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As it happenedended

Biden news: President assesses storm damage in California as classified documents scandal hurts polls

President Biden’s visit comes as White House remains adamant it will not interfere in the ongoing investigation into classified documents

Oliver O'Connell
Friday 20 January 2023 13:17 GMT
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President Biden will survey storm damages in Santa Cruz County

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President Joe Biden assessed storm damage in Santa Cruz County, California on Thursday accompanied by Governor Gavin Newsom. Mr Biden met first responders and locals impacted by the succession of storms that struck the region.

“If anybody doubts the climate is changing, then they must’ve been asleep for the last couple years,” the president said during remarks from a storm-damaged beach in the town of Capitola.

During the California tour, Mr Biden continued to defend how his office handled classified material, amid ongoing investigations from the DoJ.

“I think you’re going to find there’s nothing there. There’s no there there,” he said.

His visit comes a day shy of his second anniversary in the White House, and as the US hits the debt ceiling forcing the government to take “extraordinary measures to make payments on the national debt”.

Biden has battled inflation, but more economic headwinds await

Eric Garcia reports on why high inflation, a hallmark of President Biden’s second year in the White House, is such a tricky issue to overcome — and what might come next.

Inflation rocked Biden’s second year. There’s more trouble on the horizon

High inflation was a hallmark of President Biden’s second year in office. Eric Garcia reports on why it’s such a tricky issue to overcome

Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 22:00

Biden surveys storm damage up close

After an aerial tour of the region’s storm damage, President Joe Biden visited business owners whose properties had been devastated by the atmospheric river that slammed into California for much of January.

Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 22:11

Investigation? Review? Legal process?

The language the White House uses to describe the special counsel investigation into the handling of classified documents that ended up in a farage and a former office of President Joe Biden’s after his time as vice president is very carefully chosen.

Any White House or campaign tends to choose its words carefully, but never moreso than when under a prosecutor’s scrutiny. It’s a rhetorical dance where political figures weigh demands for full disclosure against the political imperative to cast investigations in the least ominous light — not to mention the desire to avoid potential criminal charges.

Read on:

"Investigation"? Nope, "review:" White House describes probe

When Hillary Clinton was running for president in 2016, she and her campaign called the FBI’s scrutiny of her private email server a “security review.”

Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 22:30

In pictures: Biden surveys California storm damage

President Joe Biden, California Governor Gavin Newsom, and a small business owner survey damage caused by recent heavy storms in Capitola, California
President Joe Biden, California Governor Gavin Newsom, and a small business owner survey damage caused by recent heavy storms in Capitola, California (AFP via Getty Images)
President Joe Biden inspects storm-caused damage as he visits Paradise Beach Grille in Capitola, California
President Joe Biden inspects storm-caused damage as he visits Paradise Beach Grille in Capitola, California (REUTERS)
People look on as President Joe Biden surveys damage caused by recent heavy storms
People look on as President Joe Biden surveys damage caused by recent heavy storms (AFP via Getty Images)
An aerial view of the damage along the coast of California
An aerial view of the damage along the coast of California (AFP via Getty Images)
Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 22:41

Classified documents case starting to hurt Biden, poll finds

Nearly two-thirds of American adults support Congress investigating classified documents found at President Joe Biden’s home and post-vice presidential office, according to a new poll.

The survey from Yahoo News/YouGov found that 39 per cent of Democrats per cent of Democratic-leaning independents want to see another person be the Democratic nominee for president in 2024, while 38 per cent said they wanted Mr Biden. In December, 46 per cent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents wanted Mr Biden to be the nominee and 37 per cent said “someone else”, marking a drop in support for the incumbent president.

In addition, the number of people who said they were “not sure” about who they wanted as the Democratic nomineee climbed seven points in the past month.

Eric Garcia has the details.

Classified documents case is starting to become a problem for Biden, poll finds

The number of Democrats who want to see a new nominee increased in the past month, poll finds

Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 22:50

Debt ceiling: What they’re saying

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen:

This letter serves to notify you, of the extraordinary measures Treasury began using today ... I respectfully urge Congress to act promptly to protect the full faith and credit of the US.

Ways & Means Committee Chair Jason Smith:

Instead of attacking his political opponents, President Biden should be spending this time working with House Republicans to address the debt ceiling in a way that imposes some fiscal sanity. Otherwise, the president is simply scheduling America’s next debt crisis.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer:

If the MAGA GOP stops paying our nation’s bills, Americans will be the ones to pay the price. Political brinkmanship with the debt limit would be a massive hit to local economies and American families and would be nothing less than an economic crisis at the hands of the Republicans.

Oliver O'Connell19 January 2023 23:30

Biden highlights connection between climate change and California storms

President Biden underscored the link between the climate crisis and the recent extreme weather in California during a visit to hard-hit areas along the state’s Central Coast region.

“If anybody doubts the climate is changing, then they must’ve been asleep for the last couple years,” the president said, joined by California governor Gavin Newsom and a group of first responders.

“Extreme weather caused by climate change means stronger and more frequent storms, more intense drought, longer wildfire seasons, all of which threatens communities across California, so we have to invest in stronger infrastructure,” he added.

You can watch Mr Biden’s full remarks here.

Read more about the president’s climate legacy so far in this report from Louise Boyle.

Biden’s $369bn green plan was hailed as a triumph – but does it live up to the hype?

The Inflation Reduction Act has been lauded as a major victory for the Biden administration, writes senior climate correspondent Louise Boyle. But can it deliver the emissions cuts so desperately needed?

 

Josh Marcus19 January 2023 23:39

Biden details extent of California storm damage and federal recovery effort

The president’s remarks today from California shined a light on the extent of storm damage in the state, and on the immense federal effort to begin the rebuilding process.

Mr Biden, speaking from a beach on the Central Coast, detailed how at the worst parts of the recent round of storms, over 200,000 lost power and 150,000 faced evacuation orders.

All together, 21 people died in the storms, the president added.

The president, however, said he was “cautiously optimistic” that the worst was over and the rebuilding process could begin soon.

Over 500 employees of the FEMA disaster agency are on the ground in the state, and have supplies for 100,000 meals and 10,000 shelter cots.

“We’ll be with you every step of the way,” Mr Biden said to conclude his speech.

Josh Marcus20 January 2023 00:00

Biden links California storm damage to climate change as he surveys damage

President Joe Biden on Thursday pledged to put the full force of the federal government behind efforts to help Northern California communities rebuild from a series of devastating floods left by a massive series of storms over the last few weeks.

“The country is here for you and with you. We are not leaving until things are built back, and built back better than they were before,” he said. “As you recover ... we’ll be with you every step of the way”.

Mr Biden, who had travelled to California to survey the wide-scale destruction left in the wake of massive rainfall brought by a phenomenon meteorologists call an atmospheric river, said the infrastructure law he signed last year will help Californians “build back stronger” after this and other disasters. He also noted that his administration has dispensed over $9bn in aid to the Golden State after other disasters, which he attributed to climate change.

Louise Boyle and Andrew Feinberg have the full story.

Biden links California storm damage to climate change as he surveys damage

A series of ‘atmospheric rivers’ battered 41 of the state’s 58 counties from the beginning of the year

Josh Marcus20 January 2023 00:15

US hits debt ceiling forcing government to take ‘extraordinary measures’

The United States hit the debt limit on Thursday, which triggered the US Treasury Department to take “extraordinary measures” to ensure that the country could fulfill its debt obligations.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sent a letter to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Thursday warning that her department would begin taking “extraordinary measures.” She told Mr McCarthy in her letter that she will be “unable” to fully invest the portion of the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund that is not immediately required to pay beneficiaries.

She also told him that she would begin a “debt suspension period” starting on Sunday and continuing into 5 June 2023.

Eric Garcia has the latest from Washington, DC.

US has hit the debt ceiling – here’s what that means

The debt limit sets up a fight between the White House and House Republicans

Oliver O'Connell20 January 2023 00:30

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