Trump faces pressure from Republicans to drop 'corrosive' fight to overturn election
John Bolton: Trump is ‘throwing rocks through windows’
HR McMaster: Trump’s actions sowing doubt among
electorate
Miranda
Bryant in New York and agency
Sun 22 Nov
2020 17.21 GMTLast modified on Sun 22 Nov 2020 17.49 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/22/trump-republicans-pressure-fight-overturn-election
Donald Trump
faced growing pressure from Republicans on Sunday to drop his chaotic,
last-ditch fight to overturn the US presidential election, as victor Joe Biden
prepared to start naming his cabinet and a Pennsylvania judge compared Trump’s
legal case there to “Frankenstein’s monster”.
Despite
Republican leadership in Washington standing behind the president’s claims that
the 3 November election was stolen from him by nationwide voter fraud, other
prominent figures, including two of his former national security advisers, were
blunt.
Former
Trump national security adviser John Bolton said that Biden would be sworn in
in January and added: “The real question is how much damage Trump can do before
that happens.”
The
president’s efforts were designed mainly to sow chaos and confusion, he told
CNN’s State of the Union show, as a demonstration more of “raw political power”
than a genuine legal exercise.
Bolton
noted that the Trump campaign has so far lost all but two of more than 30 legal
challenges in various states.
“Right now
Trump is throwing rocks through windows, he is the political equivalent of a
street rioter,” Bolton said.
And another
former Trump administration national security adviser, HR McMaster, told CBS’s
Face the Nation that Trump’s efforts were “very corrosive” and warned that his
actions were sowing doubt among the electorate.
“It’s
playing into the hands of our adversaries,” he said, warning that Russia, for
example, “doesn’t care who wins” as long as many Americans doubt the result,
undermining US democracy.
The
Maryland governor, Larry Hogan, another Republican, said he also was confident
Biden would be sworn in on schedule on 20 January and said “I’m embarrassed” at
the lack of party leadership speaking out to recognize the election result.
Hogan added
that he thought Trump’s pressuring last week of state legislators “to somehow
try to change the outcome” was “completely outrageous”.
The US used
to supervise elections around the world but was now “beginning to look like
we’re in a banana republic,” Hogan told CNN’s State of the Union politics show.
He added of
Trump’s efforts to exert legal and political pressure: “It’s time for them to
stop.”
On Friday,
the president met with Republican leaders from Michigan at the White House in a
wild attempt to sway them and leaders in other battleground states in the
electoral college to set aside the will of the people and declare Trump the
winner, despite officials at local and federal level declaring it the most
secure election in American history.
In the
latest setback to Trump’s efforts, Matthew Brann, a Republican US district
court judge in Pennsylvania, threw out the Trump campaign’s request to
disenfranchise almost 7 million voters there.
“This
claim, like Frankenstein’s Monster, has been haphazardly stitched together from
two distinct theories in an attempt to avoid controlling precedent,” he wrote
in a damning order, issued on Saturday.
It came
after similar failed court bids in Georgia, Michigan and Arizona to prevent
states from certifying their vote totals.
Ruling that
Pennsylvania officials can certify election results in the state, where Biden
has a lead of more than 80,000 votes, Brann said the Trump campaign presented
“strained legal arguments without merit and speculative accusations…
unsupported by evidence” in its attempt to challenge a batch of thousands of
votes.
Brann also
suggested that the Trump campaign’s case demonstrated a failure to understand
the US constitution, writing: “Plaintiffs seek to remedy the denial of their
votes by invalidating the votes of millions of others. Rather than requesting
that their votes be counted, they seek to discredit scores of other votes, but
only for one race. This is simply not how the constitution works.”
For Trump
to maintain any hope of staying in the White House, he would need to eliminate
Biden’s 81,000-vote lead in Pennsylvania. The state is due to start certifying
its results on Monday – as is Michigan.
Kristen
Clarke, president of the lawyers’ committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said of
the Pennsylvania result and forthcoming result certification: “This should put
the nail in the coffin on any further attempts by President Trump to use the
federal courts to rewrite the outcome of the 2020 election.”
Republican
Pennsylvania senator Pat Toomey acknowledged that the ruling closed off any
chance for a legal victory in the state and called on Trump to accept the
result and praised Brann as “a fair and unbiased jurist”.
Liz Cheney,
a member of the Republican leadership team in the House of Representatives,
urged Trump to respect “the sanctity of our electoral process” if he cannot
prove his voter fraud claims.
Biden has
garnered the most votes of a presidential winner in history, recording 6
million more votes than Trump, and will begin naming people on Tuesday to fill
his cabinet positions, chief of staff Ron Klain said on Sunday.
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