logo
Ex-Biden aide agrees to testify to House committee about president's mental fitness while in office

Ex-Biden aide agrees to testify to House committee about president's mental fitness while in office

Yahoo11-06-2025
A former senior adviser to President Joe Biden has agreed to testify before the House Oversight Committee in a closed-door interview as part of its investigation into claims of Biden's cognitive decline while in office.
Neera Tanden, who served as a senior adviser, White House Staff Secretary, and Director of the Domestic Policy Council during the Biden administration, is set to testify before the committee on June 24, according to an Oversight Committee aide.
Her closed-door testimony will be recorded and reviewed as part of Republican committee members' investigation into Biden's mental acuity and the alleged cover-up by his staff and allies.
Republican Representative James Comer, the chairman of the committee, has accused Democrats, the media, and the Biden administration of 'propping up a man who was unfit to lead.' Comer believes the so-called 'cover up' allowed for the utilization of 'autopens' to issue 'blanket pardons' for members of the Biden family. President Donald Trump has made similar claims that the use of the autopen meant someone other than Biden was in charge of the White House during his term.
Tanden has acknowledged that the autopen is used in 'a lot' of administrations but has not provided any public comment on Biden's use of it or his cognitive function.
Comer had requested Tanden and other former staffers he's accused of engaging in a 'cover-up,' testify to the committee and threatened to subpoena those who do not voluntarily comply.
Tanden, 54, is a prominent Democratic political consultant who has worked in the Clinton, Obama and Biden administrations.
When Biden took office in 2020, he nominated Tanden to serve as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget. However, the nomination was considered controversial due to Tanden's history of name-calling in tweets. The White House eventually withdrew Tanden's nomination and appointed her senior adviser and staff secretary.
The testimony will come after a renewed focus on Biden's mental fitness, which was the subject of Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson's book Original Sin.
Comer has also requested testimony from Michael Donilon and Anita Dunn, former senior advisers; Bruce Reed, former deputy chief of staff; and Steve Ricchetti, the former counselor to the president.
Others subpoenaed include Anthony Bernal, a former senior adviser to First Lady Jill Biden; Ashley Williams, the former deputy director of Oval Office operations; and Annie Tomasini, the former deputy chief of staff.
Comer has also subpoenaed Biden's physician, Kevin O'Connor.
Biden has maintained that he drove the decision-making during his presidency. There has been no evidence that aides acted on his behalf or that anyone other than Biden used the autopen.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The DC public library system falls way short of ‘Abundance'
The DC public library system falls way short of ‘Abundance'

The Hill

time23 minutes ago

  • The Hill

The DC public library system falls way short of ‘Abundance'

Book clubs nationwide have been talking for months about whether you are 'Abundance-pilled,' a reference to the recent book by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson that has made it into the lexicon of many public policy nerds. And public policy nerds happen to be everywhere in the District of Columbia. That is why the waitlist to borrow this book at the D.C. Public Library is more than 300 people long for a hard copy, over 500-long for an eBook and more than 800-long for an audiobook. How many copies does the D.C. library system have of this New York Times-bestseller, which was published in March? Well, from March to July, the total was just one. One hard copy, zero eBook registrations and zero audio books. Only in August did the D.C. public library finally expand its catalogue to 51 copies, which is still little relief for the hundreds who have been waiting months. Think of the debates we missed out on, the replies we never sent. The online discourse was impoverished by the absence of witty, wonky D.C.-based keyboard warriors. Other library systems nearby have copies of 'Abundance.' The Arlington Public Library has had 47 copies all along. Fairfax County has 45 and Montgomery County has 18 hardcover copies, 63 eBook registrations and 75 audiobooks. So these books have been lining the shelves of our suburban friends' and families' local libraries. Just not ours. 'Abundance' isn't the only new nonfiction title of interest to D.C. readers that is sparsely filling our shelves. Jake Tapper's 'Original Sin' has just two hard copies that more than 50 library patrons are waiting to read. Jacinda Ardern's 'A Different Kind of Power' has two hard copies and more than 70 on the waitlist. John Green's 'Everything Is Tuberculosis' has seven copies for a nearly 200-person-long waitlist. Not every recent release is getting this treatment. 'Sunrise on the Reaping,' Suzanne Collins's highly anticipated 'Hunger Games' prequel, which was published the same day as 'Abundance,' has 100 copies at the D.C. library system. The argument of 'Abundance' is that an overly regulatory environment, often championed by well-intentioned liberals, has halted or slowed progress on large and ambitious projects. Or so I have been told. I wouldn't know. I'm waiting in line to read it with more than 1,500 other D.C. library patrons. Could it be that one of the places we need to modernize by removing regulations is our public library? I reached out to the director of new title procurement at the D.C. library, asking about the policies regarding the acquisition of new copies, but I did not receive a response. As D.C. has an overly complex regulatory system in other areas — which is not entirely the District's fault, given its status as a federal district — it is not out of the question that the city should review its internal policies to see where they could be streamlined. It must be noted that the current financial constraints on the District are quite severe. The House of Representatives has effectivel y stolen $1 billion from the District of taxes already paid by residents. This has led to fewer police officers, cuts to school programs and other fiscal limits. Mayor Muriel Bowser has been tirelessly advocating for the restoration of these funds and should be commended for her efforts. Perhaps the public library has put large-scale purchase orders of new books on hold until the District is paid what it is due. If that is the case, I sincerely request that Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) pass the District of Columbia Local Funds Act of 2025. The Senate passed it back in March, and it just is waiting for the Speaker to bring it to the floor. These are taxes already paid by over 700,000 residents of the district, and we should be free to spend that money in a way we deem necessary — and yes, that includes new titles for the public library. Whether the backlog of new titles is due to internal library policies or to the withholding of funds by the federal government, something must change. It may feel like a small thing to have to wait over six months to check out a new book, but it is clearly possible, since the rest of the region can adequately procure popular books. If it is the latter, it is time to rethink the policies between D.C. and federal government on matters of public libraries and services. If the former, it is time to take inspiration from our neighboring library districts and update our internal policies. Libraries have served as the centers of learning and cutting-edge information for centuries, and the capital of the richest nation to ever exist should be a shining example of this long tradition. I believe the D.C. library should have an abundance of books, across topics, with reasonable waitlists.

Senate heads into recess as Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell'
Senate heads into recess as Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell'

UPI

time24 minutes ago

  • UPI

Senate heads into recess as Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell'

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, speaks at a press conference calling on the administration to release the Epstein files in the U.S. Capitol building last week. File Photo by Annabelle Gordon/UPI | License Photo Aug. 3 (UPI) -- The U.S. Senate began its month‑long recess Saturday night amid negotiations to advance the nomination of dozens of Donald Trump's pending nominees, as the president told Sen. Chuck Schumer to "go to hell" when the talks collapsed. Trump, in a post to his Truth Social platform on Saturday, had wanted the Senate to stay in session but accused Schumer of "political extortion" for allegedly demanding a billion dollars in funding in order to approve dozens of his remaining "highly qualified nominees" for appointment to the administration. A source familiar with Schumer's alleged demands told Axios that Schumer wants the White House to release withheld federal funding in exchange for passing a small batch of the nominees. "Tell Schumer, who is under tremendous political pressure from within his own party, the Radical Left Lunatics, to GO TO HELL!" Trump said in his post. "Do not accept the offer, go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our country." Schumer later shared Trump's post and quipped, "The Art of the Deal." He later added that Trump had "attempted to steamroll" the Senate into approving his "historically unqualified nominees." But the standoff has led Senate Republicans to express support for the possibility that Trump use recess appointments, a controversial constitutional mechanism that allows the president to "temporarily" fill vacant positions when the Senate is in recess. "The Senate should immediately adjourn and let President Trump use recess appointments to enact the agenda 77M Americans voted for," Sen. Roger Marshall posted on Saturday. Senate Republicans also indicated they might pursue a change to Senate rules after they return from recess to make it easier to pass through confirmations. Sen. Markwayne Mullin told Fox News that lawmakers would be moving forward with a rule change in September.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store