Donald Trump mounts all-out assault on election
result in Michigan
President calls county officials in attempt to derail
Biden victory
Plans to fly Republican lawmakers to meet with him in
DC
Tom
McCarthy
@TeeMcSee
Email
Thu 19 Nov
2020 17.48 GMTLast modified on Fri 20 Nov 2020 04.37 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/nov/19/trump-michigan-election-result-assault-challenge
Donald
Trump has mounted an all-out assault on the election result in Michigan,
reportedly planning to fly state lawmakers to meet with him in Washington and
phoning county officials in an apparent attempt to derail the certification of
Democrat Joe Biden’s 150,000-vote victory in the state.
On Tuesday
night, Trump placed phone calls to two Republican members of a county-level
vote certification board the night before the pair tried to reverse their
previous endorsement of a large chunk of the vote in Michigan.
The news
emerged as Republican lawmakers in Michigan prepared to fly to Washington on
Friday to meet with Trump at his request, the Washington Post first reported.
While no
explanation for the meeting has been given, Trump has been pressuring Republican
state lawmakers to try to hijack the electoral college by advancing slates of
electors that could compete with those selected by the states’ voters.
There was
no indication that Trump’s strategy, which in addition to the consent of
legislatures would require a string of highly unlikely court victories and
ultimately participation by Democrats in Congress to succeed, had any remote
chance of overturning the election.
But Trump’s
full-court press in Michigan has raised concerns about the integrity of the
state’s election result, which has an election certification deadline of
Tuesday 23 November.
But at a
meeting on Tuesday night, Hartmann and Palmer at first refused to certify the
vote in Wayne county, which hosts the city of Detroit and where more than 80%
of the vote is African American, citing minor irregularities. Biden won the
county by more than 330,000 votes – his largest margin of any county in
Michigan.
After three
hours of discussion among community members attending the meeting virtually,
some of whom accused Hartmann and Palmer of carrying out a brazen, racist
assault on the right to vote, the pair certified the Wayne county vote. In the
past the process has been treated as routine.
Trump spoke
with Palmer on the phone later that night, she told the Detroit Free Press. “He
was checking to make sure I was safe,” she said. Palmer said that she and her
family had “received multiple threats”.
The next
day both Hartmann and Palmer filed affidavits in court seeking to reverse their
certification of the Wayne county result, claiming that they had been promised
internally that the vote would be audited, only to discover it would not be.
The White
House did not reply to a request for comment. Neither did Hartmann or Palmer.
Trump inaccurately tweeted on Tuesday night that the board had declined to
certify the Wayne county vote, indicating that he was following the process
closely.
The
Michigan secretary of state, Jocelyn Benson, said through a spokesperson on
Thursday that the certification was final. “There is no legal mechanism for
them to rescind their vote,” she said. “Their job is done and the next step in
the process is for the board of state canvassers to meet and certify.”
The
vice-chairman of the Wayne county board of canvassers, Democrat Jonathan
Kinloch, denied the substance of the affidavits, telling the Washington Post
that the Republican pair understood the process and knew what they were
certifying.
Ever since
Trump’s election loss two weeks ago, the Trump campaign has been filing
lawsuits and applying pressure on Republican officials in multiple states in an
effort to overturn the election result or, barring that, to spread the false
belief that Biden’s victory was illegitimate. Polling indicates that they are
succeeding in the latter objective with a majority of Republicans.
Trump
campaign tampering had not caused a serious hitch in the process of vote
certification, however, until Tuesday night.
Biden needs
electoral votes to make his win over Trump official, although he defeated Trump
in a sufficient number of states that he still would win in the electoral
college even if the Trump campaign managed to steal the election in multiple
big states such as Michigan and Pennsylvania.
Separately
in Michigan on Thursday, the Trump campaign withdrew an election-related
lawsuit in federal court, making the false assertion in court documents that
the Wayne county vote had not been certified. The Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani
was leading that case.
The Trump
campaign’s legal strategy came under question in a separate case in
Pennsylvania, where on Wednesday the campaign proposed that the campaign itself
should conduct a review of mail-in ballots and let the court know what it
found. As of this writing the court had not taken up the offer from the
campaign, which has failed to advance any of its dozens of lawsuits since
election night.
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