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US election 2020: ‘America is back’, says Biden as he unveils team - BBC News

US President-elect Joe Biden has unveiled officials for six important posts, as he prepares to take office.

Mr Biden said that "America is back" and "ready to lead the world, not retreat from it".

If confirmed, Avril Haines would be the first female director of national intelligence and Alejandro Mayorkas the first Latino homeland security boss.

President Trump has agreed transition moves must start and Mr Biden will now get a top secret intelligence brief.

However, Mr Trump still refuses to concede the election and continues to repeat unsubstantiated claims that the 3 November vote was "rigged".

The White House said Mr Biden would get the Presidential Daily Brief, the document that updates the president on details of the latest international threats and developments.

And following approval from the General Services Administration (GSA), Mr Biden can now access key government officials and millions of dollars in funds as he prepares to take over on 20 January.

On Tuesday, Governor Tom Wolf said he had certified Mr Biden's victory in Pennsylvania, a key swing state. Another, Michigan, certified the same outcome on Monday.

What did Biden say?

Speaking in Wilmington, Delaware, on Tuesday, the president-elect highlighted the need to rebuild alliances, as well as tackling coronavirus and climate change.

He said his team would "tell me what I need to know, not what I want to know".

The appointments suggest a move away from the "America First" narrative of President Trump.

"We cannot meet these challenges with old thinking and unchanged habits," Mr Biden said.

The president-elect also noted that he was struck by his calls with world leaders "by how much they're looking forward to the United States reasserting its historic role as a global leader over the Pacific, as well as the Atlantic, all across the world".

He later told reporters he spoke with Prime Minister Boris Johnson and other leaders about the Ireland and Northern Ireland border.

Mr Biden, who has Irish heritage, said he was against a guarded border, and said it must be kept open. "The idea of having the border north and south once again being closed, it's just not right."

In an interview with NBC News, Mr Biden emphasised the outreach from the administration "has been sincere" and not "begrudging".

Mr Biden also said there were plans for him to meet with the Covid task force in the White House regarding vaccine distribution and access.

"We're gonna not be so far behind the curve as we thought we might be," he said.

Who are his picks?

A composite image of Jake Sullivan, Linda Thomas-Greenfield and Antony Blinken
Getty Images/Reuters

Mr Biden presented six key figures on Tuesday:

  • Antony Blinken,Secretary of state. Mr Blinken said that the US would soon "with equal measures of humility and confidence" restore its relationships with other countries
  • John Kerry, Climate change envoy. He was one of the leading architects of the Paris climate agreement, from which President Trump withdrew. Mr Kerry said the world must "come together to end the climate crisis"
  • Avril Haines, Director of national intelligence. Mr Biden said: "I picked a professional... a fierce advocate for telling the truth".
  • Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of homeland security. Mr Mayorkas said the department had "a noble mission, to help keep us safe and to advance our proud history as a country of welcome"
  • Jake Sullivan, White House national security adviser. Mr Sullivan praised his boss, saying he taught him much about statecraft, but also "most importantly about human nature"
  • Linda Thomas-Greenfield, US ambassador to the UN. She said that she brings her southern Louisiana roots to her job, calling it "a cajun spin" on "gumbo diplomacy"

One choice that is expected but has not been announced yet is former Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen as treasury secretary

L-R Alejandro Mayorkas, Janet Yellen, Avril Haines
Getty Images/Alamy

Most of the picks, although not Mr Kerry or Mr Sullivan, will need confirmation by the Senate. Rejection of a nominee is rare. The last was in 1989, although some nominees have withdrawn from consideration.

Analysis box by Tara McKelvey, White House reporter

Joe Biden's picks for the top roles in his administration have been celebrated by centrist Democrats: they speak glowingly of the diversity and experience of the individuals, a group that includes veteran foreign policy experts, and accomplished women and people of colour.

Yet progressives feel cheated. They say they helped Mr Biden win, and now they have been shut out of power.

These progressives say the cabinet will be filled with "Clinton and Obama retreads", as one of them puts it, describing it as a return to the "Blob", a term that Ben Rhodes, who served as Mr Obama's speechwriter, once used to describe the Washington establishment.

Stephen Wertheim from the Quincy Institute, a think tank focused on foreign policy, says the new Democratic team in the White House may end up acting like the old one, a group of centrists who, he says, focused more on military threats than on issues such as climate change. He adds: "Progressives have a right to be concerned about whether there will be significant change."

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What are Republicans saying?

In a brief appearance in the White House press room on Tuesday, Mr Trump praised the work of his administration, hailed the Dow Jones stock index for passing the 30,000 mark and left without taking questions.

While praising the armed forces later in the Rose Garden, he said: "And as I say, 'America First'. Shouldn't go away from that... 'America First'."

Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton said Mr Biden had surrounded himself with "panda huggers" who would go soft on China.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who is on the committee that will vote on Mr Blinken's nomination, tweeted: "Biden's cabinet picks went to Ivy League schools, have strong resumes, attend all the right conferences & will be polite & orderly caretakers of America's decline."

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