A MESSAGE FROM THE CENTER FOR PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION
ADVISORY BOARD
November 8,
2020
November 8, 2020
https://presidentialtransition.org/publications/message-from-the-center-advisory-board/
The
Partnership for Public Service’s Center for Presidential Transition is the
nation’s premier nonpartisan source of information and resources designed to
help presidential candidates and their teams lay the groundwork for a new
administration or for a president’s second term. The Center has been active in
transition activities on a bipartisan basis for four cycles.
We
congratulate Vice President Joe Biden and Senator Kamala Harris on their
successful and historic campaign for the White House. In our role we have
observed the seriousness with which they have taken the transition planning
process. They embraced transition planning early, recruited a seasoned and
disciplined team and resourced their transition effort commensurate with the
challenges that President-elect Biden will face on January 20. While there will
be legal disputes requiring adjudication, the outcome is sufficiently clear
that the transition process must now begin.
As
candidate Biden becomes President-elect Biden, he and his transition team will
quickly shift from campaigning to governing. To build an effective government
ready to address the urgent needs of our great country, the new president will
have to recruit 4,000 political appointees, including 1,250 who require Senate
confirmation; prepare a $4.7 trillion budget; implement a strong policy agenda;
and assume leadership of a workforce of 2 million civilian employees and 2
million active duty and reserve troops.
We want to
also applaud the two other key stakeholders necessary for a successful
transition – the White House staff and the career officials throughout the
federal government with responsibility for transition planning under the
Presidential Transition Act. The White House staff took implementation of the
Presidential Transition Act seriously, met every statutory milestone and worked
closely with the career officials responsible for transition planning. The
career federal officials with responsibility for transition planning, led by
the GSA, did exactly what one would expect from highly qualified, experienced
career officials – they planned and prepared methodically for either
eventuality – a Trump re-election or a Biden win.
Now the
real challenge begins. We urge the Trump administration to immediately begin
the post-election transition process and the Biden team to take full advantage
of the resources available under the Presidential Transition Act. This was a
hard-fought campaign, but history is replete with examples of presidents who
emerged from such campaigns to graciously assist their successors. “Your
success now is our country’s success,” George H.W. Bush wrote in 1993 to the
incoming president who involuntarily retired him, “I am rooting hard for you.”
Josh
Bolten, White House Chief of Staff and Director of the Office of Management and
Budget, George W. Bush Administration (Republican)
Michael
Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services and Administrator,
Environmental Protection Agency, George W. Bush Administration, Governor of
Utah (Republican)
Thomas F.
(Mack) McLarty, White House Chief of Staff, Clinton Administration (Democrat)
Penny S.
Pritzker, Secretary of Commerce, Obama Administration (Democrat)
Pressure mounts on federal agency to affirm Biden
victory
Until the General Services Administration determines
Biden is the president-elect, his transition team cannot access government
funds or communicate with federal agencies.
By ALEX
THOMPSON
11/08/2020
05:30 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/08/general-services-administration-biden-win-435203
Former
Republican White House officials and veterans of past presidential transition
are calling for the government to begin the formal transfer of power from
President Donald Trump to President-elect Joe Biden.
“While
there will be legal disputes requiring adjudication, the outcome is
sufficiently clear that the transition process must now begin,” the nonpartisan
Center for Presidential Transition wrote in a letter exclusively obtained by
POLITICO. The letter is signed by Democratic and Republican experts in
transitions, including George W. Bush’s former chief of staff Josh Bolten and
the former Republican Governor of Utah Mike Leavitt. The letter was also signed
by Bill Clinton’s first chief of staff Thomas (Mack) McLarty and Barack Obama’s
Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker.
“We urge the Trump administration to immediately begin
the post-election transition process and the Biden team to take full advantage
of the resources available under the Presidential Transition Act,” they wrote.
The letter
raises the pressure on the General Services Administration, whose
administrator, Emily Murphy, has resisted affirming that Biden won the
election. In a statement released Saturday, the agency said, "an
ascertainment has not yet been made. GSA and its Administrator will continue to
abide by, and fulfill, all requirements under the law.” The agency did not
comment further on Sunday.
Until
Murphy ascertains that Biden is the president-elect, the Biden transition
cannot access government funds or communicate with the federal agencies they
will be staffing. Experts say that the delay could hinder the Biden effort.
"Every day counts in a transition, this year more than any transition
since 1932,” said David Marchick, the director of the Center for Presidential
Transition.
That has
thrust the low-key Murphy into the center of the presidential contest. The
GSA’s hesitation is partly to avoid any hint of partisanship. Since President
Donald Trump has not conceded the race and is pursuing several legal
challenges, declaring Biden the victor would likely prompt outrage from the
right. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment about the
GSA.
On Twitter
Sunday, the president wrote "since when does the Lamestream Media call who
our next president will be?"
Most of the
party's leaders have followed suit, either remaining silent — like Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell — about the election result or openly
questioning it. “Voters decide who wins the election, not the media,” Rep.
Markwayne Mullin said Saturday. “I fully support President Trump as he
continues to fight for every legal vote to be counted.” Sen. Lindsey Graham
(R-S.C.) said Sunday on Fox News: “Don’t concede, Mr. President. Fight hard.”
But the
letter is a sign that broader Republican support may be starting to crumble.
Former President George W. Bush’s office recently released a statement
pointedly calling Biden the “president-elect.” Pressed on Trump’s legal
challenges, Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) told ABC on Sunday that it “seems unlikely
that any changes could be big enough to make a difference.”
Sens. Mitt
Romney (R-Utah) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Ak.) have also issued statements
congratulating Biden.
The Biden
transition team so far has tried to give the GSA some space to make its
election decision, but signaled Sunday they were prepared to up the pressure on
Murphy.
“Now that
the election has been independently called for Joe Biden, we look forward to
the GSA Administrator quickly ascertaining Joe Biden and Kamala Harris as the
President-elect and Vice President-elect,” a transition spokesperson told
POLITICO. "America’s national security and economic interests depend on
the federal government signaling clearly and swiftly that the United States
government will respect the will of the American people and engage in a smooth
and peaceful transfer of power.”

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