Since we last talked, both Russian President Vladimir Putin and then Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have acknowledged that Joe Biden will be the next president — in that order. Republican strategists I’ve talked to, including those close to McConnell, have wondered when and how he’d find an exit ramp to indulging Trump’s baseless election fraud claims. The electoral college voting for Biden for president was it. “The decision by the electoral college yesterday was determinative,” McConnell said Tuesday afternoon, by way of explaining why he, finally, five weeks later, acknowledged that Biden won the election. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) acknowledges Joe Biden's win on Dec. 15. (Rod Lamkey/POOL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock) |
We have not yet seen a wave of other Republican lawmakers acknowledging Biden’s win too — though there have been some. And Trump certainly hasn’t conceded; far from it, he continues to tweet his baseless fraud claims. But at the very least, McConnell forged a path for other Republican lawmakers to follow, one that leads directly away from Trump, as The Fix’s Aaron Blake writes. McConnell is the lawmaker in the Senate that Biden really cares about acknowledging his election victory, since the two will be working together a lot next year — especially if Republicans keep control of the Senate majority by winning two Georgia runoffs. Shortly after all this, McConnell took his first concrete step to stop Trump’s challenges by urging senators in a private call not to join House lawmakers in challenging the results when Congress counts them in January, reports The Post’s Seung Min Kim. (More on how that challenge works and will fail, especially without any senators on board.) Biden keeps giving Republicans the benefit of the doubtBiden arrives Dec. 14 to give a victory speech after the electoral college voted him the next president. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post) |
Republicans like McConnell were just caught in a tricky political situation, Biden has said recently. They’ll come around when Trump is gone. He’s even gone so far as to say he understands why Republicans have ignored his win. And on Tuesday, he and McConnell spoke — possibly for the first time since Biden won — and it was Biden who called McConnell, he explained, “to thank him for the congratulations.” Don’t get me wrong — Biden has definitely had some sharp words for Trump and his allies who have actively tried to undermine the election, like the ones who signed onto a baseless lawsuit last week that the Supreme Court quickly dispensed with. But as I write here, Biden has been extending a remarkably gracious olive branch to Republicans, Republicans he knows he needs to work with next year. So far, he’s one of the only major players on both sides of the aisle willing to do so. What you need to know about Pete Buttigieg joining Biden’s CabinetWho he is again: Buttigieg is the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., who ran for president last year. He positioned himself as one of Biden’s main rivals for the centrist wing. Buttigieg did pretty well in the primaries — in largely White states. He struggled with voters of color and eventually dropped out, just in time to endorse Biden in a critical moment that ended up being the catalyst for Biden’s win. Biden and Buttigieg campaign together in March 2020. (Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters) |
How you pronounce his name again: Boot-edge-edge is what his campaign liked to say. What Biden’s nominating him for: Transportation secretary. No, Buttigieg doesn’t have explicit experience in transportation. Or even experience in the federal government. The size of the department he’ll run is like a small city, which is the last big thing he did, report The Post’s Michael Laris, Ian Duncan and Seung Min Kim. But it’s also a catalyst for Buttigieg to get that experience, they say, especially if he can help Biden get deals with Congress on rebuilding the nation’s aging roads and bridges, and on climate change and vehicle emissions. Biden’s pandemic inauguration is taking shapeIt will be on the steps of the Capitol just like any other inauguration. But they’re going to ask that people don’t come and form a crowd, reports The Post’s Matt Viser. There will be a parade, but it will be a hybrid in-person-virtual event. Still in doubt: Whether Trump will attend, or invite Biden for a traditional tea beforehand. By Matt Zapotosky, Josh Dawsey and Devlin Barrett ● Read more » | |
By Arelis R. Hernández and Maria Sacchetti ● Read more » | |
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