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Transition Briefing: Passing the Presidency to Donald Trump | Transition Briefing: Passing the Presidency to Donald Trump |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Welcome to the new Trump Transition Briefing, a rundown of notable events in Washington’s changing of the guard from President Obama to President-elect Donald J. Trump. Here are the things we are watching for on Thursday. | Welcome to the new Trump Transition Briefing, a rundown of notable events in Washington’s changing of the guard from President Obama to President-elect Donald J. Trump. Here are the things we are watching for on Thursday. |
Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former mayor of New York, expressed interest on Thursday morning in being attorney general, telling CNN, “I certainly have the energy, and there’s probably nobody who knows the Justice Department better than me.” | |
The next question: Would he actually make good on Mr. Trump’s promise to put Hillary Clinton in jail? | |
Mr. Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, left the door open on Wednesday. So did Mr. Giuliani on Fox News when he said Mr. Obama should not pardon Mrs. Clinton for alleged mishandling of classified information on her private server. | |
“I don’t like to see America become a country in which we prosecute people, you know, about politics,” he said. “On the other hand, there are deep and disturbing issues there in which if you don’t investigate them — ” | |
The Fox News hosts finished the sentence: “They’re going to continue.” | |
Legal analysts say that a Trump attorney general would wield the power to open a new investigation, even with a special prosecutor. But he could not guarantee the outcome. | |
Mr. Trump’s already hectic schedule on Thursday got a new meeting. Besides Mr. Obama and the House speaker, Paul D. Ryan, he and Vice President-elect Mike Pence will break bread with Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, in the Capitol at 1:30. | |
Happily for Mr. Trump, Mr. McConnell had nary a negative word about the head of his party during the campaign. | |
Mr. Obama and Mr. Trump are set to get together at the White House, a significant step in the handoff and a meeting between men who have had little good to say about each other. Mr. Trump has famously and falsely questioned Mr. Obama’s birthplace and citizenship, and Mr. Obama has scalded him as unfit for office and worse, including during a roasting at the 2011 White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. But the two seem to have agreed to let bygones be bygones to secure the nation’s traditional peaceful transition of power. | Mr. Obama and Mr. Trump are set to get together at the White House, a significant step in the handoff and a meeting between men who have had little good to say about each other. Mr. Trump has famously and falsely questioned Mr. Obama’s birthplace and citizenship, and Mr. Obama has scalded him as unfit for office and worse, including during a roasting at the 2011 White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. But the two seem to have agreed to let bygones be bygones to secure the nation’s traditional peaceful transition of power. |
In remarks at the White House on Wednesday, Mr. Obama promised that his staff would do all it could to bring about a successful handover. Will that include a friendly photo of the two adversaries? | In remarks at the White House on Wednesday, Mr. Obama promised that his staff would do all it could to bring about a successful handover. Will that include a friendly photo of the two adversaries? |
The White House will also begin putting into effect the plans it has been working on since spring to bring the president-elect and his team up to speed. “Landing teams” at each federal agency will begin working with aides designated by Mr. Trump to hand over key operations, some of them via iPads loaded with vital information, others through cloud-based systems or internal websites. Mr. Trump will also gain access to a new personnel tracking interface created by the Obama administration to handle the vast array of documents and data that is involved in hiring 4,000 political appointees in a short time. | The White House will also begin putting into effect the plans it has been working on since spring to bring the president-elect and his team up to speed. “Landing teams” at each federal agency will begin working with aides designated by Mr. Trump to hand over key operations, some of them via iPads loaded with vital information, others through cloud-based systems or internal websites. Mr. Trump will also gain access to a new personnel tracking interface created by the Obama administration to handle the vast array of documents and data that is involved in hiring 4,000 political appointees in a short time. |
As the losing vice-presidential candidate, Mr. Kaine will no doubt take some time to mourn what might have been. But he remains a senator from Virginia, and that will provide him a platform to challenge a President Trump. | As the losing vice-presidential candidate, Mr. Kaine will no doubt take some time to mourn what might have been. But he remains a senator from Virginia, and that will provide him a platform to challenge a President Trump. |
Mr. Kaine will have some competition for the anti-Trump mantle in several of his Senate colleagues: Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who ran against Hillary Clinton in the Democratic presidential primary; Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who emerged as a fierce, populist fighter on the trail; and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the chamber’s new Democratic leader. | Mr. Kaine will have some competition for the anti-Trump mantle in several of his Senate colleagues: Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who ran against Hillary Clinton in the Democratic presidential primary; Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who emerged as a fierce, populist fighter on the trail; and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the chamber’s new Democratic leader. |
But keep an eye on Mr. Kaine, who delivered Virginia for Mrs. Clinton and has two years before he faces re-election. Like House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, who emerged as the leader of the Republican opposition after losing as the 2012 vice-presidential nominee, Mr. Kaine may become someone Democrats rally around. And who knows? Democrats will need a candidate to challenge Mr. Trump in 2020. | But keep an eye on Mr. Kaine, who delivered Virginia for Mrs. Clinton and has two years before he faces re-election. Like House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, who emerged as the leader of the Republican opposition after losing as the 2012 vice-presidential nominee, Mr. Kaine may become someone Democrats rally around. And who knows? Democrats will need a candidate to challenge Mr. Trump in 2020. |
Fans of HBO’s “Game of Thrones” may have a new show to watch for the next 10 weeks: the jockeying and backbiting as Mr. Trump begins building out his administration. And Mr. Trump’s attacks on the Washington establishment, including Republicans, mean the pool of talent that he might draw from is much murkier. | |
There’s already talk, of course, that Mr. Trump may reward those who were very loyal to him. And the campaign operatives who engineered his victory are certain to have first dibs. | |
But the process of filling those jobs is never tidy, and there’s every reason to believe it will be even less so for Mr. Trump. So watch for the inevitable trial balloons that go nowhere and the opposition research from Democrats that scuttles at least a few of Mr. Trump’s first picks. |