Biden says 'no time to waste' on COVID relief bill

He made brief remarks Saturday after the House passed the legislation.

This is Day 40 of the administration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.


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First lady visits the Houston Food Bank

First lady Jill Biden arrived at the Houston Food Bank around 1 p.m. on Friday with Texas first lady Cecilia Abbott, according to a pool report.

Biden and Abbott first stopped in the main lobby for several minutes and received a rundown of the food bank’s food distribution process from Nicole Lander, the organization’s chief impact officer. Lander told the first ladies that the food bank distributes an average of 18 million pounds of food per month during disasters, the equivalent of 20 tractor-trailer loads. Lander also noted that one in four children in the Houston area lacks consistent access to nutritious food, according to the report.

Biden and Abbott then moved to a warehouse room and joined volunteers in packing bags of food for the food bank’s Backpack Buddy program, which distributes food on weekends to students who rely on school meals during the week.

Biden packed canned peaches, while Abbott packed boxes of raisins.

They were joined by Houston Independent School District Interim Superintendent Grenita Lathan, according to the pool report.

After their first stop, Biden and Abbott moved to a separate room to pack meals for seniors through the food bank’s Senior Box program, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and provides a monthly box of food to roughly 11,000 low-income seniors in the Houston area, a separate pool report said.

Biden packed quick oats into boxes. Abbott also helped pack food boxes nearby, wearing a face mask emblazoned with the Texas flag.


Biden tours Houston emergency management center

Biden toured the Harris County Emergency Operations Center in Houston as the first first stop on his trip in Texas in the wake of deadly winter storms. He was joined by Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and other lawmakers and local officials.

"It’s a hell of an operation you’ve got here," Biden said upon arriving to the center.

The director of the center, Mark Sloan, detailed the operations of the facility and of the impact of the winter storms on the region. He said that of the 5 million residents in the county, the storm left 1.5 million people without power and heat and detailed the county's trouble getting water to residents, noting that approximately 3.5 million were without water. He talked about the emergency response, including handing out meals and water.

Biden thanked the workers, saying they were saving lives and "doing God's work."


Biden administration announces 'Khashoggi policy'

In a statement shared with Congress, the Biden administration announced Friday that it is creating a new “Khashoggi policy” to impose visa restrictions on any foreign official believed to be directly involved in plots against dissidents, or any “serious, extraterritorial counter-dissident activities,” like the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The State Department has identified 76 Saudi individuals who Secretary of State Antony Blinken says have been hit with these penalties. It’s unclear if Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is in that group because visas are confidential under U.S. law. But the “Khashoggi ban,” as Blinken calls it, will apply to their family members as well.

The Treasury Department has also sanctioned one former Saudi official, Deputy Intelligence Chief Ahmad Hassan Mohammed al Asiri, another close confidant of bin Salman, but one who was fired after Khashoggi’s murder. But for now, bin Salman escapes U.S. financial penalties—with many U.S. lawmakers already calling for him to face specific sanctions.

“While the United States remains invested in its relationship with Saudi Arabia, President Biden has made clear that partnership must reflect U.S. values,” Blinken said, adding the U.S. will no longer tolerate these extraterritorial plots and the State Department will begin reporting on them in its annual human rights report.

-ABC News' Conor Finnegan and Trish Turner


Biden fist-bumps Gov. Greg Abbott as he arrives in Texas

Biden was greeted on the tarmac in Texas on Friday by Gov. Greg Abbott who he fist-bumped after touching down for his first presidential disaster visit.

Biden was also greeted on the tarmac by a group of lawmakers including Democratic Texas Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee, Al Green, Lizzie Pannill Fletcher and Sylvia Garcia, as well as Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo.

First lady Jill Biden also gave a fist-bump to Abbott and accepted a bouquet of flowers, as Biden bumped elbows with Jackson Lee and Green, who also took a photo of him. Biden stood near the two Democratic lawmakers and chatted for a few moments before moving on to speak with other elected officials.

-ABC News' Molly Nagle


Republicans vote by proxy -- after slamming the idea a year ago

Rep. Ted Budd, R-N.C., had a message for Democrats last summer about their proxy voting system set up during the pandemic: it was an "unconstitutional scheme."

"If you use Nancy Pelosi's proxy to skip work, you shouldn't get paid. It's as simple as that," he said in a June 30 Facebook video introducing his new bill withholding member pay for proxy voting.

Budd wasn't alone: A handful of House Republicans previously critical of the proxy vote system submitted letters to have colleagues vote for them, while they were scheduled to appear at CPAC.

Freshman Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., tweeted last summer that leaders "show up no matter how uncertain the times are," and that Democrats were "cowards for hiding" and proxy voting.

He was also in Orlando on Friday, telling conservatives activists, "If we sit on the sidelines, we will not have a country to inherit."

"If we do not get involved and say that it is our duty to make sure that our country is responsible, that our country doesn't take away our liberties, then my friends, we will lose this nation," Cawthorn said.

Others Republicans scheduled to appear at CPAC on Friday who also planned to vote by proxy included Reps. Greg Steube of Florida, Virginia Foxx of North Carolina, and Matt Gaetz of Florida, who was one of the first Republicans to support proxy voting.

Curtis Kalin, a spokesman for Budd, said the congressman still opposes proxy voting, and will donate his salary for the days he used the system to a restaurant relief fund, given his bill last year, "The No Pay for Proxy Voting Act."

The Republicans who attended CPAC aren't alone in their questionable use of the proxy voting system -- established by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., last year to cut down member travel to Washington during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Last year, Rep. Greg Stanton, D-Ariz., was caught voting during a Transportation Committee hearing from a boat during a family trip to Utah. Stanton later apologized and said he "messed up." And several House Democrats voted by proxy last May in order to attend a SpaceX rocket launch in Florida.-ABC News' Benjamin Siegel