Home of the Jim Heath Channel and Fact News

President Trump used a campaign rally on the eve of two critical Senate runoffs in Georgia to once again vent his debunked grievances about the outcome of November’s presidential election, as he continued his assault on the peaceful transfer of power.

NYT:  In an appearance that was supposed to bolster the fortunes of the two Republican candidates — Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler — Trump instead turned the nearly 90-minute rally into a rambling lecture filled with conspiracy theories, rumors, unproven assertions and personal attacks on Democrats, the news media and Georgia’s Republican officials.

“There’s no way we lost Georgia,” Trump said just after taking the stage. “I’ve had two elections. I’ve won both of them. It’s amazing.”

Moments later, after briefly mentioning the two Republican senators, he shifted back to his own, losing election: “They’re not going to take this White House. We’re going to fight like hell, I’ll tell you right now.”

The performance, which he foreshadowed on Twitter earlier in the day, underscored the president’s attempts to find a way to reverse his loss to President-elect Joe Biden, even at the risk of alienating Republican voters in Tuesday’s Senate contest, which observers in both parties expect to be close.

If Democrats win both runoffs, they will take control of the Senate.

With Biden’s inauguration 16 days away, Trump and his allies have turned their attention to Wednesday’s joint session of Congress, where scores of Republicans in the House and Senate say they will object to Biden’s victory being certified in what is usually a largely ceremonial event.

Their effort is certain to fail, given Democratic control of the House, and it has split the Republican Party.

“If you don’t show up, the radical Democrats will win,” he said to a large, cheering crowd at an airport hangar, with Marine One, the president’s helicopter, in the background.

But he quickly returned to complaining about his own political fate.

“Those of you that know how badly screwed we got, I want to be clear that we can’t let that happen again,” Trump said. “We can’t let that happen again. We’re going to come back, and I really believe we’re going to take what they did to us on Nov. 3. We’re going to take it back.”

He also called on his Vice President Mike Pence to do something illegal during the electoral vote count.

“And I hope Mike Pence comes through for us, I have to tell you. I hope that our great Vice President comes through for us, he’s a great guy. Of course, if he doesn’t come through, I won’t like him quite as much.”

The party’s top lawmakers, including Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, have rejected Trump’s claims of widespread voter fraud and said it is time to accept Biden as the next president.

Others in the party, including a dozen senators and Representative Kevin McCarthy, the House Republican leader, have embraced at least the idea of challenging the certification.

Trump appears to have little patience for those who resist his call for overturning the election.

In a tweet on Monday morning, he admonished Senator Tom Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, for saying that challenging the certification could only “erode further our system of constitutional government.”

In his tweet, the president suggested that Cotton — a staunch conservative and Trump supporter — should prepare to be challenged in a primary.

“How can you certify an election when the numbers being certified are verifiably WRONG,” Mr. Trump tweeted, adding: “@SenTomCotton Republicans have pluses & minuses, but one thing is sure, THEY NEVER FORGET!”

Tonight, Trump noted Senator Mike Lee, Republican of Utah, was at the rally, but said he was “a little angry with him.” Lee has said he will not support objections to the election’s certification.

On Saturday, Trump delivered vague threats of criminal prosecution to Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia secretary of state, during a rambling telephone call.

Trump pressured Raffensperger to “find” him enough votes to reverse the presidential contest in the state.

The conversation prompted calls by Democrats for Trump to be prosecuted for illegally trying to induce state officials to commit voter fraud.

And it spurred outrage from officials in Raffensperger’s office, who accused the president of improperly trying to undo the results of a fair election.

Gabriel Sterling, a top election official in Georgia, delivered a scathing refutation today of Trump’s false claims of voter fraud, running through a long list of debunked conspiracy theories and systematically debunking each one again.

It was like “Groundhog Day,” he said with evident frustration, adding of the fraud claims, “This is all easily, provably false, yet the president persists, and by doing so undermines Georgians’ faith in the election system.”

Trump had previewed his rally remarks on Twitter hours before his departure from Washington, saying that he would reveal at tonight’s event “the real numbers” about the fraud that he claims happened during the Georgia presidential contest.

During the rally, Trump spent some time delivering his usual campaign stump speech, warning baselessly that Democrats will adopt socialist policies, throw open the border, end private health insurance and wage a war on Christians.

“You’ve got to swarm it tomorrow,” he told his supporters, urging them to cast ballots for Loeffler and Perdue.

But he returned again and again to his own election, attacking Raffensperger and Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, saying: “They say they are Republicans. I really don’t think so. They can’t be.”

Trump also vowed that he would “be here in a year and a half campaigning against your governor — I guarantee you that.”

Trump recited a litany of fake statistics that he said proved the election was stolen from him in Georgia, despite the fact Raffensperger and state officials had repeatedly told him his assertions were patently false.

Trump said Republicans were able to ride “my coattails” to victory and pick up seats in the House despite pre-election projections.

“When that happens,” he said, “no president loses unless they play games that you don’t lose, they play games.”

That was false.

The incoming president’s party has lost ground in Congress in several recent elections.

In the 2000 elections, Republicans lost three House seats despite President George W. Bush’s victory.

In the 1992 election, President Bill Clinton defeated the incumbent president but Republicans made “unexpected” gains in Congress.

And Trump lamented the legitimate vote counting process, falsely claiming that “they keep finding votes” in his and other Republican races.

“I was leading in Pennsylvania by hundreds of thousands of votes,” he said. “All of a sudden — I was tired — I said, ‘What happened?’”

What happened was the legitimate vote counting process.

Trump’s lead shrank in Pennsylvania and several other states as election officials continued to count mail-in ballots.

In addition to using the Georgia rally to try to increase turnout among Republicans in Tuesday’s voting, Trump kept returning his focus to himself, even as his party is trying to save the Republican majority in the Senate.

Die-hard supporters of Trump, including thousands who believe he is the rightful winner of a 2020 election rife with voter fraud, packed a regional airport in northwestern Georgia for the president’s remarks.

The event was billed as a final rally for Loeffler and Perdue, but the crowd was there for Trump and Trump alone.

Supporters said they backed his unfounded efforts to subvert the election results and his attempts to pressure the Georgia secretary of state into finding the necessary votes.

 

Pin It on Pinterest

Shares
Share This