Trump takes fighting stance as election swings toward Biden
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[November 06, 2020]
By Jeff Mason and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As former Vice
President Joe Biden moved closer to winning the White House, President
Donald Trump adopted a fighting posture on Thursday, making false claims
to undermine a vote that was not going his way.
While Biden, a Democrat, called for calm and patience, Republican Trump,
without offering evidence, said his opponents were engaging in fraud and
election theft, accusations he has been making long before Election Day.
"If you count the legal votes I easily win," Trump said during remarks
the White House, his first public appearance since Wednesday morning.
"This is a case where they're trying to steal an election. They're
trying to rig an election, and we can't let that happen."
Trump suggested he had won states that have been called in favor of
Biden and sharply criticized polling before the election that he said
was designed to suppress the vote because it favored the Democrat.
Polls this year, similar to the 2016 election that he won, predicted a
much weaker electoral performance by Trump than he achieved.
The president, a former reality TV star who regularly plays to cameras
and crowds, took no questions from reporters in his first appearance
since early Wednesday morning.
The president's comments came as the election results continued to swing
toward his Democratic rival.
A somber mood prevailed at the White House. Aides to the president said
they remained cautiously optimistic that he still had a path to
re-election, while conceding that he may lose.
Trump worked from the Oval Office on Thursday in what was otherwise
largely an empty West Wing. Many of his senior staff were huddled at the
campaign's headquarters in nearby Virginia.
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President Donald Trump is reflected as he departs after speaking
about the 2020 U.S. presidential election results in the Brady Press
Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 5,
2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
"He's very engaged, he's monitoring, talking to all the states. It
doesn't look good, but this guy wants to keep fighting," said one
Trump confidante, speaking on the condition of anonymity. "He's in a
fighting mood right now. He's not melancholy or dejected. But the
path is getting harder and harder."
The president's campaign has launched multiple legal challenges in
the states where votes are still being counted.
One White House official said he was confident the strategy of legal
challenges would prevail, even if television networks call the race
for Biden once final vote counts in states such as Georgia, Arizona
and Pennsylvania come in.
Another lamented the loss of support among suburban women that
helped doom Trump's chances in Wisconsin, while lauding the
president for changing the Republican Party for decades to come by
attracting more Latino and African-American votes.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Steve Holland; Editing by Lincoln
Feast.)
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