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US federal agency greenlight Biden’s presidential transition

FILE - In this June 21, 2019 file photo, General Services Administration Administrator Emily Murphy speaks during a ribbon cutting ceremony for the Department of Homeland Security's St. Elizabeths Campus Center Building in Washington. The head of the obscure federal government agency that is holding up Joe Biden's presidential transition knew well before Election Day she might have a messy situation on her hands well. Prior to Nov. 3, GSA administrator Emily Murphy held a Zoom call with Dave Barram, 77, a man who was in her shoes 20 years earlier during the contested 2000 election between George W. Bush and Al Gore. Barram said he gave her some simple advice, “If you do the right thing, then all you have to do is live with the consequences of it.’”(AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) on Monday told Joe Biden it was ready to begin the formal presidential transition process for him.

GSA Administrator Emily Murphy told Biden in a letter that she was prepared to make “post-election resources and services available” for Biden’s transition to the White House, stressing that despite “recent developments involving legal challenges and certifications of election results,” she made her decision “independently, based on the law and available facts.” 

Also on Monday, President Donald Trump tweeted that he was recommending that the GSA “do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols,” and that he had directed his team to facilitate Biden’s transition, although he still didn’t concede defeat.

“Our case STRONGLY continues, we will keep up the good fight, and I believe we will prevail!” Trump said, referring to a series of legal actions his campaign launched in multiple states aimed at overturning the election results. 

He added, however, that to allow the transition to start was “in the best interest of our Country.”

Ever since Biden was projected by U.S. media to have won the presidency, Murphy has faced pressure to ascertain that Biden is the president-elect, a step that effectively marks the recognition by the current administration that a new president is elected and a transition will begin. 

Murphy said in the letter that she was “coerced” into making the “determination prematurely,” and that the federal law stipulating the ascertainment “provides no procedures or standards for this process.” 

While ascertaining that Biden is the “apparent president-elect,” the administrator emphasized that the “actual winner of the presidential election will be determined by the electoral process detailed in the Constitution.”

Carolyn Maloney, chairwoman of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform and one of the Democrats who previously demanded that Murphy brief the Congress about the delay, said in a statement that she was “thankful for” the administrator’s latest move. 

“But make no mistake — it is no cause for celebration that members of the Trump Administration refused to follow the law for weeks while coronavirus cases spiked to catastrophic levels,” she said. 

Also on Monday, the state of Michigan, a battleground state where the Trump campaign filed a lawsuit challenging the election results, certified Biden’s victory. -BBC

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