How Biden Could Restore US Leadership at the UN in his First 100 Days

Published: Nov. 30, 2020, 11:45 p.m.

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The first 100 days of any new presidential administration offers a key inflection point, signaling the policies that the new administration will prioritize and champion. It is during those first 100 days that the new administration gets the most leeway from congress, the media, and the general public to set their agenda.\\xa0\\xa0

Setting that agenda often includes a mix of new executive actions, supporting specific pieces of legislation, and releasing a federal budget request to congress which demonstrates the new administration\'s funding priorities.\\xa0

This is the opportunity for the Biden administration when it takes office on January 20. In today\'s episode, we take a deep dive into what a Biden-Administration\'s first 100-day agenda may look like when it comes to re-setting America\'s relationship with the United Nations and other multilateral organizations.

Peter Yeo is the President of the Better World Campaign and Senior Vice President of the United Nations Foundation. He has had a long career in congress, the federal government and advocacy; and he explains the various executive actions and legislative priorities that the Biden administration will likely pursue to signal the United States\' renewed commitment to multilateralism.\\xa0

Today\'s episode is produced in partnership with the Better World Campaign as part of a series\\xa0 examining the opportunities for strengthening multilateral engagement by the new Biden-Harris administration and the incoming 117th Congress. To learn more and access additional episodes in this series, please visit http://getusback.org/

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