Georgia confirms results in latest setback for Trump bid to overturn
Biden win
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[November 21, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - President Donald Trump's
desperate bid to overturn the Nov. 3 election result was dealt another
blow on Friday after it was announced he had lost Georgia, while the
winner, President-elect Joe Biden, filled more jobs in his incoming U.S.
administration.
Biden, a Democrat, is preparing to take office on Jan. 20, but Trump, a
Republican, has refused to concede and is seeking to invalidate or
reverse the results through lawsuits and recounts in a number of states,
claiming - without proof - widespread voter fraud.
That effort - which Trump's critics have called an unprecedented push by
a sitting president to subvert the will of the voters - has met with
little success. Trump's campaign has suffered a string of legal defeats
and apparently has failed to convince fellow Republicans in states that
he lost, such as Michigan, to act on his unfounded conspiracy theories.
It received more bad news on Friday when Georgia Secretary of State Brad
Raffensperger announced that a manual recount and audit of all ballots
cast in the southern state had determined that Biden was the winner.
Biden is the first Democrat to carry Georgia since 1992.
"The numbers reflect the verdict of the people, not a decision by the
secretary of state's office or courts, or of either campaign,"
Raffensperger, a Republican and Trump supporter, told reporters.
Official figures on the Secretary of State's website showed Biden
winning the state by 12,670 votes.
Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, a Republican, said he was required by law
to formalize the certification of the results, "which paves the way for
the Trump campaign to pursue other legal options in a separate recount
if they choose." But he also said the audit showed some errors in the
original vote count.
Trump had earlier expressed dismay, saying on Twitter that Georgia
officials were refusing "to let us look at signatures which would expose
hundreds of thousands of illegal ballots" and give him and his party "a
BIG VICTORY."
The president provided no evidence to back up his claim.
Trump, in his first public comments in days about the election outcome,
again asserted "I won" as he strayed from the theme of a White House
event on lowering drug prices. But he also seemed to acknowledge the
possibility he might not stay in power, saying pharmaceutical companies
had opposed his pricing reform and, "I just hope they keep it."
Stung by a series of court defeats, the Trump team is resting its hopes
on getting Republican-controlled legislatures in battleground states won
by Biden to set aside the results and declare Trump the winner,
according to three people familiar with the plan.
It is focusing on Michigan and Pennsylvania for now, but even if both
those states flipped to the president he would need to overturn the vote
in another state to vault ahead of Biden in the Electoral College.
Such an extraordinary event would be unprecedented in modern U.S.
history. Trump not only would need three state legislatures to intervene
against vote counts as they stand now, but then also have those actions
upheld by Congress and, almost certainly, the U.S. Supreme Court.
Undeterred by the lengthening odds, Trump invited Michigan's state
legislative leaders, Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey and House of
Representatives Speaker Lee Chatfield, both Republicans, to meet him on
Friday at the White House.
In a statement issued after the meeting in the Oval Office, Shirkey and
Chatfield said they had discussed how Michigan needed additional federal
funding to fight the coronavirus pandemic, and they said they had faith
in a review of Michigan's elections process that is being conducted by
state lawmakers.
"We have not yet been made aware of any information that would change
the outcome of the election in Michigan and as legislative leaders, we
will follow the law and follow the normal process regarding Michigan's
electors, just as we have said throughout this election," their
statement said.
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After a painstaking recount, Georgia officials confirmed that
President-elect Joe Biden defeated President Donald Trump in the
battleground state on Nov. 3, further narrowing the president's
dubious effort to overturn the election results. Lisa Bernhard
produced this report.
The White House had no immediate comment.
Arriving at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport earlier in the
day, Shirkey and his colleagues were met by a crowd of
demonstrators, some of whom held signs that read "SHAME" while
others chanted "respect Michigan voters."
Biden, who turned 78 on Friday, continued to lay the foundation of
his administration, announcing appointments including his former
deputy chief of staff Louisa Terrell as the incoming director of the
White House's office of legislative affairs, the main liaison with
Congress.
Biden also met U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi
and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leaders in
Congress, in his home state of Delaware.
They agreed Congress needs to pass an emergency relief package in
the current session to blunt the economic pain of the pandemic,
according to a joint statement. More than 252,000 people in the
United States have died from COVID-19.
'PUT THE COUNTRY FIRST'
The president's lawyers argue the U.S. Constitution gives
legislatures, rather than state governors and secretaries of state,
the ultimate authority to appoint electors. Republicans control the
Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin legislatures.
Those states were the pillars of Trump's victory in the 2016
election, but Biden prevailed in all three by even larger margins
than Trump did four years ago.
Legal experts have sounded the alarm at the notion of a sitting
president seeking to undermine the will of the voters, though they
have expressed skepticism that a state legislature could lawfully
substitute its own electors.
Pressure for Trump to start the formal transition process mounted,
with a few more Republicans voicing doubts over Trump's claims of
fraudulent voting.
U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, who is retiring at the
end of the year, said Biden had a "very good chance" of becoming the
next president and that the loser of the election should "put the
country first."
There is a "right way and a wrong way" for Trump to contest what he
sees as election irregularities, Susan Collins, the Maine Senator,
said in a statement. "The right way is to compile the evidence and
mount legal challenges in our courts. The wrong way is to attempt to
pressure state election officials."
Danielle Friedman, senior counsel for Biden's campaign, told
reporters the recount requested by Trump in Wisconsin was on course
to reaffirm Biden's "resounding" victory in the state. The official
canvass in the state, she said, had put Biden's win at a margin of
20,608 votes.
Nationally, Biden won nearly 6 million more votes than Trump, a
difference of 3.8 percentage points. But the outcome of the election
is determined in the Electoral College, where each state's electoral
votes, based largely on population, are typically awarded to the
winner of a state's popular vote.
Biden leads by 306 electoral votes to Trump's 232 as states work to
certify their results at least six days before the Electoral College
convenes on Dec. 14.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax in Princeton, New Jersey; Additional
reporting by Michael Martina in Detroit, Jarrett Renshaw in
Wilmington, Delaware, Karen Freifeld in New York and Jan Wolfe,
Doina Chiacu, Julia Harte, Steve Holland, David Morgan, Tim Ahmann,
Daphne Psaledakis, Eric Beech and Lisa Lambert in Washington;
Writing by Daniel Trotta, Paul Simao and Matt Spetalnick; Editing by
Howard Goller and Daniel Wallis)
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