $900 billion stimulus plan "would be a good start"

President-elect Joe Biden said that while a $900 billion stimulus package would help Americans in need during the pandemic, “it’s not enough.”

Biden added: “But here’s the deal; if Mitch McConnell just brought the bill up, just put it on the floor, I believe, senator believes, or soon-to-be former senator believes, that it would pass. But it’s a start. But look, people are really hurting. They’re scared to death.”

Earlier today: High-level negotiations over an economic stimulus package are intensifying as congressional leaders and top senators are pushing to reach a major agreement that has eluded Washington for months.

For much of the year there has been partisan bickering and negotiations that have broken down repeatedly, but momentum is finally building — as McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are in discussions over a possible $908 billion deal pushed by a bipartisan group of lawmakers — and lawmakers are trying to attach an agreement to a massive funding proposal to avoid a government shutdown by Dec. 11.

But even as Pelosi and McConnell spoke Wednesday about their shared goal to finalize an agreement, there are still many landmines to navigate and major divisions between the two parties. Aides acknowledge that they aren’t there yet.

Right now, the $908 billion framework is little more than a one-pager. And, the divisions over state and local funding and liability protections are still very much alive.

Watch here:

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Biden says he will ask Americans to wear a mask for 100 days after he takes office

President-elect Joe Biden speaks during an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper on December 3.

President-elect Biden told CNN’s Jake Tapper that he will ask Americans to wear masks for 100 days after he takes office.

In his first joint interview with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, Biden described his coronavirus plans as a balance between ensuring that Americans believe the vaccine is safe and instituting a number of plans that will curb the spread of the virus without shutting down the economy.

Biden said that on the day he is inaugurated he plans to ask the public to wear a mask for 100 days.

Biden also said during the interview that he will be “happy to” get a coronavirus vaccine once Dr. Anthony Fauci says it is safe and that he will get the vaccine publicly to demonstrate his confidence in it.

Watch here:

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Biden and Harris sit down for first joint interview since winning the election

CNN’s Jake Tapper interviewed President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on Thursday in their first joint interview since winning the election.

The full interview is airing now on CNN. The hour-long special will be simulcast on CNN International and in Spanish on CNN en Español. You can also watch the interview on the video player above here.

The interview took take place in Biden’s hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, at the same theater where the President-elect unveiled several top members of his administration.

After meeting with Biden team, Fauci says that's "the way transition should work"

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, told CNN he had a one-hour meeting at the White House on Thursday with President-elect Joe Biden’s agency review team.

Team members Fauci met with included Jeffrey Zients, Biden’s choice for coronavirus czar, as well as Transition Covid-19 Advisory Board members Dr. David Kessler, former commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, and former US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy.

Among the topics they discussed, Fauci said, were vaccine distribution and the state of the pandemic.

According to the Biden-Harris transition website, “Agency review teams are responsible for understanding the operations of each agency, ensuring a smooth transfer of power.”

Fauci is a member of the current White House coronavirus task force and has been the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease since 1984, serving under six US presidents.

Fauci said it was good meeting and that it is “the way transition should work.”

Biden says he asked Fauci to be one of his chief medical advisers

President-elect Joe Biden speaks during an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper on December 3.

President-elect Joe Biden told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Thursday that he has asked Dr. Anthony Fauci to be a chief medical adviser and part of his Covid-19 response team when his administration begins next year.

Biden said the conversation happened on Thursday afternoon. CNN reported earlier in the day that Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a member of Donald Trump’s coronavirus task force, had a planned meeting with Biden’s transition team.

Biden added that Ron Klain, his incoming chief of staff, knew Fauci well and had been talking to him “all the time.”

Fauci has had a complicated relationship with Trump ever since he began advising the Republican leader on the coronavirus response, with the President often flouting the recommendations of Fauci and other scientific leaders. Those clashes have made Fauci the focus of public attention, often seen as a hero on the left for his commitment to science in the face of Trump’s comments and a villain on the right, especially among Trump loyalists.

Biden described his coronavirus plans as a balance between ensuring that Americans believe the vaccine is safe and instituting a number of plans that will curb the spread of the virus without shutting down the economy. Biden said that on the day he is inaugurated he plans to ask the public to wear a mask for at least 100 days.

“Just 100 days to mask, not forever 100 days. And I think we’ll see a significant reduction,” he said.

Biden also said during the interview that he will be “happy to” get a coronavirus vaccine once Fauci says it is safe and that he will get the vaccine publicly to demonstrate his confidence in it.

“That’s the moment in which I will stand before the public” and get the vaccine, Biden said. “People have lost faith in the ability of the vaccine to work. Already the numbers are really staggeringly low, and it matters what the President and vice president do.”

Biden’s comments come a day after three of his presidential predecessors — Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama — said they would publicly get a coronavirus vaccine as a way to demonstrate its safety and efficacy.

“I think that my three predecessors have set the model as to what should be done, saying, once it’s declared to be safe… then obviously we take it and it’s important to communicate to the American people,” Biden said.

Watch here:

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Rhode Island governor says she won't be Biden's HHS secretary

Rhode Island Governor Gina M. Raimondo speaks at a news conference at the Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Providence, Rhode Island, on May 12.

Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo said today she won’t be President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee for Health and Human Services secretary.

Speaking at a news conference today, she went on to say that she is focused on her duties in her home state.

Some background: CNN reported that Raimondo was a contender for the position and had been interviewed for the job, a source familiar with the process tells CNN.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is also a leading contender to head the Department of Health and Human Services, people familiar with the matter tell CNN.

The secretary of Health and Human Services will play a central role in the coronavirus fight, which is why Biden is focusing on governors who have been on the front lines of the pandemic.

Hispanic Caucus held "diplomatic but tense" meeting with Biden team over Cabinet spots, source says

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus met virtually with incoming White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain, as well as key Biden transition team leaders Jeffrey Zients and Ted Kaufman, with a source on the call describing it as “diplomatic but tense.”

The source said the CHC members pushed back about leaks coming from the transition team about New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham turning down the role of interior secretary.

The source said Klain was very respectful and told the group they were right but he couldn’t control what leaks came out of the transition team.

The source also said they learned on the call that Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo is no longer in the running for Secretary of Health and Human Services.

The CHC was clear with the Biden transition team that the group wants Lujan Grisham as secretary of health and human services and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra or Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez to serve as the US Attorney General.

Some background: Today’s meeting comes as activists and elected officials insist that Biden is not doing enough to meet his promise of creating an administration that reflects the nation’s diversity.

So far, Biden has named four people of color to his Cabinet: UN Ambassador nominee Linda Thomas-Greenfield, a Black woman; Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas, a Cuban-American man who would be the first Latino to serve in the position if confirmed by the Senate; and Neera Tanden, who is the first woman of color and first South Asian person nominated to lead the Office of Management and Budget.

Cecilia Rouse, a Black woman, was nominated to chair the Council of Economic Advisers, a position which Biden announced last week he will elevate to the Cabinet level.

Biden, however, named White nominees to two of the highest-profile Cabinet positions — secretary of state and treasury secretary.

Black and Latino leaders are concerned that people of color are primarily being nominated to second-tier positions in Biden’s administration and are urging Biden to choose diverse candidates fill the remaining high-profile positions.

CNN’s Nicquel Terry Ellis and Lauren Fox contributed reporting to this post.

The White House has held multiple pardon meetings since the election

The White House is seen on November 23 in Washington, DC.

With a rush of pardons expected before President Trump leaves office, the White House has been holding multiple pardon meetings since the election, involving the White House Counsel’s office and other staff, two senior administration officials told CNN. 

The meetings include a list of potential pardon cases to be considered and ideas of who else should be included. White House officials like Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner have weighed in, but the White House Counsel’s office runs the meetings, one of the sources said. 

While such meetings are not unusual and past presidents have issued pardons on their way out, the president’s past clemency for allies, like Michael Flynn and Roger stone, and potential preemptive pardon considerations for his family bring an added dimension. 

The Trump White House also acts fast once the President makes a decision, at times without Justice Department involvement, according to sources.

The White House declined to comment when reached out to by CNN.  

Three sources with knowledge of the situation told CNN Kushner has not been personally involved in advocating for his father, Charles Kushner, to get a pardon for his felony, but two of the sources said outside criminal justice groups who worked with Jared Kushner in the past have petitioned the White House to consider the pardon. 

It’s known Kushner would like one, according to one source, and it’s so evident it doesn’t need to be discussed since the President is aware.

In 2004, Charles Kushner pleaded guilty to 16 counts of tax evasion, one count of retaliating against a federal witness — his brother-in-law — and another count of lying to the Federal Election Commission.

CNN previously reported that associates in Trump’s orbit, including his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, have approached the President to seek preemptive pardons. The President has also been talking with advisers about preemptively pardoning several people close to him, including his children and Jared Kushner.

The President has told advisors he feels he and his family have been unfairly targeted and that he’s concerned the legal pursuits could continue under the Biden Justice Department.

Lawyers and allies of the president have been lobbying him for pardons ranging from their personal clients to people who Vice President-elect Kamala Harris put behind bars, according to multiple people. She was a state prosecutor and pardons only apply to federal crimes.

CNN reported Wednesday that the public should expect a “flurry” of pardons before Trump leaves office, a source close to the White House says, as has happened at the end of previous administrations.

This source, familiar with discussions on the matter, told CNN some of the President’s advisers believe that it would perfectly fine for Trump to pardon his family members and other associates preemptively, even though they haven’t been charged with any crimes.

CNN’s Jim Acosta contributed reporting to this post.

Trump has had more than 30 defunct election-related lawsuits in 30 days. Here's where things stand.

President Donald Trump listens during a Medal of Freedom ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House on December 3 in Washington, DC.

After more than 30 defunct lawsuits in 30 days, attempts by President Trump and his backers to overturn the election of Joe Biden as the next president have failed in court — sometimes repeatedly, with judges gutting claims and shutting down all possible legal avenues to interfere with the Electoral College.

The President’s effort isn’t stopping, with more lawsuits and appeals getting filed almost daily and more than $170 million raised in response to pleas for cash from Trump.

But officials across the country confirmed that the 2020 vote was secure. Biden’s victories have already been certified in six of the most closely contested states — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. His wide Electoral College win over Trump is secured, and will be formalized this month.

Judges have rejected Trump’s attempts so thoroughly over the past few weeks, they’ve shut down the cases on nearly every question they’re asked.

One federal judge in Pennsylvania, Matthew Brann, wrote he couldn’t do what the Trump campaign and Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani wanted because it would be unconstitutional. A judge in Michigan, Timothy Kenny, explained point by point why witness statements suspecting fraud fell short.

A judge on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court wrote in a concurring opinion last weekend, which denied a Republican attempt to throw out millions of absentee votes in the state, that the court shouldn’t “lend legitimacy to such transparent and untimely efforts to subvert the will of Pennsylvania voters.”

And yet, Trump’s dreams linger in court. Ongoing cases still look to push false narratives of fraud — often built on their disbelief of Biden support in heavily Democratic cities and unhappiness with absentee voting.

Here’s a look at the lawsuits the Trump campaign and allies have won and lost:

Read more here.

March For Our Lives calls on Biden to appoint gun violence prevention director and youth engagement director 

Demonstrators hold signs during the March For Our Lives on March 24, 2018 in New York City.

March For Our Lives Thursday is calling on the Biden-Harris administration to appoint a National Director of Gun Violence Prevention and a Director of Youth Engagement – two positions that have never before existed in a presidential administration.

“In order to replicate the historic turnout and engagement of young voters in 2020, the Biden-Harris administration must meaningfully engage with the voters that helped put them in the White House,” March For Our Lives said in a statement first provided to CNN Thursday.

The group is asking that a National Director of Gun Violence Prevention serve in a senior level position — adjacent to the cabinet — and that this person report directly to the President, leading a committee dedicated to studying gun violence and related reforms.

The group has also asked that the National Director of Gun Violence Prevention “reflect the understanding that gun violence is a public health crisis, and disproportionately affects our most vulnerable populations,” adding that, “candidates who have been impacted by gun violence and who bring an intersectional approach should be considered.”

March For Our Lives is also asking that a Director of Youth Engagement join the Biden-Harris administration to, “sit on the Domestic Policy Council and advise the President and senior staff on issues of importance to young Americans.”

The group has suggested that this position be filled by a member of Gen Z.

March For Our Lives was founded in 2018 by survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida. Seventeen students and faculty members were killed in the tragedy.

Since then, the group has led a massive youth-led gun violence prevention movement and a national push in both 2018 and 2020 to register and engage young voters.

“This necessary addition to the domestic policy team would prioritize issues disproportionately impacting young Americans, and ensure a seat at the table for young American voices, who have traditionally been shut out of the domestic policy agenda,” March For Our Lives said of the role, adding that the director would work with the Office of Public Engagement to coordinate an annual youth summit at the White House and pay special attention to the issues most impacting young Americans including climate change, racism, healthcare, education and gun violence.

Eve Levenson, Policy and Government Affairs Manager for March For Our Lives, told CNN the group believes it is crucial the incoming administration “remember their mandate to the young people who helped them get elected.”

“We expect that they will work to ensure our generation is represented both in terms of prioritizing the issues we care about, including gun violence prevention, and ensuring youth representation in staffing,” Levenson said.

“As the generation that has lead the social movements over the last 4 plus years that fundamentally changed the political landscape that determined the election, we’ve more than earned our seat at the table,” Levenson added.

Max Markham, incoming policy director for March For Our Lives, told CNN the country’s youth can only expect to see the “progress and healing it needs” if the new administration offers them a “meaningful and unique seat at the table.”

Biden will appoint a former top Obama economic adviser to be his Covid-19 coordinator 

Jeffrey Zients, former acting director and deputy director for management at the Office of Management and Budget, testifies before the Senate Budget Committee on April 11, 2013 in Washington, DC.

Jeffrey Zients is President-elect Joe Biden’s choice to be the White House coronavirus coordinator, or “czar,” a source familiar tells CNN.

Zients, a top economic adviser under President Barack Obama and a co-chair of Biden’s transition team, was widely expected to get this appointment.

The announcement is expected to be formally made in the coming days.

Politico first reported Zients’ appointment.

Last month, Biden announced a coronavirus advisory board led by established public health officials and staffed by a mix of doctors and current and former government officials.

Trump won't say if he has confidence in Attorney General William Barr

President Donald Trump listens to a question during a ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House on December 3 in Washington, DC.

President Trump wouldn’t say whether he had confidence in Attorney General William Barr when asked Thursday.

Trump paused a moment, then told reporters in the Oval Office, “Ask me that in a number of weeks from now. They should be looking at all of this fraud.”

That question comes after Trump and Barr had a “contentious” meeting on Tuesday after Barr told the Associated Press the Justice Department had seen no evidence of widespread election fraud, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins reported earlier Thursday.

Trump erupted at Barr, sources said, but did not scream at him. 

The Washington Post reported that Trump has considered firing Barr, though Jim Acosta reported Trump is frustrated with Barr over those comments, per sources who describe Trump as “disappointed” but added that officials are discouraging the President from firing any top leaders in the administration — the attorney general in particular — so close to the end of his term. 

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany also wouldn’t say Wednesday whether Trump had confidence in Barr when asked, saying, “If the President, if he has any personnel announcements, you’ll be the first to know it.”

Trump also repeated baseless claims of “massive fraud” and a “rigged election” Thursday. There is no evidence of widespread election fraud, as state officials and Barr have said.

“He hasn’t done anything. He hasn’t looked (for fraud in the Georgia election),” Trump said of Barr and his administration’s Justice Department.

Watch:

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