Trump's attacks on election integrity 'disgust
me', says senior Georgia Republican
Lieutenant governor: ‘Trump did not win the state of
Georgia’
President made numerous false claims in incoherent
speech
Oliver
Laughland in Valdosta, Georgia and Martin Pengelly in New York
Sun 6 Dec
2020 16.03 GMTFirst published on Sun 6 Dec 2020 16.01 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/06/trump-republicans-governor-geoff-duncan-republican
Donald
Trump’s attacks on Republican officials in Georgia and insistence his defeat by
Joe Biden must be overturned are disgusting, the Republican lieutenant governor
of the southern state said on Sunday.
“It’s not
American,” Geoff Duncan told CNN’s State of the Union. “It’s not what democracy
is all about. But it’s reality right now.”
The
president staged a rally in Valdosta, Georgia on Saturday night. He began his
speech, which lasted more than 90 minutes, by falsely claiming he won the
state, which in fact he lost by around 12,000 votes in a result certified by
Republican secretary of state Brad Raffensperger more than two weeks ago.
“They
cheated and they rigged our presidential election, but we will still win it,”
Trump falsely insisted. “And they’re going to try and rig this [Senate]
election too.”
Two Georgia
Republicans face 5 January runoffs which will decide control of the Senate. On
Sunday evening, Kelly Loeffler will debate Rev Raphael Warnock, her Democratic
challenger. Amid controversy over stock trades made by both Republicans during
the Covid-19 pandemic, David Perdue has declined to debate his challenger, Jon
Ossoff.
In
Valdosta, the president invited Perdue and Loeffler on to the stage. Neither
reiterated his baseless claims about election fraud, Perdue coming closest by
saying: “We’re going to fight and win those seats and make sure you get a fair
and square deal in Georgia.”
As Perdue
spoke, the crowd chanted: “Fight for Trump!”
Some
suggest Trump’s assault on the presidential election could depress Republican
turnout.
“I think
the the rally last night was kind of a two-part message,” Duncan told CNN. “The
first part was very encouraging to listen to the president champion the
conservative strategies of Senators Loeffler and Perdue, and the importance of
them being re-elected.
“The second
message was concerning to me. I worry that … fanning the flames around
misinformation puts us in a negative position with regards to the 5 January
runoff. The mountains of misinformation are not helping the process. They’re
only hurting it.”
“Oh, absolutely it disgusts me,” Duncan said.
In
Valdosta, Trump read from a prepared list of nonsensical evidence he said
highlighted his victory. This included arguing that by winning Ohio and Florida
he had in fact won the entire election, and also that winning an uncontested
Republican primary was proof he beat Biden in November.
Trump lost
the electoral college 306-232 and trails in the popular vote by more than 7m.
His campaign has launched legal challenges in various states. The majority have
been rejected or dropped. The campaign filed a new lawsuit in Georgia on
Friday.
Trump vented
fury at Republican governor Brian Kemp, a one-time ally who he called from the
White House on Saturday to demand the Georgia result be overturned.
“Your
governor could stop it very easily if he knew what the hell he was doing,”
Trump told supporters, adding: “For whatever reason your secretary of state and
your governor are afraid of Stacey Abrams.”
Abrams, a
staunch voting rights advocate who Kemp beat for governor in 2018, helped drive
turnout and secure the state for Biden, the first Democrat to win it since
1992.
On Sunday,
Duncan was asked if Kemp would do as Trump asks, and call a special session of
the state general assembly to appoint its own electors for Trump, a demand one
critic called “shockingly undemocratic”.
“I
absolutely believe that to be the case that the governor is not going to call
us into a special session,” Duncan said.
In an angry
intervention earlier this week, Georgia elections official Gabriel Sterling
said of Trump’s attacks on Kemp, Raffensperger and other Republicans: “Someone’s
gonna get hurt, someone’s gonna get shot. Someone’s gonna get killed. And it’s
not right. It has all gone too far.”
Duncan said
“we’ve all all of us … got increased security around us and our families [but]
we’re going to continue to do our jobs. Governor Kemp, Brad Raffensperger and
myself, all three voted and campaigned for the president, but unfortunately he
didn’t win the state of Georgia.”
Duncan
sidestepped a question about the wisdom of holding a rally where many attendees
did not wear masks, as coronavirus cases surge. But he did call Biden’s request
that Americans to wear masks for 100 days “absolutely a great step in the right
direction”.
On
Saturday, the Washington Post found only 27 of 249 congressional Republicans
were willing to acknowledge Biden’s victory. Duncan did so.
“On 20
January Joe Biden’s going to be sworn in as the 46th president and the
constitution is still in place,” Duncan said. “This is still America … as the
lieutenant governor and as a Georgian I’m proud that we’re able to look up
after three recounts and be able to see that this election was fair.”
Raffensperger
told ABC’s This Week: “We don’t see anything that would overturn the will of
the people here in Georgia.”
It was
“sad, but true”, he added, that Trump had lost.
“I wish he
would have won. I’m a conservative Republican and I’m disappointed but those
are the results.”
In
Valdosta, Trump did seem at points to recognise the end is near. With reference
to policy on Iran and China, he described “what we would have done in the next
four years”. He also said that if he thought he had lost the election, he would
be “a very gracious loser”.
“I’d go to
Florida,” he said. “I’d take it easy.”

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