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Trump-Biden transition updates: At least 20 arrested, 1 stabbed at DC protests

The event was largely peaceful, but grew violent after crowds thinned at night.

Last Updated: November 16, 2020, 2:06 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 one week after Biden was projected as the winner of the presidential race.

Trump has largely hunkered down inside the White House since the election, but on Saturday his motorcade drove drove past supporters gathered to rally in Washington, D.C., on his way to play golf.

Biden, meanwhile, is pressing forward, meeting with transition advisers in Delaware and calling Trump's refusal to concede "an embarrassment."

The Biden transition team and the Trump administration are in a standoff over whether Biden should be granted access to federal resources allocated for the transition of power. The General Services Administration, headed by a Trump appointee, has yet to officially recognize Biden as the victor in the election, preventing Biden's team from gaining full access to government funds and security information.

But a growing number of Republican senators are calling on the administration to start giving Biden classified intelligence briefings, a sign that support for Trump's refusal to concede the election may be waning among his allies on Capitol Hill.

Top headlines:

Here is how the transition is unfolding. All times Eastern.
Nov 10, 2020, 2:07 PM EST

Pence ignores questions about whether it's time to concede

A masked Vice President Mike Pence, arriving at the Senate GOP lunch Tuesday afternoon on Capitol Hill, ignored reporter questions about whether it's time for the president to concede the presidential race.

"Mr. Vice President, is it time to concede?" a reporter asked. "Is there really any evidence of fraud?" 

The vice president did not answer and kept on walking.

Vice President Mike Pence arrives for the weekly Senate Republican lunch on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 10, 2020.
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Pence, in contrast to Trump, has been maintaining a public schedule despite the president's projected loss over the weekend. His visit to Capitol Hill comes one day after leading his first coronavirus task force meeting in some three weeks. Pence made sure cameras got a shot of him walking across from the Executive Office Building to the West Wing before meeting with the president Monday.

Meanwhile, this is the fifth day Trump has no public schedule.

-ABC News' Jordyn Phelps

Nov 10, 2020, 1:18 PM EST

Boris Johnson congratulates Biden despite Trump's refusal to concede

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson joins a growing list of foreign heads of state to congratulate Biden despite Trump's continued refusal to concede.

Johnson tweeted Tuesday afternoon that the two discussed their "shared priorities – from tackling climate change, to promoting democracy, and building back better from the coronavirus pandemic."

A Downing Street spokesperson told pool reporters Johnson and Biden discussed the countries' partnership through NATO -- an alliance Trump has repeatedly slammed.

Johnson also invited Biden to attend the COP26 climate change summit that the United Kingdom is hosting in Glasgow next year and said he also looks forward to seeing him when the UK hosts the G7 Summit in 2021, according to the spokesperson.

Nov 10, 2020, 12:48 PM EST

Democrats slam Barr while Republicans support Trump legal battles

Democrats and Republicans, as expected, are split over whether Attorney General William Barr’s memo to U.S. attorneys -- in which he authorized them to probe widespread voter fraud, despite no evidence of its existence having surfaced -- was appropriate to send. 

“Attorney General Barr has unfortunately done great harm to the reputation of that office, and to the Department of Justice,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., calling his action “unprecedented and unforgiving.”

“The notion that the Department of Justice is going to interfere in the election process before the president leaves, to me, is just inexcusable. It's not -- it's no surprise,” he added. 

House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., also criticized Barr in a written statement Tuesday, arguing the decision “speaks to Barr’s dangerous and irresponsible impulse to pander to the President’s worst instincts.”

The U.S. Capitol is viewed through the columns of the Supreme Court building in Washington, Nov. 4, 2020.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Sen. Ted Kennedy, R-La., a close ally to Trump, meanwhile, called it “perfectly appropriate,” adding the election isn’t over until the Trump team has had its cases heard.

“Tens of millions of Americans believe, whether you agree with them or not, that we need to send Big Bird to some of these states to teach them how to count,” Kennedy said. “For the integrity of the electoral process, and the system that we have chosen to effectuate our democracy, we have got to allow our courts to hear these allegations of voting irregularities by the president and anyone else who wants to bring them forward.”

-ABC News' Allison Pecorin and John Parkinson

Nov 10, 2020, 12:17 PM EST

Biden team slams Barr for authorizing DOJ to probe alleged voter fraud

Bob Bauer, the Biden team's attorney tasked with leading its legal response to the election, slammed Attorney General William Barr after Barr, in a memo Monday night, authorized U.S. attorneys to pursue allegations of voter fraud, despite no evidence surfacing thus far of any widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election. 

“It is deeply unfortunate that Attorney General Barr chose to issue a memorandum that will only fuel the ‘specious, speculative, fanciful or far-fetched claims’ he professes to guard against,” Bauer said. “Those are the very kind of claims that the president and his lawyers are making unsuccessfully every day, as their lawsuits are laughed out of one court after another.”

Attorney General Bill Barr leaves the U.S. Capitol after meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in his office, Nov. 9, 2020 in Washington, D.C.
Samuel Corum/Getty Images

“But, in the end, American democracy is stronger than any clumsy and cynical partisan political scheme,” Bauer added. 

In the memo Barr sent Monday evening, he authorized U.S. attorneys to "pursue substantial allegations of voting and vote tabulation irregularities” and said such inquiries "may be conducted if there are clear and apparently-credible allegations of irregularities that, if true, could potentially impact the outcome of a federal election in an individual State." 

The action comes days after ABC News and other outlets characterized Biden as the president-elect and raises the prospect that Trump is seeking to use the Justice Department to try to challenge the election.

-ABC News' Mary Bruce and Alexander Mallin

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