Trump campaign distances itself from attorney Sidney Powell: Transition updates

The campaign now says she's not a member of the president's legal team.

Last Updated: November 23, 2020, 1:31 PM EST

President-elect Joe Biden is moving forward with transition plans, capping a tumultuous and tension-filled campaign during a historic pandemic against President Donald Trump, who still refuses to concede the election two weeks after Biden was projected as the winner and is taking extraordinary moves to challenge the results.

Running out of legal alternatives to override the election loss, Trump invited Michigan's top Republican state lawmakers to visit the White House on Friday, as he and allies pursue a pressure campaign to overturn results in a state Biden won by more than 150,000 votes.

Despite Trump's roadblocks and his administration refusing to recognize Biden as the president-elect, Biden is forging ahead as he prepares to announce key Cabinet positions.

Though Trump has alleged widespread voter fraud, he and his campaign haven't been able to provide the evidence to substantiate their claims and the majority of their lawsuits have already resulted in unfavorable outcomes.

Top headlines:

Here is how the transition unfolded this past week. All times Eastern.
Nov 18, 2020, 4:03 PM EST

Biden speaks of 'brick walls' in the Senate

On a private video call with supporters Wednesday, Biden acknowledged the uphill battle he’s likely to face in the Senate but stressed his fundamental belief that he knows the chamber well enough to achieve consensus. 

“We're going to run into some real brick walls initially in the Senate unless we’re able to turn around Georgia and pick up those two seats, but even then it's gonna be hard,” Biden said. 

“I believe -- I know the place -- I believe we can ultimately bring it together,” the president-elect continued.

Biden spoke about the need to unite the country given more than 70 million people voted for Trump, stopping himself short, before adding that “at least half those folks…are just looking for answers. They’re not bad folks."

-ABC News' Molly Nagle

Nov 18, 2020, 3:37 PM EST

Biden laments that his transition 'should be further along' on COVID-19

At one point during an at-times emotional and technologically challenged virtual roundtable with workers on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis on Wednesday afternoon, Biden lamented that the General Services Administration has still not ascertained him as the winner of the election.

He warned that the delay is going to put his administration weeks behind in terms of a vaccine distribution program and other steps he plans to take to combat the spread of the virus.

“I am optimistic, but we should be further along,” Biden told a group, citing a law which says the GSA may recognize the apparent winner. "And we've been unable to get access to the kinds of things we need to know about the depth of the stockpiles. We know there's not much at all. We get to the point where we have a sense of when these vaccines comes out, how they'll be distributed, who will be first in line, what the plan is."

Biden said unless data and information from the federal government are made available to his team soon, they’re going to be “behind by weeks or months,” on the critically important vaccine program.

“So, I just want to tell you that that's the only slow down right now that we have," Biden said.

President-elect Joe Biden leaves The Queen theater on Nov. 18, 2020, in Wilmington, Del.
Andrew Harnik/AP

-ABC News' John Verhovek, Molly Nagle and Beatrice Peterson

Nov 18, 2020, 2:20 PM EST

Biden meets with front-line health care workers in virtual roundtable 

While the Trump administration blocks Biden’s transition and subsequent access to federal pandemic plans, Biden is taking matters into his own hands, speaking directly with front-line health care workers in a virtual roundtable as cases surge across the country. 

Joined by a handful of front-line health care workers from different states including a firefighter paramedic from Indiana, a home care worker from Washington and a nurse from Minnesota, Biden opened the roundtable by thanking them for their participation and promising to protect them.

“It's not enough to praise you, we have to protect you. We have to pay you. And you deserve leadership that listens to you and that works as hard for you as you do for the families in your communities,” Biden said from the Queen Theater in Wilmington, Delaware. 

President-elect Joe Biden enters The Queen theater ahead of a virtual meeting with frontline healthcare workers in Wilmington, Del., Nov. 18, 2020.
Tom Brenner/Reuters

The participants took turns sharing their stories with Biden telling them he’d have more questions for them after everyone spoke. Mary Turner, president of the Minnesota Nurses Association, got choked up when talking about how she’s been on the picket line for months urging the federal government to do more in its response. 

Unfortunately, the federal government has not been there. As a result, the pandemic is surging and front-line workers are getting sick and die,” she said through tears. “Nurses across the country were so relieved and grateful, Mr. President-elect, when you committed to take your passion that we need to have to get this pandemic under control.”

Nov 18, 2020, 1:41 PM EST

Nearing end of audit, Georgia finds Biden still leading Trump after missing votes added

In the morning news conference from Georgia’s secretary of state’s office, Gabriel Sterling said while he couldn’t give an exact number of counties that were completely finished with the audit, results in 112 counties were either exactly the same as the county originally reported or the count was within single digits of what was originally reported.

Of these counties, 58 had zero deviations and 20 had deviations of just one vote in either direction.

As of about 11 a.m. Wednesday, 4,968,000 ballots had been hand-counted as part of the audit of the approximately 5 million ballots cast in the presidential race, according to Sterling.

He said that it’s likely results of the audit won’t be made public until Thursday, but that he would have more concrete guidance during a 4 p.m. press conference.

PHOTO:A Chatham County election official posts a sign in the public viewing area before the start of a ballot audit, Nov. 13, 2020, in Savannah, Ga
A Chatham County election official posts a sign in the public viewing area before the start of a ballot audit, Nov. 13, 2020, in Savannah, Ga.
Stephen B. Morton/AP

Sterling also announced that there was one additional county -- Douglas -- where an uncounted memory card of votes was discovered, raising the total to four counties in Georgia that have found unreported votes during the audit. Douglas County failed to upload results stored on one memory card from an election day precinct. The county realized the error when the hand count came up with more ballots than was reported.

The card revealed 128 votes for Trump, 156 votes for Biden and seven votes for Libertarian Jo Jorgenson.

Heading into the audit, Biden led by a margin of about 14,000 votes, and, with all the previously unreported ballots added, the margin in Biden's favor was 12,781 votes, according to Sterling. 

-ABC News' Quinn Scanlan

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