The Latest: Biden marks Veterans Day at Korean War Memorial
Columbia Basin Herald | UPDATED 4 years, 2 months AGO
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on President-elect Joe Biden (all times local):
11:25 a.m.
Joe Biden is marking Veterans Day with a visit to the Korean War Memorial in Philadelphia.
The president-elect is making a brief foray out with his wife, Jill, to the memorial, where he is laying a wreath.
Biden’s son Beau was a major in the Delaware Army National Guard and died in 2015 of brain cancer. Biden often spoke emotionally of his son's service on the campaign trail.
Jill Biden made military spouses and families one of her signature issues when Biden served as Barack Obama's vice president, and aides say that may be one of her focal points as first lady.
Biden otherwise is spending his Wednesday in private briefings with his transition team.
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HERE'S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PRESIDENT-ELECT JOE BIDEN'S TRANSITION TO THE WHITE HOUSE:
Vowing “to get right to work,” President-elect Joe Biden shrugs off President Donald Trump’s fierce refusal to accept the election outcome as “inconsequential,” even as Democrats elsewhere warn that the Republican president’s actions are dangerous.
Read more:
— AP Explains: Election’s validity intact despite Trump claims
— Analysis: GOP lets doubts about Biden’s legitimacy flourish
— Pompeo brushes aside results of presidential election
— Some big, early shifts on immigration expected under Biden
— Kamala Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, poised to break stereotypes
— Dems clinch House control, but majority likely to shrink
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HERE'S WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON:
11:05 a.m.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called Donald Trump the “previous president” of the United States and said it was “refreshing” to talk to President-elect Joe Biden.
Johnson has had a warm relationship with Trump. He congratulated Biden on his election victory in a phone call on Tuesday.
Johnson told British lawmakers on Wednesday that he and Biden discussed plans to “stick up for NATO and to work together in the fight against climate change” -- issues on which Trump and the British leader have starkly different views.
Johnson says it was “refreshing” to have that conversation and he looks forward to “many more.”
He says he has had “a good relationship with the previous president” and it’s “the duty of all prime ministers to have a good relationship with the White House.” But he says he was “delighted to find the many areas in which the incoming Biden-Harris administration is able to make common cause with” British lawmakers.