Who will tell Trump to go? Not Melania or Jared,
reports say
Confusion reigns as accounts of attempts to talk
president into conceding to Joe Biden are swiftly shot down
Victoria
Bekiempis
Sun 8 Nov
2020 19.33 GMTLast modified on Mon 9 Nov 2020 02.56 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/08/donald-trump-concede-jared-kushner-melania-trump
As Donald
Trump spent Sunday morning visiting one of his golf clubs and doubling down on
bogus election fraud claims, conflicting reports emerged about whether the
president’s family and top advisers were advising him to admit defeat.
The
disparate reports probably reflected a White House in deep turmoil, some
officials digesting the scale of their defeat in the presidential election but
others, especially Trump himself, cling to a false narrative that the election
was somehow stolen.
Citing two
sources, CNN reported that Jared Kushner, Trump’s senior adviser and
son-in-law, had spoken to him about conceding. Another source told CNN Trump’s
wife, Melania, told him that it was time to accept Joe Biden’s victory.
Melania
Trump was then yet to make a public statement on the election but had
reportedly voiced her opinion in private.
“She has
offered it, as she often does,” CNN reported this source as saying.
Later on
Sunday she tweeted support for her husband, saying: “The American people
deserve fair elections. Every legal – not illegal – vote should be counted.”
Shortly
after noon, the New York Times said a White House official disputed CNN’s
reporting on Kushner. This official claimed that Kushner had advised Trump to
seek “legal remedies”.
Axios also
reported on Kushner’s counsel. “A second source close to Kushner confirmed he
had not advised Trump to concede,” the news site said.
Axios and
CNN both reported that Trump is considering holding campaign-style rallies
centered around potential recount battles and ongoing lawsuits. Axios wrote on
Sunday evening that: “Team Trump is ready to announce specific recount teams in
key states, and it plans to hold a series of Trump rallies focused on the
litigation.”
Any advice
would appear to have had little impact on Trump himself, who continued to tweet
false and baseless allegations of electoral fraud and had yet to call Biden to
concede the race, a longstanding tradition in US politics. There was little
sign that the president’s two oldest sons, Eric and Don Jr, were advising him
to concede.
According
to the Times, White House advisers and staffers convened on Saturday at Trump
campaign headquarters. After campaign officials explained that any legal
strategy likely would not change election results, Kushner asked some to
explain this to Trump. When they asked Kushner if he should also be part of
this conversation, Kushner reportedly said he would participate in subsequent
discussions.
According
to Axios, a source claimed there were some uncomfortable conversations in
Trump’s circle, and that the majority accepted that Biden had won.
A
spokeswoman for Melania Trump did not immediately respond to the Guardian’s
request for comment.
Trump’s
personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, has emphatically pushed for legal intervention.
CNN also reported that the White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, who tested
positive for Covid-19 this week, had discussed next moves with Trump’s legal
team.
Regardless
of Trump’s view of the outcome, there has been no communication between the
White House and Biden’s camp.
Biden
senior adviser Symone Sanders told CNN’s State of the Union that while “a number
of Republicans from the Hill have reached out … I don’t believe anyone
from the White House has”.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário