‘Erratic’ Donald Trump should not get intelligence briefings, Biden says

US News

President Joe Biden said Donald Trump should not be given access to classified intelligence briefings due to his “erratic behaviour”.

Outgoing presidents are traditionally given access to briefings, but that is solely the decision of the current president.

Donald Trump has been requested to appear before Congress
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Donald Trump is the first US president to be impeached twice

Mr Biden told CBS News that while he didn’t want to “speculate out loud”, he had concerns over Mr Trump being briefed.

He said: “I just think that there is no need for him to have the intelligence briefings. What value is giving him an intelligence briefing? What impact does he have at all, other than the fact he might slip and say something?”

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Mr Trump is due to face his second impeachment trial next week, following the violence at the US Capitol which saw five people die.

However, Mr Biden said his hesitance to allow Mr Trump access to the briefings was due to the former president’s “erratic behaviour unrelated to the insurrection”.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki has said the issue of granting Mr Trump access was “something that is under review”.

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Mr Trump had a tempestuous relationship with the intelligence community throughout his four-year presidency, and both Democrats and former Trump officials have questioned his access to briefings.

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Five people died in the riots on 6 January

Writing for the Washington Post last month, former principal deputy director of national intelligence Susan Gordon urged Mr Biden to cut off Mr Trump.

She said Mr Trump’s “post-White House ‘security profile’, as the professionals like to call it, is daunting. Any former president is by definition a target and presents some risks. But a former president Trump, even before the events of last week, might be unusually vulnerable to bad actors with ill intent”.

She also drew attention to Mr Trump’s business concerns, and reports that he was in debt to the tune of about $400m (£291m).

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Mr Trump has played down suggestions of money worries, calling his debt load a “peanut”.

Democratic Representative Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, has also urged Mr Biden to cut off briefings for Mr Trump.

After Mr Trump’s term ended in January, Mr Schiff said: “There’s no circumstance in which this president should get another intelligence briefing. I don’t think he can be trusted with it now, and in the future.”

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Next week the Senate will decide whether to convict Mr Trump, and vote to decide whether he will ever be able to hold office again. Mr Trump has refused to testify at the trial.

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