President Trump's Fox News town hall with Sean Hannity on
Thursday night presented a rare opportunity for the nation's
commander-in-chief to answer questions coming directly from everyday
Americans. Town hall audience members in Green Bay, Wis., didn't
hold back, asking the president about numerous topics, including mail-in
voting, the recent rioting in America's cities -- and what
Trump considered to be his greatest accomplishment since taking office. Addressing one audience member's inquiry, Trump said he thought mail-in voting posed the “biggest risk” to a fair election come November.
'The most important question'
“I
think it’s the most important question I’ll be asked,” Trump said after
the audience member wanted to know how the president will make sure the
election is “free from fraudulent absentee votes and mail-in ballots.” Trump
raised his concerns about states like California that plan to do an
all-mail-in ballot election this fall over coronavirus concerns. The
president said mail-in ballots would call into question the integrity of
the election.
A "Hannity" town hall audience member in Green Bay, Wis., on
Thursday asks President Trump about protecting November's election.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has been “mailing out
millions and millions of ballots,” Trump told the audience. “Where are
they going?...Is the postman going to hand them out? Are they going to
take them out of the mailbox?” The president added his concerns
that a country like China could “print millions of ballots using the
exact same paper” in an attempt to interfere in the election. Some
election officials and voting experts, however, have challenged the
president's assertion, pointing to safeguards that states use to protect
the authenticity of mail-in ballots. Trump also made a
distinction between mail-in ballots and absentee ballots because of the
safeguards in requesting an absentee ballot. “People go through a
process for that -- but the mail-in ballots, they mail them to anybody
and they send them out by the millions," the president said.
"The mail-in ballots, they mail them to anybody and they send them out by the millions." — President Trump
He
added that he has voted via absentee ballot because his voting address
is in Florida even though he spents most of his time at the White House
in Washingtion, D.C. SEAN HANNITY'S TOWN HALL WITH PRESIDENT TRUMP: PART 1 Trump added that he thought most people prefer to vote in person on Election Day. “We
went through World War I and we voted, we went through World War II and
we voted. And now we have a virus, and by that time [November] it’ll be
less and less," he said.
“We went through World War I
and we voted, we went through World War II and we voted. And now we
have a virus, and by that time [November] it’ll be less and less." — President Trump
'These people are vandals'
Another
audience member asked the president what the administration would do to
keep the streets safe after the unrest in Wisconsin this week. The
president responded by saying that if former Wisconsin Gov. Scott
Walker, a Republican, were still running the state, it wouldn’t have
happened. (Wisconsin's current governor is Tony Evers, a Democrat.)
An audience member in Green Bay, Wis., asks President Trump about
how the administration will keep the streets safe from unrest.
“You happen to have a Democrat governor right now,”
the president said. “Democrats think it’s wonderful that they’re
destroying our country. It’s a very sick thing going on, nobody’s ever
seen it.”
“Democrats think it’s wonderful that they’re destroying our country. It’s a very sick thing going on, nobody’s ever seen it.” — President Trump
Trump
also claimed the “radical left” was manipulating presumptive Democratic
presidential nominee Joe Biden and would soon “take him over.” “With
that being said, the Republicans have to get tougher,” Trump said. “I'm
telling them all the time, because they're sitting back, they want to
be politically correct. ... And we told them, every night we're going to
get tougher and tougher, and at some point there's going to be
retribution because there has to be.”
"Republicans
have to get tougher. I'm telling them all the time, because they're
sitting back, they want to be politically correct." — President Trump
“These people are vandals, but they're agitators. But they're really -- they're terrorists in a sense.”
'We'll have close to 300 judges'
When
asked by another audience member about what he considered his greatest
accomplishment while in office, Trump first noted the historic number of
judges his administration has been able to get confirmed.
An audience member in Green Bay, Wis., asks President Trump what he believes has been his greatest accomplishment.
“I think before I'm finished this term, we’ll have
close to 300 judges -- federal judges,” he said. “That's a number that
nobody can even believe, and part of it was that President Obama was
unable to get judges approved in a large number -- about 142 judges. So I
took it off, got them approved, and then got a lot approved beyond.” He
said he’s also proud of how his administration has rebuilt the
military, launched Space Force and gotten Republican-backed tax cuts
signed into law.
Taking on the media
Trump
also told Fox News host Sean Hannity he believed he wouldn’t have been
elected president in 2016 if he didn’t “take on the media.” “The
New York Times is so dishonest, The Washington Post is so dishonest.
They write things -- you can do something great and they can make it
sound horrible. You could do something, and they can make it sound
beyond belief bad, like it's the worst thing ever.”
"The
New York Times’ is so dishonest, The Washington Post is so dishonest.
They write things -- you can do something great and they can make it
sound horrible." — President Trump
During
the wideranging interview, Trump said he believes his former national
security adviser, John Bolton, should be prosecuted for
"releas[ing] classified" information. The president also said he plans
on building on the accomplishments from his first term if he is
reelected. "I
never did this before," Trump said of the presidency. "I didn't know
very many people in Washington. It wasn't my thing. I was from
Manhattan, from New York. ... Now, I know everybody and I have great
people in the administration."
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