WASHINGTON — US President-elect Joe Biden's top advisors on Sunday outlined his plans to tackle the nation's multiple crises while balancing the impeachment trial of Donald Trump, as an historic inauguration week opens in the United States.
Washington was under the watch of thousands of National Guard troops and ringed with security barriers ahead of Biden's swearing in Wednesday, in a nation still rattled by the January 6 attack on the Capitol.
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"I hope that the Senate leaders on a bipartisan basis have found a way to move forward on all their responsibilities," including the impeachment trial and dealing with the coronavirus pandemic, Biden's incoming chief of staff Ron Klain told CNN.
But injecting a note of urgency, he warned that the nation could reach the awful total of 500,000 COVID-19 deaths sometime next month. The toll on Sunday surpassed 397,000, according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.
As the president-elect prepares to take power in a city where only two weeks earlier Trump supporters launched a violent attempt to overturn the election, Biden faces overlapping crises: not only the pandemic but a struggling economy, climate change and racial tensions.
Biden wants the Congress to act quickly on a massive, $1.9 trillion stimulus plan to revive the economy, and he plans a blitz to accelerate America's stumbling Covid vaccine rollout.
His target of seeing 100 million doses of coronavirus vaccine injected within his first 100 days in office is "absolutely" achievable, top US scientist Anthony Fauci told NBC on Sunday.
"The feasibility of his goal is absolutely clear, there’s no doubt about it," said Fauci, who will be Biden's chief advisor on the virus, as he was Trump's.
Shadow of uncertainty
But the coming Senate impeachment trial — an unprecedented second for Trump — casts a shadow over Biden's path forward.
Democratic congressional leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer have yet to say when the trial will begin.
"I don't think there's any promised date when Speaker Pelosi is going to present the articles of impeachment," Dick Durbin, a Democratic leader in the Senate, told CNN.
"We understand, under the Constitution, we have a responsibility to act as quickly as possible."
Biden has said he hopes the Congress can deal with that stark distraction even while advancing his aggressive agenda.
Adding to the uncertainty is a badly riven Republican Party — divided over Trump's false assertions that he won November's election, his fanning of emotions ahead of the deadly Capitol invasion, and on the future direction of the party.
'Socialized policy'
One frequent Trump confidant, Senator Lindsey Graham, warned Sunday on Fox News' Sunday Morning Futures that Republicans may not offer Biden much of a grace period, if any — saying the president-elect might be trying to move too far too fast.
"I think we are going to have in the first hundred days by the Biden administration the most aggressive socialized policy effort in the history of the country," he said.
He added, "No good comes from impeaching President Trump (when he is) out of office."
But Klain repeated Biden's affirmation that the Senate — controlled only narrowly by Democrats — could handle both an impeachment trial and the new Biden agenda.
He added Biden would be able to take a flurry of executive actions — requiring no congressional approval — as early as Wednesday afternoon.
They will include returning the country to the Paris climate accord and ending the travel ban on some mainly Muslim countries.
A muted celebration
Plans for the inauguration — in normal times a bracing, even joyous, tribute to peaceful transition — had already been scaled down out of pandemic concerns. Fears of new violence by unyielding Trump supporters after the January 6 riot have cast a further pall.
Thousands of National Guard troops were filling downtown Washington, the normal crowd has been banned, and streets have been blocked with heavy trucks and concrete barriers.
"This will be an inaugural like no other, in large part because of COVID," Vice President-elect Kamala Harris said in an interview aired Sunday on CBS.
"But we are going to get sworn in. And we're going to do the job we were hired to do."