Trump keeps up claims of widespread fraud at Georgia rally for
U.S. senators
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[December 07, 2020]
By Jeff Mason
VALDOSTA, Georgia (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump campaigned in Georgia on Saturday for two
Republican senators at a rally that some in his party feared could end
up hurting, not helping, their chances by focusing on his efforts to
reverse his own election defeat.
In his first rally appearance since he lost to Democrat Joe Biden in the
Nov. 3 presidential contest, Trump urged the crowd to vote for
Republican candidates in the Georgia runoff election on Jan. 5 despite
his unsubstantiated claims of significant electoral fraud in the state.
But he gave considerable time in his remarks to allegations, made
without evidence, of widespread fraud in the nationwide election that
led to a Democrat reclaiming the White House. Trump has declined to
concede the race.
"They cheated and they rigged our presidential election but we will
still win it," Trump said. "And they're going to try and rig this
election too," Trump, a Republican, told the crowd, who chanted "Four
More Years!"
The president repeated his attacks on Republicans who have refused to
back his claims, including Georgia's governor, Brian Kemp. Earlier on
Saturday, Trump phoned Kemp and pressured the governor on Twitter to
take further steps to help him overturn the election results.
Trump's allegations of widespread voter fraud have been rejected by
state and federal officials across the country, and his campaign's
numerous legal challenges have almost all failed.
Biden was the first Democratic presidential candidate to win in Georgia
since 1992. Statewide recounts, including a painstaking review by hand
of some 5 million ballots, turned up no significant irregularities.
The January runoffs pit two Republican senators, David Perdue and Kelly
Loeffler, against well-funded Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and
Raphael Warnock, seeking to capture a state that has not elected a
Democratic senator in 20 years.
The races will determine which party controls the U.S. Senate.
Democrats, who already have the majority in the House of
Representatives, need to win both seats to control the Senate. If
Republicans win one seat, they will retain their majority and be able to
block much of Biden's legislative agenda.
Biden said he would visit Georgia to campaign for the Democratic
candidates but did not give a timetable for his trip.
ATTACKING REPUBLICANS
Governor Kemp did not attend the rally due to the death in a car crash
of Harrison Deal, a close family friend of the governor and staffer for
Loeffler. He had an active exchange with Trump on Twitter earlier in the
day, however.
"I will easily & quickly win Georgia if Governor @BrianKempGA or the
Secretary of State permit a simple signature verification ... Why are
these two 'Republicans' saying no?" Trump wrote on Twitter.
After Kemp responded that he had "publicly called for a signature audit
three times," Trump said that wasn't good enough, and added in a second
tweet that Kemp should immediately call a special session of the state
legislature.
"Your people are refusing to do what you ask. What are they hiding?"
Trump said.
In a move unprecedented in modern U.S. history, the Trump team has
tried, without success, to get Republican-controlled legislatures in
battleground states won by Biden to set aside the results and declare
Trump the winner.
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President Donald Trump attends a campaign rally for Republican U.S.
senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, ahead of their January
runoff elections to determine control of the U.S. Senate, in
Valdosta, Georgia, U.S., December 5, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Biden won the election with 306 Electoral College votes - more than
the 270 required - to Trump's 232. The Electoral College will meet
on Dec. 14 to formalize the outcome.
Trump told the Saturday rally his challenge was headed to the U.S.
Supreme Court "very shortly," without elaborating. Legal experts do
not see a path to the nation's highest court, however.
"Hopefully our legislatures and the United States Supreme Court will
step forward and save our country,” he said.
Richard Hasen, professor of law and political science at the
University of California, Irvine, said it was unclear what case
Trump was referring to, but added: "I don't think any of these
efforts stand any chance of success."
Trump's penchant for making his political rallies largely about
himself - and now, his claims that the U.S. electoral system was
manipulated - had raised concerns among some Republicans that his
appearance in Georgia could end up turning voters off or making them
feel there is no point in voting.
Before the rally, Matt Towery, a former Georgia Republican
legislator who is now a political analyst and pollster, said Trump
could help if he praised the candidates, but warned:
"If he talks about them for 10 minutes and spends the rest of the
time telling everyone how terrible Brian Kemp is, then it will only
exacerbate things."
When Loeffler and Perdue briefly took the stage and were handed the
microphone by Trump, many in the crowd drowned out their words with
chants of "Fight for Trump!"
Two pro-Trump lawyers, L. Lin Wood and Sidney Powell, have argued
that Georgians should not vote in the runoff until issues from the
2020 election are resolved in the state, even after lawsuits they
have filed to overturn the results have failed.
Trump said on Saturday that voters could and should refuse to accept
what he called the "rigged" presidential election results while also
casting ballots for Perdue and Loeffler in the runoffs.
"If you don't vote, the socialists and the communists win," he said.
"We can fight for the presidency and fight to elect our two great
senators, and we can do it at the same time."
(Reporting by Jeff Mason in Valdosta, Georgia; Aram Roston, Makini
Brice, Steve Holland and David Morgan in Washington; and Joseph Ax
in Princeton, New Jersey; Writing by Sonya Hepinstall; Editing by
Mary Milliken, Chizu Nomiyama, Daniel Wallis, Elaine Hardcastle)
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