January 22 news on Joe Biden’s first days as US President | CNN Politics

Biden focuses on the economy on second day in office

biden economic relief plan coronavirus pandemic american values nr vpx_00001530
Biden: We cannot, will not let Americans go hungry
02:10 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The Senate has confirmed retired Gen. Lloyd Austin as Defense secretary.
  • President Biden is expected to sign two executive actions today related to economic relief. He rolled out his national strategy yesterday to battle Covid-19, signing several initiatives to ramp up vaccinations, expand testing and reopen schools.
  • Meanwhile, the article of impeachment against former President Trump will be delivered to the Senate on Monday, Sen. Chuck Schumer announced.

Our live coverage has ended.

51 Posts

35 lawmakers co-sign a letter asking Biden to commute all death penalty sentences 

Massachusetts Rep. Ayanna Pressley and Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri on Friday co-authored a letter to President Biden, urging him to “immediately commute the sentences of all those on death row.” 

The three-page letter included co-signers like Reps. Karen Bass, Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ritchie Torres. 

It is the second letter Pressley has sent to Biden, pushing him to act quickly to end the federal death penalty. There are currently 49 men on federal death row.

She wrote a letter to Biden on Dec. 15, five days after the federal execution of Brandon Bernard, telling Biden that “with a stroke of a pen, you can stop all federal executions.”   

Biden has previously said that ending the federal death penalty is on his list of plans for criminal justice reform, but he has yet to address the federal death penalty, even after issuing several executive orders during his first two days in office.

Asked on Wednesday whether there would be a moratorium on the federal death penalty, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said, “The President, as you know, has stated his opposition to the death penalty in the past. He remains – that remains his view. I don’t have anything more for you in terms of future actions or mechanisms though.” 

In their letter on Friday, Pressley and Bush urged Biden “to take swift, decisive action” by “commuting the death sentences of those on death row and ensuring that each person is provided with an adequate and unique re-sentencing process is a crucial first step in remedying this grave injustice.”

“We look forward to working with your administration to enact just and restorative policies that will meaningfully transform our criminal legal system for the better,” the letter said.

House impeachment managers will deliver article of impeachment to Senate on Monday evening, Pelosi says

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office released details on how the impeachment article will be delivered to the US Senate on Monday.

House managers will deliver the article to the Senate Monday evening at about 6:55 p.m. ET, and will read the article aloud on the Senate floor. 

Following that, the impeachment managers will make their way back to the House side of the US Capitol. 

Schumer wants impeachment trial to start week of Feb. 8, source says

Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer wants former President Trump’s impeachment trial to start week of Feb. 8, a source familiar with the matter said.

“We all want to put this awful chapter in our nation’s history behind us. But healing and unity will only come if there is truth and accountability and that is what this trial will provide,” Schumer said.

According to a source familiar with the schedule, here’s what it will look like:

  • Monday, Jan. 25: House managers will come to read the article of impeachment
  • Tuesday, Jan. 26: Senators will be sworn in
  • Tuesday, Feb. 2: This is the due date for President to answer to the article and for the House to hold a pre-trail brief. Schumer said on Friday that during this time period, the Senate will continue to do other business like confirming President Biden’s Cabinet nominations and negotiating a Covid-19 relief package.
  • Monday, Feb. 8: Once the briefs are drafted, presentations will start this week.
  • Tuesday, Feb. 9: This is the due date for the House’s pre-trial rebuttal brief. Here, the trial can begin.

Some background: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the article of impeachment will be sent to the Senate on Monday.

Watch here:

6545aa07-b3ec-4628-9e13-d22618da240d.mp4
03:10 - Source: cnn

Some National Guard troops will stay in DC due to concerns of unrest during impeachment trial

Members of the National Guard wear protective face masks and stand in a formation on the US Capitol grounds on January 22, in Washington, DC.

Plans to keep thousands of National Guard troops in Washington through the end of the month are driven in part over concerns about more unrest during upcoming impeachment proceedings and also anticipation of President Biden’s upcoming first address to a joint session of Congress, according to defense officials familiar with the current planning.

The concern stems from what the officials said were ongoing chatter about demonstrations picked up by federal law enforcement. 

On Thursday, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser referenced “intelligence from our federal partners that would suggest that we need more presence,” but she did not elaborate.

There is also discussion the troops will stay through March because of intelligence about other upcoming demonstrations and threats, the official said. The original deployment was for a minimum 30 days.

CNN reported Thursday that most of the 25,000 National Guard troops who were brought to Washington, DC, to help secure the city through the inauguration would be sent home within five to 10 days, according to a statement from the National Guard Bureau. Approximately 15,000 troops will return home “as soon as possible,” though the planning and process to begin moving them may take a few days.

There are some agencies requesting ongoing support, the National Guard Bureau said, and approximately 7,000 Guard troops are expected to stay through the end of the month.

Incidents in Washington, DC, have calmed down, a law enforcement official said, but not to a level where anything greatly changes in terms of security concerns. The Capitol remains a target and events surrounding it remain a target, the official said.

The ongoing deployment however will be all “voluntary” and governors will have to agree to keep forces in the city.

Impeachment trial arguments may not start next week

The article of impeachment will be sent to the Senate on Monday, according to Democratic aides. But it’s still possible the start of the trial may be delayed for days, or maybe even a week or perhaps slightly longer, if Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer agree to push back the start of the trial, including opening arguments.

That’s because they are still haggling over the exact schedule for the pre-trial briefs and when the arguments would take place.

Democrats may have an interest in pushing back the start of the trial if they get an agreement from McConnell to confirm nominees and cut a deal on the stalled power-sharing agreement that would allow the Senate committees to officially organize.

Some context: Republicans are signaling that as more time has passed since the riot at the US Capitol on Jan. 6, some of the emotions of the day have cooled and they’re ready to move on.

In interviews with more than a dozen GOP senators, most are likely to acquit former President Trump, and only a handful are truly at risk of flipping to convict him – unless more evidence emerges or the political dynamics within their party dramatically change.

Jill Biden makes surprise visit to National Guard troops during first official event

First lady Jill Biden used her first official event outside of the White House to add a surprise visit Friday afternoon to National Guard troops at the United States Capitol. 

“I just wanted to come today to say thank you to all of you for keeping me and my family safe,” said Biden, who emerged from her motorcade in a long black coat over a cream-colored dress and the same floral mask she had worn on inauguration night. 

Biden held a basket of treats tied with red, white and blue ribbon, which she passed out as tokens of gratitude. 

“The White House baked you some chocolate chip cookies,” she said. The guard members, who on Thursday night were unceremoniously relegated to the parking garage near the Capitol to sleep on the ground, expressed their thanks.

The first lady made her unscheduled stop at the Capitol after a planned visit to Whitman-Walker Health in downtown Washington, just a handful of blocks north of the White House.  

Whitman-Walker is a nonprofit federally qualified health center that offers community-based health and wellness services, and specializes in LGBTQ and HIV care, according to a statement from the East Wing. The clinic also offers cancer support and navigation services to patients and caregivers. Biden was given a tour of the facility and listened as administrators outlined what has been working for them during the pandemic to reach patients, and what has not. 

“Everybody needs more mental health work,” said Biden, noting the overwhelming challenges facing health care providers and patients being outlined by a member of Whitman-Walker staff. 

Here's what you need to know about Biden's second full day in office

President Joe Biden is two full days in to his term and, as promised, he’s not wasting any time getting to work.

Here’s what you need to know about what is going on in Washington:

  • Focus on the economy: Biden signed two executive orders on Friday — one focused on expanding food assistance and delivering stimulus checks to very low-income Americans, and the other on raising the minimum wage to $15 for the federal workforce.
  • Other priorities: The executive orders build on a $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief plan. It would fund a nationwide vaccination effort and provide direct economic relief, including $1,400 stimulus checks. 
  • Extremism: The Biden administration plans to take new actions to combat domestic violent extremism. This includes having the Office of the Director of National Intelligence compile a threat assessment and building the National Security Council’s ability to combat it.
  • Cabinet: The Senate voted to confirm retired Gen. Lloyd Austin to serve as secretary of defense in Biden’s administration. This makes Austin the first African American to run the Department of Defense.
  • Next week, impeachment: Both Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that the article of impeachment will be delivered to the Senate on Monday, triggering the start of the Senate’s impeachment trial of former President Trump.

Young Black leaders ask Biden to create a youth BIPOC task force

Young Black leaders are asking the Biden administration to create a BIPOC (Black, indigenous and people of color) youth task force within the Office of Public Engagement to ensure that the organizers of color who helped elect Biden are able to continue to build their movement within the federal government.

“We’ve been receiving messages from the administration that they want to work with us,” Ty Hobson Powell, a 25-year-old Washington, DC-based activist who fought on the frontlines of the Black Lives Matter movement this summer, told CNN.

“Now is the time,” he said. “Biden needs to prioritize young voices of color from day one.”

In addition to asking for a BIPOC task force, Hobson Powell and a cohort of other activists who met while organizing this summer — including Chelsea Miller, Nupol Kiazolu and Seun  Babalola — will be sending a series of demands to the Biden administration.

They are asking the Biden administration to take a number of specific racial justice measures within the first 100 days, including DC statehood, the elimination of a cash bail system, a federal ban on discrimination against hair styles and textures associated with race in academic and employment settings and recognizing Election Day as a federal holiday to encourage full participation in democracy.

A BIPOC task force would allow young people with first-hand experiences witnessing racial injustice, the Covid-19 crisis and economic turmoil that has followed, to advise the Biden administration on how to best communicate with and provide resources for their communities, the leaders say.

Kiazolu, who has has organized in Black communities since she was 12 years old, protested this past summer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, following the death of George Floyd and Louisville, Kentucky, against the death of Breonna Taylor. She also organized protests in New York City.

“Having been on the frontlines, we have experience and credentials to speak on fighting for resources, such as funds for mental health resources and preventative measures for the school to prison pipeline,” Kiazolu said.

Both Kiazolu and Miller stressed the importance of building the task within Biden’s first 100 days in office.

“If there’s anything we’ve seen from this past year, it’s the importance of urgency and showing up in real time to create change,” Kiazolu said.

“This isn’t an option. This is a necessity. This is as urgent as everything else that has been listed to take place in first 100 days,” Miller added.

Stocks finish the week mixed over stimulus plan uncertainty

US stocks finished the week mixed, as the Dow and S&P 500 posted slight drops Friday and the Nasdaq edged up a bit. 

Stocks hit record highs earlier in the week following the inauguration of President Biden but investors are still nervous about Republican pushback to Biden’s stimulus plan, the spike in Covid-19 cases and concerns about the vaccine rollout.

Tech giants IBM and Intel also gave outlooks that disappointed investors. 

Here’s where things closed:

  • The Dow fell 0.6%, or nearly 180 points.
  • The S&P 500 dropped 0.3%.
  • The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.1%.

The indexes all posted solid gains during the holiday-shortened trading week.

Biden boasts of bipartisan support for administration's $1.9 trillion plan

In remarks before signing a series of executive orders aimed at providing fiscal relief from the Covid-19 pandemic, President Biden touted “bipartisan support from majority of American mayors and governors” for his American Rescue Plan, telling reporters, “businesses and labor organizations have together welcomed it as an urgent action is needed.” 

The plan, unveiled last week, is Biden’s $1.9 trillion proposal that includes plans for bigger stimulus checks, more aid for the unemployed, the hungry and those facing eviction, additional support for small businesses, states and local governments, and increased funding for vaccinations and testing.

“Even President Trump’s — President Trump’s now, not some liberal organization, President Trump’s top former economic adviser, Kevin Hassett, said ‘he absolutely is in favor of this rescue plan.’ This almost doesn’t have a partisan piece to it,” Biden said.

White House chief of staff Ron Klain touted Hassett’s endorsement earlier today, tweeting the following:

Biden signs executive orders on aid for low-income Americans and raising minimum wage for federal workforce

President Biden signed two executive orders on Friday — one focused on expanding food assistance and delivering stimulus checks to very low-income Americans, and the other on raising the minimum wage to $15 for the federal workforce.

“Today I’m signing an executive order that directs the whole of government, a whole government effort to help millions of Americans who are badly hurting. It requires all federal agencies to do what they can do to provide relief to families, small business and communities, and in the days ahead I expect agencies to act,” Biden said. 

“A lot of America is hurting. The virus is surging. We’re 400,000 dead, expected to reach well over 600,000. Families are going hungry. People are at risk of being evicted. Job losses are mounting again. We need to act. No matter how you look at it, we need to act,” the President said. 

“If we act now our economy will be stronger in both the short and long run,” Biden said 

“If we act now, we’ll be better able to compete with the world. If we act now we’ll be better able to meet our moral obligations to one another as Americans,” the President said.

Watch here:

69d14a20-2608-463e-af52-2de6514ae78c.mp4
00:51 - Source: cnn

Biden: "We cannot, will not, let people go hungry"

President Biden was emphatic in his support of people suffocating under the financial strain of the coronavirus pandemic.

Some context: The Department of Housing and Urban Development has extended its moratorium on single-family foreclosure and eviction after a request from the Biden administration on Wednesday.

The moratorium applies to HUD-insured or guaranteed single-family forward and reverse mortgages, except for those secured by legally vacant and abandoned properties.

As one of his first acts as president, Biden called on several federal departments and agencies to extend their bans on evictions and foreclosures for those affected by the coronavirus until at least the end of March.

One of several executive actions Biden took on Wednesday is a signal from the incoming administration that immediate action is needed in order to stabilize housing for the estimated 25 million renters and homeowners who are at risk of losing their homes.

The action seeks to extend the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s federal moratorium on eviction for non-payment of rent by two more months. The CDC’s order first went into effect in September and the latest stimulus bill extended the protection until Jan. 31.

Watch here:

5cd2ced8-5f0c-410e-966e-87e54e83227c.mp4
02:15 - Source: cnn

SOON: Biden addresses his administration's economic crisis response

President Biden is expected to soon speak about his administration’s response to the economic crisis.

He’s also scheduled to sign two executive actions today related to economic relief.

One is focused on expanding food assistance and delivering stimulus checks to very low-income Americans, and the other centers on raising the minimum wage to $15 for the federal workforce.

Biden will keep Trump's top Taliban negotiator in place for now

The Biden administration is keeping former President Trump’s top envoy for Afghanistan peace talks, who has led regular negotiations with the Taliban, in place for the time being, according to three sources familiar with the matter. 

This move is not typical. Traditionally an incoming administration replaces politically appointed officials with their own team, particularly on foreign policy matters with such significance. Keeping the negotiator in place, at least for now, demonstrates the Biden team’s initial commitment to maintaining adherence to the US-Taliban peace agreement until the new team reviews it in detail and fully develops their own Afghanistan policy.

Zalmay Khalilzad, the special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation, has been on the job for more than two years and was the primary Trump administration official who met with all of the stakeholders leading up to the signing of the peace agreement in Doha. At times he had a contentious relationship with Afghan government officials who viewed him as favoring the Taliban. 

Khalilzad is a diplomatic veteran, having served as a US ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq and the United Nations. He is well known in foreign policy circles. Khalilzad’s own deeply personal ties to Afghanistan, where he was born, and his free-wheeling approach to the negotiations have also been viewed as controversial by some and effective by others.

The State Department did not comment when asked about Khalilzad staying on board. 

During his confirmation hearing, Anthony Blinken, President Biden’s pick for secretary of State, reiterated Biden’s commitment to ending the war in Afghanistan but indicated that he had not yet been briefed on the US-Taliban agreement in a detailed way.

The Biden foreign policy team will immediately have to begin making decisions about the presence of US troops in the country. That is where things will get dicey: the US-Taliban agreement commits all US and NATO forces to leave the country by May, and that is at odds with a desire by Biden and his foreign policy team to keep residual force in Afghanistan.

“We want to end this so-called forever war. We want to bring our forces home. We want to retain some capacity to deal with any resurgence of terrorism which is what brought us there in the first place,” Blinken said during his hearing. 

Extending the military mission also threatens to upend the peace talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government. This is because those peace talks – which have been slow to produce any results – were committed to by the Taliban a result of the US agreeing to a full withdrawal.

Psaki says White House has asked the CDC to look into states possibly running out of vaccine doses

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the White House has asked the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to look into the possibility that states might run out of their allocated doses of the coronavirus vaccines.

Her comment comes after New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state will run out of doses sometime on Friday, until it receives the next shipment from the federal government.

“Well we’ve asked the CDC, to look into exactly this issue, and see what can be done. I don’t have any update. Beyond that, but certainly we don’t want any states to run out of access to vaccine,” Psaki said at Friday’s White House press briefing.

CNN has previously reported that sources say the Biden administration inherited a nonexistent coronavirus vaccine distribution plan, and Psaki said that the administration hopes work with localities to “avoid situations like this in the future.”

Psaki said the administration has advocated in the past for releasing additional doses of the vaccines currently in reserve for patients second doses, but they have “deferred to health and medical experts.” She added that the administration has asked the CDC to “have the conversation with officials in New York and to look into what is possible.”

Watch here:

d4d77326-21ad-4fa1-96b1-66b5cef66d5b.mp4
00:38 - Source: cnn

White House expects Congress to move forward with relief bill and confirmations during impeachment trial

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that President Biden is confident that senators can take up his Covid-19 relief package and continue with confirmation hearings for his Cabinet members while the Senate impeachment trial takes place. 

Psaki’s comments come hours after Democratic congressional leadership announced House Democrats planned to send the article of impeachment to the Senate on Monday, which would trigger the start of the Senate’s trial of former President Donald Trump.  

“When the trial was being conducted last January, there were also hearings that were happening nearly on a daily basis, and we expect that type of work to continue,” Psaki said, speaking from the White House briefing room. 

Psaki said the White House hopes and expects that the House moves forward on American Rescue Plan, Biden’s $1.9 trillion dollar Covid rescue package, as the Senate trial is taking place. 

“He remains confident after serving decades in the Senate that the Senate, members of both parties, can walk and chew gum at the same time and can move forward with the business of the American people,” Psaki said.  

Psaki reiterated Biden’s view that “it’s up to the Senate and Congress to determine how they will hold the former president accountable and what the mechanics and timeline of that process will be.”

Watch here:

26746626-e32a-415a-9afe-5b7658e98c37.mp4
01:01 - Source: cnn

White House announces new steps to combat domestic violent extremism

White House press secretary Jen Psaki announced a slew of actions the Biden administration will take to combat domestic violent extremism in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol.

She said the initial work will fall into three areas:

  • First, she announced President Biden tasked the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to compile a “comprehensive threat assessment, coordinated with the FBI and DHS on domestic violent extremism,” adding that the analysis will come from across government and non-governmental agencies.
  • She also said the administration will build the National Security Council’s capability to focus on combating domestic extremism. “As a part of this the NSC will undertake a policy review effort to determine how the government can share information better about this threat, support efforts to prevent radicalization, disrupt violent extremist networks, and more,” Psaki said.
  • Finally, Psaki said the administration will be “coordinating relevant parts of the federal government to enhance and accelerate efforts to address DVE.” “This considered NSC convened process will focus on addressing evolving threats, radicalization, the role of social media, opportunities to improve information sharing, operational responses, and more,” Psaki said. 

WATCH:

a9c966f4-0058-46e7-acd3-a81ef334401e.mp4
02:02 - Source: cnn

Biden will speak with Mexico's president and Canada's prime minister today

The White House confirmed that President Biden will speak with Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador later today.

Obrador will be the second foreign leader Biden speaks with during his presidency.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said a readout of the call would be provided.

Biden will also speak with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday.

President Biden will meet with Vice President Harris weekly, White House says

President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are planning to have lunch weekly, the White House said Friday.

The two had their first lunch as White House press secretary Jen Psaki held a press briefing Friday afternoon. 

Psaki said Friday’s lunch focused on, “discussing their agenda, particularly getting relief to working families and containing the Covid crisis.”

“I’m sure they’ll talk about the last 48 hours as well,” she added.

Biden called the head of the National Guard earlier today, press secretary says

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters in today’s White House briefing that President Biden called Gen. Daniel Hokanson, who heads the National Guard, “to thank him for not just his work of the last few weeks, but the work of the National Guard, over the last several years.”

He offered “any assistance needed, of both the government but also on a personal level, and asked him to reach out if there was anything that he ever needed,” Psaki continued.

Late last night, reports that thousands of National Guard troops were moved to a parking garage after they were told they could no longer use space within the US Capitol Complex sparked bipartisan outrage on Capitol Hill, leading to the units being welcomed back to the Capitol Visitor’s Center.

Psaki pointed to Biden’s personal connection to the National Guard, pointing to his late son, Beau Biden, who served in the National Guard.

WATCH:

b2c49b8d-afcc-47ef-9d8d-03881b036b4f.mp4
00:35 - Source: cnn

READ MORE

Biden unveils Covid-19 plan based on ‘science not politics’ as he signs new initiatives
Biden inheriting nonexistent coronavirus vaccine distribution plan and must start ‘from scratch,’ sources say
Biden pushes to reopen schools within 100 days
Fauci talks ‘liberating feeling’ serving under Biden versus Trump
Inside Joe Biden’s newly decorated Oval Office
Congress approves waiver for Biden defense secretary pick Lloyd Austin
Buttigieg eyes more mask restrictions on ‘all modes of transportation’

READ MORE

Biden unveils Covid-19 plan based on ‘science not politics’ as he signs new initiatives
Biden inheriting nonexistent coronavirus vaccine distribution plan and must start ‘from scratch,’ sources say
Biden pushes to reopen schools within 100 days
Fauci talks ‘liberating feeling’ serving under Biden versus Trump
Inside Joe Biden’s newly decorated Oval Office
Congress approves waiver for Biden defense secretary pick Lloyd Austin
Buttigieg eyes more mask restrictions on ‘all modes of transportation’