Overview: Biden heads to Georgia to campaign in Senate runoffs
Fresh off the Electoral College affirming his win, Biden is returning to the campaign trail Tuesday to stump for Georgia's Senate runoffs and the promise he could pass the big ticket legislation through Congress he's hoping for -- as the balance of power in the incoming Senate hangs on two seats there.
Biden is slated to speak at an afternoon, drive-in rally in Atlanta for Democratic Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock, challengers to sitting GOP Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Purdue in the Jan. 5 runoff. Early voting kicked off in Georgia Monday.
After the Electoral College officially cemented his victory Monday, Biden delivered his strongest rebuke of Trump and his ongoing challenges to the election’s outcome in a primetime address, calling on the country to move on and noting that Trump hasn't been able to prove the allegations of fraud he's made.
“The integrity of our elections remains intact. And now it is time to turn the page, as we’ve done throughout our history. To unite. To heal," Biden said.
The pressure is now on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to do just that as he's yet to publicly acknowledge Biden's win even as some Senate Republicans -- and Russian President Vladimir Putin -- have done so since the Electoral College vote.
Trump has no public events on his schedule Tuesday -- refusing to acknowledge both his election loss and the country's worsening death toll from the coronavirus pandemic -- but continues to air his grievances with the election and a litany of false claims on Twitter.
The president also announced on Twitter Monday Attorney General William Barr is resigning from the administration before Christmas -- with only a month left to go.