Biden joins battle for Senate as top Republican accepts win

686

ATLANTA, Dec 16, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – President-elect Joe Biden threw his
weight into the Democratic battle for control of the US Senate on Tuesday, as
his White House win was finally acknowledged by top Republicans and holdout
foreign leaders.

Biden flew into Georgia — a southern state he won in an upset against
President Donald Trump — to host a rally for two Democratic candidates in
runoff races that will determine the Senate’s balance of power.

“Honk for your next United States senators Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael
Warnock,” Biden told the crowd at the drive-in event in Atlanta — urging
voters to turn out in force on January 5.

“Send me these two men, and we will control the Senate!”

One day after the Electoral College affirmed Biden’s victory, attention
shifted to the looming Senate battle — and to the shape of the incoming
administration, as Biden also announced he had nominated Pete Buttigieg, a
former Indiana mayor and presidential rival, as secretary of transportation.

Buttigieg would be the first openly gay person confirmed by the Senate to a
presidential cabinet post — in sync with Biden’s pledge to usher in the most
diverse cabinet ever when he takes office on January 20.

And while Trump still refuses to concede — continuing to tweet baseless
allegations of mass fraud that have been rejected in dozens of lawsuits —
top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell finally broke his silence with a
message to the president: it’s over.

“The Electoral College has spoken. So today I want to congratulate
President-elect Joe Biden,” McConnell said on the Senate floor, adding that
Americans can also “take pride” that they will have their first female vice
president in Kamala Harris.

Biden told reporters before flying to Georgia that he had a “good” phone
conversation with McConnell, a longtime Senate colleague.

“I told him that while we disagree on a lot of things, there are things we
can work together on,” Biden said.

The Electoral College confirmation triggered an acknowledgement of Biden’s
win from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who said he was “ready for
collaboration” with the Democrat.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and Mexico’s Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
— who had both waited until now to recognize the president-elect — also
sent their congratulations.

– ‘Turn the page’ –

Trump, in unprecedented fashion, has yet to acknowledge his defeat in the
chaotic election that will see him exit the White House after a single four-
year term.

But Biden urged the divided country to “turn the page” as he welcomed the
Electoral College vote on Monday, saying US democracy proved “resilient”
against Trump’s “abuse of power.”

He praised voters for casting ballots in record numbers despite fears of
Covid-19 and “enormous political pressure, verbal abuse and even threats of
physical violence.”

The White House transition is occurring with the coronavirus pandemic
surging, pushing US Covid-19 deaths above 300,000.

While critical winter months lie ahead, a bright spot has emerged with
health care workers receiving the first doses of the coronavirus vaccine
distributed in the nation.

And with top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci recommending Biden and
Harris quickly take the vaccine, the president-elect said they would receive
the shot in public view.

– Minds on Georgia –

Although the door has all but shut on his efforts to overturn the vote
results, Trump has remained defiant, insisting in a series of tweets that he
won a “landslide victory” and that there were still “tremendous problems”
with the vote.

In a threatening move against Republican leaders in Georgia, where he has
made baseless claims of massive voter fraud, he retweeted a pro-Trump lawyer
who posted a picture of Georgia’s governor and secretary of state, saying
“they will soon be going to jail.”

Democrats, who control the House of Representatives, need to flip both
Georgia Senate seats in order to seize control of the upper chamber, while
Republicans must hold just one to maintain their majority.

Republicans have framed Georgia as must-win races, with the state forming
the last line of defense against what they describe as radical “socialism.”

If Republicans do, McConnell remains majority leader, and his relationship
with Biden will quickly become the most closely watched in Washington.

The pair were known for striking deals during crunch periods when Biden was
Barack Obama’s vice president.

But McConnell gave Obama no quarter, repeatedly stymying him on judicial
nominations and forcing the president to curtail his legislative agenda.