Biden administration officials are working against the clock doling out billions in grants and taking other steps to try to preserve at least some of the outgoing President’s legacy before President-elect Donald Trump takes office in January.
“Let’s make every day count,” President Joe Biden said in an address to the nation last week after Vice President Kamala Harris conceded defeat to Trump in the presidential race.
Trump has pledged to rescind unspent funds in Biden’s landmark climate and health care law and stop clean-energy development projects.
“There’s only one administration at a time,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told reporters at a news conference Thursday. “That’s true now, and it will also be true after January 20th. Our responsibility is to make good use of the funds that Congress has authorized for us and that we’re responsible for assigning and disbursing throughout the last three years.”
But Trump will control more than the purse strings come January. His administration also can propose new regulations to undo some of what the Biden administration did through the rule-making process.
Here are some of the moves the Biden administration is taking now:
Getting infrastructure spending out the door
Biden administration officials hope that projects funded under the $1 trillion infrastructure law and $375 billion climate law will endure beyond Biden’s term and are working to ensure that money from the landmark measures continues to flow.
On Friday, Buttigieg announced over $3.4 billion in grants for projects designed to improve passenger rail service, help U.S. ports, reduce highway deaths and support domestic manufacturing of sustainable transportation materials.
”We are investing in better transportation systems that touch every corner of the country and in the workers who will manufacture materials and build projects,″ he said. “Communities are going to see safer commutes, cleaner air and stronger supply chains that we all count on.″
Speeding up environmental goals
Announcements of major environmental grants and project approvals have sped up in recent months in what White House officials describe as “sprinting to the finish” of Biden’s four-year term.
The Environmental Protection Agency recently set a nationwide deadline for removal of lead pipes and announced nearly $3 billion to help local water systems comply. The agency also announced that oil and gas companies for the first time will have to pay a federal fee if they emit dangerous methane above certain levels.
The Energy Department, meanwhile, announced a $544 million loan to a Michigan company to expand manufacturing of high-quality silicon carbide wafers for electric vehicles. The loan is one of 28 deals totaling $37 billion granted under a clean-energy loan program that was revived and expanded under Biden.
“There is a new urgency to get it all done. We’re seeing explosions of money going out the door,” said Melinda Pierce, legislative director of the Sierra Club. Biden and his allies ”really want to finish the job they started.”
Ukraine aid
Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters this week that Biden wants to “spend down the authority that Congress has allocated and authorized before he leaves office. So we’re going to work very hard to make sure that happens.”
The Biden administration would have to rush $7.1 billion in weapons — $4.3 billion from the 2024 supplemental and $2.8 billion that is still on the books in savings due to the Pentagon recalculating the value of systems sent — from the Pentagon’s stockpiles in order to spend all of those funds obligated before Trump is sworn in.
There’s also another $2.2 billion available to put weapons systems on long-term contracts. However, recent aid packages have been much smaller in size, around $200 million to $300 million each.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has said the funds are already obligated, which should make them harder to take back because the incoming administration would have to reverse that.
Pressure to quickly confirm judicial picks
Another priority for the White House is getting Senate confirmation of as many federal Judges as possible before Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20.
The Senate this week voted 51-44 to confirm former prosecutor April Perry as a U.S. District Court Judge in northern Illinois. More than a dozen pending judicial nominees have advanced out of the Senate Judiciary Committee; eight judicial nominations are awaiting committee votes and six are waiting for committee hearings.
Trump has urged Republicans to oppose efforts to confirm judicial nominees. “No Judges should be approved during this period of time because the Democrats are looking to ram through their Judges as the Republicans fight over Leadership,” he wrote on social media site X on Nov. 10, before congressional Republicans chose their new leaders.
Student loan forgiveness
The Education Department has been hurrying to finalize a new federal rule that would cancel student loans for people who face financial hardship. The proposal — one of Biden’s only student loan plans that hasn’t been halted by federal courts — is in a public comment period scheduled to end Dec. 2.
After that, the Department would have a narrow window to finalize the rule and begin carrying it out, a process that usually takes months. Like Biden’s other efforts, it would almost certainly face a legal challenge.
Additionally, the Biden administration has room to speed up student loan cancellation for people who were already promised relief because they were cheated by their colleges, said Aaron Ament, an Education Department official for the Obama administration and president of the National Student Legal Defense Network.
Education Secretary Miguel Cardona could decide that case and others rather than hand them off to the Trump administration, which is expected to be far friendlier to for-profit colleges. “It’s a no-brainer,” Ament said. “There’s a good number of cases that have been sitting on Cardona’s desk. It’s hard to imagine that those would just be left untouched.”
Trump has not yet said what he would do on student loan forgiveness. However, he and Republicans have criticized Biden’s efforts.
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
8 comments
It's Complicated
November 15, 2024 at 11:52 am
Hunter Biden has been convicted of multiple felonies for violation of (rarely enforced) Federal Firearms Act laws, including lying on the Form 4493 when making firearms purchases, and Federal Income Tax Evasion. If Hunter had not bragged about it in print in his autobiography, he would have never been charged for the gun law violations.
There are generally Presidential Pardons and sentence commutations during the lame duck period of any outgoing POTUS, so it will be interesting to see if Hunter benefits. I would be stunned if Hunter does not get a Pardon. Honestly, if he issues a Pardon to Hunter, people will understand. They may beef about it, but in their hearts they will understand a father issuing a Pardon to his son as a twilight act in his political career.
During the Biden Presidency, he has issued thousands of Pardons and sentence commutations for Federal MJ convictions meeting specific criteria (non-violent, MJ possession used to level-up charges, etc.), and certain criteria for less than honorable or dishonorable discharges from the armed forces. According to The Hill, this week, there are 8,000 pending Pardon applications, which is likely logistically impossible to process before noon on January 20, 2025, when he leaves office. They will get to some of them.
A Day without MAGA
November 15, 2024 at 11:53 am
He should pardon all undocumented and confer citizenship upon as Lincoln did with slaves
PeterH
November 15, 2024 at 12:04 pm
Horrible suggestion.
4 more years of libturd crying
November 15, 2024 at 12:07 pm
Libturds are stupid
PeterH
November 15, 2024 at 12:13 pm
Fun Fact:
Off the cuff comments by Elon Musk, who by the way has received over $4 billion in State and Federal government subsidies, indicates he would like to eliminate $2 trillion dollars from government spending.
According to economist Larry Summer’s in a Fox News interview…..If Musk were to fire every single employee on the federal payroll ….. Musk would save recoup just 15% of his desired $2 trillion on savings.
“When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn’t become a king. The palace becomes a circus.”
TURKISH PROVERB
Cat 5 Sara
November 15, 2024 at 1:33 pm
They not going anywhere,and you will be bitching the next four years,they are leaving without putting up a fight, Remember the Alamo
4 more years of libturd crying
November 15, 2024 at 1:35 pm
You said a hurricane would hit on election day. You are such a lying sack of shit!
EARL PITTS AMERICAN
November 17, 2024 at 12:52 pm
Good afternoon America,
I wager one of Joe’s aids will give him a complementary wank as he is performing Joe’s final diaper change in The White House.
Thank you America,
EARL PITTS AMERICAN
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