Trump ignores Republican calls to avoid repeating false election claims
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[July 27, 2022]
By David Morgan and Eric Beech
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump ignored
pressure from some fellow Republicans to avoid repeating his false
claims about a stolen 2020 election on Tuesday, insisting that he won
his second bid for the White House and would not allow his perceived
enemies to bar a return.
In his first speech in Washington since leaving office 18 months ago,
the former U.S. president stopped short of declaring his candidacy in
the 2024 presidential election but predicted Republicans would retake
the Senate, House of Representatives and the White House.
"I ran the first time and I won. Then I ran a second time and I did much
better ... and you know what? That's going to be the story for a long
time, what a disgrace it was. But we may just have to do it again,"
Trump said in a 93-minute speech to the conservative America First
Policy Institute.
Mike Pence, who was vice president under Trump and may seek the White
House in 2024, distanced himself from Trump's repeated election
falsehoods, saying at a separate event earlier in the U.S. capital that
conservatives needed to focus on the future to win.
"I don't know that the president and I differ on issues. But we may
differ on focus. I truly do believe that elections are about the
future," Pence said across town at the Heritage Foundation think tank.
"In order to win, conservatives need to do more than criticize and
complain. We must unite our movement behind a bold, optimistic agenda,"
he said.
Trump used his speech to paint a picture of an America plagued by crime,
violence, drugs and invasions of illegal migrants. He predicted a future
federal government controlled by Republicans that he said should impose
the death penalty on drug dealers, use the National Guard to stop
violence in states and cities and relocate the urban homeless to tent
encampments on the outskirts of U.S. cities.
Last week the congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021,
assault on the U.S. Capitol depicted Trump as ignoring pleas of family
and aides to intervene as he watched his supporters on live TV attack
the seat of Congress for hours in a failed bid to stop certification of
his loss.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump departs following remarks at the
America First Policy Institute America First Agenda Summit in
Washington, U.S., July 26, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger
Trump dismissed the panel as "hacks and thugs."
"They really want to damage me so I can no longer go back to work
for you. And I don't think that's going to happen," Trump said.
Trump remains the leading figure in the Republican Party. But while
he flirts with a 2024 presidential run, his standing has weakened
slightly, with some 40% of Republicans saying he is at least partly
to blame for the Jan. 6 riot compared with 33% in a poll conducted
as the hearings got under way six weeks ago, according to a Reuters/Ipsos
poll.
The Jan. 6 committee is trying to build a case that Trump's efforts
to overturn his defeat by Democrat Joe Biden in November 2020
constitute dereliction of duty and illegal conduct, rendering him
unfit to return to the White House.
Waning popularity could encourage potential rivals to run, including
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is among those maneuvering for
possible Republican primary challenges in 2024.
Signs of new momentum have emerged in a U.S. Justice Department
probe into the Capitol assault and an alleged scheme by Trump allies
to overturn the election with fake electors.
Former top Pence aide Marc Short last week became the highest
profile official to appear before a federal grand jury investigating
the two issues.
(Reporting by David Morgan and Eric Beech; Editing by Scott Malone
and Howard Goller)
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