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As Biden marches forward with Cabinet, Trump hopes fade in key states

Michigan is set to certify its results Monday, and Pennsylvania is likely to move a step closer to doing so.

James Oliphant (Reuters)
Washington, United States
Mon, November 23, 2020

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As Biden marches forward with Cabinet, Trump hopes fade in key states In this file photo US President-elect Joe Biden speaks after a meeting with governors in Wilmington, Delaware, on Nov.19. US President-elect Joe Biden will name on Tuesday the first picks to be part of his administration, his chief of staff said on Sunday, declining to say what positions will be announced. (AFP/Jim Watson)

U

S President Donald Trump's increasingly tenuous efforts to reverse his election loss to President-elect Joe Biden could be dealt a lethal blow on Monday, as Biden turns to the task of building his cabinet.

Michigan is set to certify its results Monday, and Pennsylvania is likely to move a step closer to doing so.

Trump, a Republican, lost both battleground states in the Nov. 3 election, but he has refused to concede defeat and has, instead, launched a legal battle to overturn the results there and in other close races across the country.

Trump's hopes of preventing the Democrat Biden from taking office on Jan. 20 likely will be doomed if Michigan and Pennsylvania certify their results, confirming Biden as the winner of a combined 36 electoral votes. Biden won 306 electoral votes, 36 over the 270 threshold needed to win the White House.

It remains unclear whether the process in Michigan will work as state law dictates. Michigan's canvassing board, which is evenly split between two Democrats and two Republicans, will meet on Monday to decide whether to certify the results.

Biden defeated Trump in Michigan by more than 150,000 votes, and the board is required by law to validate the count.

But a Republican member of the board, Norman Shinkle, has suggested in recent media interviews that he favors delaying certification because of technical irregularities. Officials in one county noted irregularities that may have affected a few hundred votes, and the Trump campaign has suggested that points to widespread fraud.

A deadlock on moving ahead with certification would likely force the matter into state appeals courts, where an order would be sought to compel the board to perform its function. If the members refused, Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, has the authority to replace them.

Monday is also the deadline in Pennsylvania for counties to report their certified tallies to Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, a Democrat. Boockvar likely would then certify the results on behalf of the state in a matter of days. Biden won Pennsylvania by more than 80,000 votes.

Trump's push to delay certification in several states has met with failure, most recently on Saturday, when a federal judge in Pennsylvania dismissed a Trump campaign lawsuit, saying it was not in the court's power to violate the Constitution.

Biden Cabinet

Biden, working in his home state of Delaware, has pushed ahead with his transition plans despite the lack of cooperation from the current administration. Ron Klain, the incoming White House chief of state, said on Sunday that Biden will announce his first Cabinet picks on Tuesday.

Joe Biden will pick Antony Blinken as US secretary of state, a person close to the president-elect's transition said on Sunday, elevating one of his most seasoned and trusted aides as he prepares to undo Trump's "America First" foreign policy.

US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) Japanese and South Korean counterparts Shinsuke Sugiyama (center) and Lim Sung-Nam, attend a joint press conference in the Iikura guesthouse in Tokyo, Oct. 27, 2016.
US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) Japanese and South Korean counterparts Shinsuke Sugiyama (center) and Lim Sung-Nam, attend a joint press conference in the Iikura guesthouse in Tokyo, Oct. 27, 2016. (Kyodo News via AP/-)

Blinken's appointment makes another longtime Biden aide with a foreign policy background, Jake Sullivan, the top candidate to be US national security adviser.

The President-elect has chosen another veteran diplomat, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who held a top diplomatic post in the administration of former President Barack Obama, as US ambassador to the United Nations, media reports said on Sunday.

Biden said last week he had chosen a Treasury secretary, and would announce the winner near Thanksgiving, Nov. 26. Former Federal Reserve chief Janet Yellen is said to be the top candidate.

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