Fox’s Arizona Call for Biden Flipped the Mood at
Trump Headquarters
The Fox News decision left the president fuming, and
his team complaining. Then he began casting aspersions on other states’ vote
counts.
Annie
KarniMaggie Haberman
By Annie
Karni and Maggie Haberman
Published
Nov. 4, 2020
Updated
Nov. 5, 2020, 2:32 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/04/us/politics/trump-fox-news-arizona.html
WASHINGTON
— With Florida looking red early on Tuesday night, President Trump and his
advisers thought they were witnessing a repeat of election night 2016, when a
victory in Florida foreshadowed a victory over all.
Inside the
East Room, the mood was upbeat as hundreds of people, including cabinet
secretaries, ambassadors and former officials who have remained loyal to Mr.
Trump, mingled and dined on sliders and French fries. Officials who had been
pessimistic about the president’s re-election chances suddenly started to
picture four more years in power.
That mirage
of victory was pierced when Fox News called Arizona for former Vice President
Joseph R. Biden Jr. at 11:20 p.m., with just 73 percent of the state’s vote
counted.
Mr. Trump
and his advisers erupted at the news. If it was true that Arizona was lost, it
would call into doubt on any claim of victory the president might be able to
make.
What ensued
for Mr. Trump was a night of angry calls to Republican governors and advice
from campaign aides that he ignored, leading to a middle-of-the-night
presidential briefing in which he made a reckless and unsubstantiated string of
remarks about the democratic process. Standing in the East Room at 2:30 a.m.,
he dismissed the election as a “fraud” and claimed he wanted to stop the
counting of votes and leave the results to the Supreme Court.
The Trump
campaign knew Arizona could be up for grabs, but the Fox News call putting it
in Mr. Biden’s column was symbolic, making it the first state that appeared to
have flipped from the president’s 2016 batch of winning states. Gov. Doug
Ducey, Republican of Arizona, had been on the phone all night with
administration officials and campaign staff members, adamant that there were
still Republican votes to be counted in his state.
Jason
Miller, Mr. Trump’s political adviser, disputed the accuracy of the call on
Twitter and frantically called Fox News, asking the network to retract it. He
was unsuccessful. Instead of retracting it, the decision desk at Fox News
doubled down on its call, putting Arnon Mishkin, the head of the desk, on air
to defend the call. Several hours later, The Associated Press also called
Arizona for Mr. Biden. (Other news organizations, including The New York Times
and CNN, had not declared a victor by Wednesday afternoon because of absentee
ballots that remained to be counted.)
Jared
Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, was also in touch with
Rupert Murdoch, the Fox News owner, as the night wore on. And on Wednesday
morning, Mr. Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, insisted the president
would win Arizona by 30,000 votes.
Keeping
Arizona in play was critical to the narrow path the campaign still saw to a
victory on Wednesday, along with Georgia and Pennsylvania.
Mr. Trump
spent much of Tuesday evening and early Wednesday watching election results
roll in on Fox News from the White House residence, where he connected with
several Republican governors on the phone. In conversations with Gov. Greg
Abbott of Texas and Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, he asked about the
possibility that fraud was being committed, according to people briefed on the
call.
On Twitter,
Mr. Ducey insisted that all the counting be completed before anyone else called
the state.
Angry and
feeling stung, the president and his aides watched as Mr. Biden gave a brief
speech in Wilmington, Del., projecting victory for himself. “We feel good about
where we are, we really do,” Mr. Biden told supporters, who honked their horns
in support. “We believe we are on track to win this election.”
While Mr.
Biden was speaking, the president tweeted for the first time all night,
baselessly claiming that Democrats were trying to “steal” the election. In a
follow-up tweet, he said that he, too, would deliver remarks. A podium with a
presidential seal had already been set up in the East Room.
Mr. Trump’s
advisers tried to persuade Mr. Trump to speak in the East Room before Mr. Biden
made his remarks in Wilmington, but they were unsuccessful. Instead, they sat
and watched as Mr. Biden set the tone for the night.
So it was
hours before Mr. Trump actually appeared in the East Room. In the Oval Office,
he huddled with aides who discussed how to frame the state of the race and
whether he could declare victory or should take a more subtle tone.
“This is a
fraud on the American public,” he told a crowd of supporters at 2:30 a.m., in
remarks that were immediately criticized even by some of his allies, like Chris
Christie, the former New Jersey governor. The president continued: “This is an
embarrassment to our country. We were getting ready to win this election.
Frankly, we did win the election.”
As the map
closed in on the Trump campaign on Wednesday, with Michigan and Wisconsin being
called for Mr. Biden, the president was not seen in public all day. A Marine
who stands guard in front of the West Wing doors when the president is in the
Oval Office had not been spotted all day.
From the
residence, Mr. Trump continued making calls to supporters and friends
throughout the morning, sounding subdued and somewhat dispirited to some
people. Outside the White House, finger-pointing about what went wrong had
already begun. Some aides said that Mr. Trump had often resisted entreaties
from Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, and Brad
Parscale, his former campaign manager, and others to spend more time in
Arizona. But they said he had resisted in part because he did not like
traveling west and spending the night on the road.
Ms.
McDaniel, however, disputed that she had harbored concerns about the president
visiting Arizona, and said she was not involved in determining his campaign
schedule, which was handled by his campaign.
They and
several other aides had also tried and failed to get Mr. Trump to stop
attacking an Arizona favorite son and war hero, Senator John McCain, a
Republican whom the president has continued to criticize even after the
senator’s death two years ago.
There were
also questions as to whether, had the campaign not spent so much money before
the coronavirus pandemic began, it might have had extra resources to spend in
states where Mr. Biden had won or was leading by slim margins, like Wisconsin,
Michigan and Nevada.
But others
defended the early spending by Mr. Parscale, who among other things had focused
on increasing the president’s turnout with Latino voters, who ended up being a
key part of his support in Florida.
On
Wednesday, the president’s family was heavily involved in efforts to question
the validity of the vote tallies. Mr. Trump had joked at a rally that if he
lost, he would never speak to any of his adult children again.
Mr. Kushner
was making calls, looking for what he described as a “James Baker-like” figure
who could lead the legal effort to dispute the tabulations in different states,
according to a person briefed on the discussions. (Mr. Baker led George W.
Bush’s successful recount case in 2000.) The president’s eldest son, Donald
Trump Jr., was working out of the campaign headquarters in Virginia. Another
son, Eric Trump, whose wife, Lara, has been heavily involved in campaign
activities, spoke at a news conference in Philadelphia, alongside Rudolph W.
Giuliani, the former New York mayor.
“They’re not
letting poll watchers watch the polls,” a visibly angry Eric Trump said, in a
baseless attempt to cast doubt on the ballot counting still ongoing in
Pennsylvania. Mr. Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, also made the
groundless assertion that the election in Pennsylvania was being stolen. He
also floated the idea of a “national lawsuit” about allegations of fraud, but
it was not clear what that meant.
For all of
the president’s superstitions, and his attempts to surround himself with the
team that helped lead him to victory four years ago, he found himself in a far
weaker position this time. In the final weeks before Election Day, Mr. Kushner
reassembled a group of people who had been involved in Mr. Trump’s first
campaign, including the former White House deputy chief of staff, Katie Walsh,
to work with Mr. Miller and others on the final weeks of spending on
television.
But by
Wednesday, several White House officials and outside advisers said they were
hopeful, but not particularly optimistic, that Mr. Trump’s legal challenges in
several states would be able to change the trajectory of the race. The
president himself tweeted a suggestion that “a large number of secretly dumped
ballots” had cost him Michigan, a message Twitter quickly labeled misleading.
Annie Karni
is a White House correspondent. She previously covered the White House and
Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign for Politico, and covered local
news and politics in New York City for the New York Post and the New York Daily
News. @AnnieKarni
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a
campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018
for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT

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