Biden faults ‘roadblocks’ as his team manages transition from Trump

President-elect Joe Biden delivers remarks Monday after being briefed by members of his foreign policy and national security teams.
(Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)

President-elect Joe Biden delivers remarks Monday after being briefed by members of his foreign policy and national security teams. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)

President-elect Joe Biden is complaining that the outgoing Trump administration has thrown up some “roadblocks” as he and advisers prepare to take the White House.

In prepared remarks Monday in Wilmington, Del., Biden said that he and his team have been frustrated by what he called a lack of cooperation, especially at the Department of Defense and with the Office of Management and Budget.

“All of it makes it harder for our government to protect the American people,” Biden said, calling the alleged failures of cooperation from political leaders at the agencies “nothing short of irresponsibility.”

Biden’s comments followed an earlier flap within Washington about meetings between current Pentagon leaders and those in the incoming camp; current DoD officials had downplayed accounts about delays or cancellations but Biden made clear on Monday that he remains unhappy about the state of that relationship.

Biden said he and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris need a complete picture of the workings of government because of the magnitude of the challenges they’ll confront on taking office next month.

“We need to make sure nothing is lost in the handoff between administrations,” he said. “We need full visibility.”

The president-elect said not all agencies have been problematic and some of the interactions his team is having are “exemplary.” Broadly, however, he described a national security and foreign policy institution in Washington that includes many entities Biden said were “hollowed out,” short on “personnel, capacity and morale” and in which “policy processes have atrophied or been sidelined.”

Trump dismissed his most recent Senate-confirmed secretary of defense, Mark Esper, and replaced him with an acting interim officer, Chris Miller. The White House also replaced a number of other Pentagon leaders with interim replacements for the final weeks until Inauguration Day.

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