2020
ELECTION
Trump's refusal to concede amps up pressure on
GOP
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is perhaps the
most important figure who hasn't weighed in publicly.
Ultimately,
few Republicans expressed concern that President Donald Trump would refuse to
leave the White House after Inauguration Day.
By ANDREW
DESIDERIO
11/08/2020
01:17 PM EST
Updated:
11/08/2020 01:30 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/11/08/trumps-refusal-to-concede-pressure-gop-435124
President
Donald Trump’s refusal to concede the election to President-elect Joe Biden is
splitting the GOP — and increasingly putting congressional Republicans in a
bind.
GOP
lawmakers offered dueling sentiments on Sunday, a day after Biden secured the
270 electoral votes needed to win the White House and as Trump continued to
make unsubstantiated allegations of widespread voter fraud.
And some
top Republicans like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) have
notably declined to weigh in since Biden was declared the winner — neither
bolstering Trump’s claims nor pressuring him publicly to concede. But such a
stance may not be tenable for long, and how McConnell and other leaders in the
party approach the matter will undoubtedly shape the transition of power in the
coming weeks.
In the
meantime, Trump’s steadfast allies are urging him to continue fighting, as his
campaign mounts several long-shot legal challenges to various vote totals in
key battleground states.
“Don’t
accept the media’s declaration,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told Fox News host
Maria Bartiromo on Sunday. “Don’t concede, Mr. President. Fight hard.”
House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), also on Fox News, agreed that it was
premature to call the presidential contest for Biden.
“What we
need in the presidential race is to make sure every legal vote is counted,
every recount is completed, and every legal challenge should be heard,”
McCarthy said. “Then, and only then, America will decide who won the
race."
Other
Republicans said they were not surprised that the president would challenge the
results, given his nature. But they acknowledged that in the end, Biden will
almost certainly remain the winner of the presidential contest, even after
recounts and re-canvassing efforts are completed in several states.
“It’s time
for the president’s lawyers to present the facts and then it’s time for those
facts to speak for themselves,” Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), a member of GOP
leadership, said on ABC’s This Week. But, he added, it “seems unlikely that any
changes could be big enough to make a difference.”
“The
reality is, given the fact that the statisticians have come to a conclusion at
this stage, I think we get behind the new president,” Sen. Mitt Romney
(R-Utah), who opposed Trump’s reelection and was the only Republican who voted
to convict him in the Senate’s impeachment trial, said on CNN’s State of the
Union.
Biden on
Saturday declared victory, urging the nation in a primetime address to “put the
anger and harsh rhetoric behind us.” His campaign also is beginning the
presidential transition process, and Biden is expected to name a group of
advisers on Monday that will guide his decision-making on the coronavirus
pandemic.
In addition,
several foreign leaders have already congratulated Biden and Vice
President-elect Kamala Harris on winning the election, including Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and Italian
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte. Early Sunday morning, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu joined in — a notable statement given his support for the
president and his policies toward Israel.
Former
President George W. Bush, a longtime member of the GOP establishment, also said
on Sunday that he had spoken with both Biden and Harris to congratulate them on
their victory.
But it’s
McConnell who remains perhaps the most important figure in terms of an ability
to influence the process of Trump's concession or departure.
The
Kentucky Republican tweeted Friday that “every legal vote should be counted,”
but refused to go beyond his statement at a news conference that day. Asked if
he had spoken to the president recently, he noted only that they talk
frequently. His office declined to comment on Sunday.
The two men
have become allies over a chaotic four years despite their sharply different
personalities, and McConnell has largely avoided crossing the president
publicly. But McConnell may not want a national crisis on his hands, and he is
far better positioned to hold on to power after Senate Republicans won key
Senate races even as Trump went down.
Still,
McConnell, like most Republicans, is unlikely to want to draw the ire of the
president, who is set to maintain a firm grip on the GOP in the years to come —
and could even mount a presidential bid in 2024.
That’s
particularly true of many of the GOP’s rising stars and potential 2024
presidential contenders, like South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who said it was
“premature” to declare Biden the winner.
“We should
give President Trump his day in court,” Noem said on ABC’s This Week. “If Joe
Biden really wants to unify this country, he would wait and make sure that we
can prove we had a fair election.”
Romney
noted Trump has every right to pursue legal challenges, especially given how
close the race was in several of the battleground states. But he expressed
concern that the president has gone further, falsely declaring himself the
winner of the election on Twitter and characterizing the contest as “rigged”
and “stolen.”
“I think
one has to be careful in the choice of words. I think when you say that the
election was corrupt or stolen or rigged, that that's unfortunately rhetoric
that gets picked up by authoritarians around the world,” Romney added on NBC’s
Meet the Press. “And I think it also discourages confidence in our democratic
process here at home.”
Sen. Pat
Toomey (R-Pa.), appearing on CBS’ Face the Nation, said the Trump campaign’s
allegations should be “adjudicated” but declined to adopt the more aggressive
posture of the president’s allies.
And
ultimately, few Republicans expressed concern that Trump would refuse to leave
the White House after Inauguration Day. Romney said he expects that the
president will eventually concede. And Blunt, who suggested the result was
inevitable, said: “I look forward to the president dealing with this however he
needs to deal with it.”


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