Donald Trump has said he will leave the White House if Joe Biden is formally confirmed as the next US president. Answering reporters' questions for the first time since losing the 3 November vote, Mr Trump insisted, however, that "this race is far from over". He has refused to concede, citing unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud.
BBC reports in its article US election: Trump signals he is prepared to leave White House that electors will meet to formalise the result on 14 December. Earlier this week, Mr Trump finally agreed to allow the formal transition to President-elect Biden's team to begin, following several weeks of uncertainty. The decision means Mr Biden is able to receive top security briefings and access key government officials and millions of dollars in funds as he prepares to take over.
Mr Trump did not say whether he would run for president again in 2024, or whether he would attend Mr Biden's inauguration. The normally routine process of transitioning from one president to another and confirming the result has been derailed by President Trump's refusal to concede. Under the US electoral system, voters do not directly choose the next president. Instead, they vote for 538 officials, who are allocated to American states based on their population size. The electors almost always vote for the candidate who won the most votes in their states, and although it is possible for some to disregard the voters' pick, no result has ever been changed this way.
Mr Trump also said that he was planning to hold a rally in Georgia on Saturday in support of two Republicans in key runoff elections that will decide which party controls the Senate. The elections in Georgia are due to be held on 5 January.
The president-elect celebrated a quiet Thanksgiving on Thursday, as coronavirus cases in the US continue to rise. "This year, our turkey will be smaller and the clatter of cooking a little quieter," Mr Biden and his wife Jill said in an op-ed published by CNN. "Like millions of Americans, we are temporarily letting go of the traditions we can't do safely. "It is not a small sacrifice. These moments with our loved ones - time that's lost - can't be returned. Yet, we know it's the price of protecting each other and one we don't pay alone." Earlier this week, Mr Biden urged Americans to hold smaller celebrations, saying: "I know that we can and will beat this virus." He has said that tackling the pandemic will be his main priority when he takes office.
Mr Biden has already nominated a number of top officials for when he takes over and said that co-operation from the White House over the transition had been "sincere". Speaking in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, on Wednesday, he said that the US "won't stand" for any attempt to derail the election. Americans "have full and fair and free elections, and then we honour the results," he said.