Trump privately admits it’s over, but wants to
brawl for attention
To one person, Trump even confided he was “just
disappointed we lost.” But he still maintains he would have won a fair
election.
By ANITA
KUMAR
01/05/2021
08:17 PM EST
Updated:
01/05/2021 10:21 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/05/donald-trump-election-challenge-455233
Donald
Trump has privately acknowledged he lost the presidency. He knows Joe Biden
will replace him. He recognizes Congress will formally certify the results on
Wednesday.
To one
person, Trump even confided he was “just disappointed we lost.”
Trump’s
acceptance has taken shape in recent weeks, according to three people who have
spoken to Trump in that time span, with one conversation occurring a week ago.
Trump admits his defeat, but still maintains he would have won a fair election,
they said, despite no concrete evidence emerging of widespread voter fraud. He
has even discussed his exit plans from Washington with staff, debating when to
move to his South Florida Mar-a-Lago resort, according to one of the people.
Sometimes,
Trump does still lapse back into the belief that maybe, just maybe, he could
somehow eke out a win, most often when listening to his small group of lawyers,
including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Chapman University law
professor John Eastman.
But mostly,
he is continuing his fight to subvert the election for a Trumpian reason: to
keep the attention on himself and give his supporters what they want, according
to the people who have spoken with him.
“The point
is to still be relevant and still be talked about in the news,” said one of the
people. “This is someone who’s been on Page Six of the New York Post for 40
years. He’s beyond embarrassment.”
With that
in mind, Trump has kept up a flurry of activity to pressure other Republicans
to aid his effort to block Biden’s presidency.
In the days
before Congress votes to certify the election results, Trump has been calling
numerous members of Congress and legislators in battleground states, while
meeting with lawyers and top aides.
He even
publicly pressured Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday to go beyond his
constitutional duties and upend Wednesday’s certification proceedings, which
the vice president will oversee in a mostly ceremonial role. Hours later at
lunch, Pence informed Trump that he doesn't believe he has the power to block
the certification of Biden's victory, according to two White House officials.
The vice president told Trump that he planned to allow objections and possibly
make his own statement on election fraud, they said.
At 10 p.m.
on Tuesday, Trump issued a statement denying that Pence had made those
comments, calling it “fake news“ and saying he and the vice president were “in
total agreement“ that Pence has the power to act.
Trump’s
team hopes to secure 180 House members, along with 13 senators, to object to
Biden’s Electoral College win, likely turning a traditionally short ceremony
into a day-long event.
If
lawmakers contest results from the six swing states of Pennsylvania, Nevada,
Wisconsin, Georgia, Michigan and Arizona, the vote could drag into Thursday.
Rep. Scott
Perry of Pennsylvania, who visited the Trump campaign headquarters shortly
after the election, is expected to play a role in contesting his state’s
results, according to a former Trump campaign staffer. And newly sworn in Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia recently spoke to Trump, making it likely she
will play a role in contesting her state’s results.
Still,
Democrats are expected to join with numerous Republicans to eventually declare
Biden the winner.
Jason
Miller, who served as a Trump campaign senior adviser, argued Trump’s election
fight is not about his own race but about fixing the election system for future
elections.
“We want to
make sure people have confidence in our election system," he said.
"We don’t want this all to get swept under the rug."
The White
House did not respond to a request for comment.
For the two
months, Trump has falsely insisted he won the election, even as states across
the nation certified wins for Biden and selected electors who voted last month
to make Biden the 46th president.
But
privately, Trump has told some allies he knows he won’t prevail. And even
publicly, Trump has made statements about Biden that show he expects the
Democrat will be in the White House.
At a
campaign rally in Georgia Monday night, Trump speculated about what a
relationship between President Biden and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un
might look like. “I got along very well with Kim Jong Un. I don’t think that
Joe’s going to, based on what I’ve heard, but I got along very well with him,”
Trump said without calling Biden the next president.
Those
around Trump compared the president’s attitude to someone who knows he lost a
game, but believe it’s only because the referee made a bad call. “He’s come to
terms with the election results,” said one of the three people. “He accepts
them, but he doesn't believe them.”
Trump has
repeatedly asserted the election was fraudulently stolen from him, using
unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud to file lawsuits trying to overturn
the results. He filed a new challenge last week and still has a half dozen
appeals and motions pending at the Supreme Court. None of them are expected to
go anywhere.
Trump has
long played the victim card, arguing he’s just like Americans who feel betrayed
by the political system. As evidence, he and his allies have latched onto
Robert Mueller’s probe into whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia
on its 2016 election interference campaign. While Mueller uncovered extensive
Trump campaign efforts to conspire with Russian contacts, he concluded there
was no criminal conspiracy.
“After
experiencing all of the baseless allegations around Russia and being proven
right, you now have similar people coming to you and telling you that this
system screwed you again and his view is, ‘I’m not going to get screwed a
second time,’” said former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.
Even though
the election’s certification has reached its last step in Congress, Trump
hasn’t stopped pushing state officials to act.
Last
weekend, Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to
“find” enough votes to overturn Biden’s victory, and also held a conference
call with about 300 legislators from Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin.
Phill
Kline, a former Kansas attorney general who hosted the call on behalf of the
group Got Freedom, which says it’s fighting election fraud, said state
legislators still have time to act.
“The state
legislatures have the constitutional authority and they have not been allowed
to meet as a body to review the election and exercise that authority,” he said.
“Up until Inauguration Day, they can meet and decertify electors.”
In Arizona,
Republican T.J. Shope, an incoming state senator, said he expects at least one
local legislator to try to decertify the election before Inauguration Day. “I
fully expect some sort of late shenanigans of some sort,” he said. But Shope
doesn’t expect the objections to have widespread support in Arizona, even among
Republican leaders.
Election
lawyers say the time to contest the election, either through litigation or in
the states, passed in December.
“If the
goal is some kind of PR move to try to get legislators to try to come out and
say, ‘Congress shouldn’t accept electoral votes,’ it might play politically,”
said Richard Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California,
Irvine School of Law.
And the
political play is why Trump keeps going publicly with the election subversion
campaign, even as he privately accepts Biden will become president.
Indeed,
Trump’s fights have been cheered by his MAGA base, which is expected to descend
on Washington Wednesday for massive protests on the election results.
“He 100
percent knows it’s not going to happen, and he is calling people and doing
stuff,” said one of three people. “But all of this is about demonstrating to
his loyal followers on Twitter and the people who give $5 and $20 and $50 a
month that he is fighting to the bitter end.”
Bryan
Bender, Josh Gerstein, Natasha Korecki, Meridith McGraw, Gabby Orr and Holly
Otterbein contributed to this report.


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