Friday, November 6, 2020

Sen. Lindsey Graham Donates $500K to Trump Legal Defense


Vowing to "stand with" President Donald Trump, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., announced Thursday night he is donating $500,000 to Trump's legal defense fund.

"I'm here tonight to stand with President Trump," Graham told Fox News' "Hannity." "He stood with me. He's the reason we're going to have a Senate majority. My race was overwhelming. He helped Senate Republicans, we're going to pick up House seats, because of the campaign that President Trump won.

"I'm going to donate $500,000 tonight to President Trump's defense legal fund."

Graham began by calling out "suppression polling" that he claimed was intended to defeat Trump and other Republicans before the Nov. 3 election.

"It's a game they play with their polling to depress the Republican vote," Graham told host Sean Hannity.

"Give to DonaldJTrump.com, so we will have the resources to fight," Graham added. "The allegations of wrongdoing are earth shattering. It makes the Carter Page warrant application look on the up and up.

"Senate Republicans are going to be briefed by the Trump campaign Saturday, and every Senate Republican, and House Republican needs to get on television and tell this story."

Amid calls from some the Republican Party is not vocally backing Trump's election fraud challenges, Graham said "everything should be on the table."

"There is the process of observing an election that's being violated," Graham continued. "Philadelphia elections are crooked like a snake. Why are they shutting people out? Because they don't want people to see what they're doing.

"You are talking about a lot of dead people voting. You are talking about in Nevada people are not legal residents."

Graham expressed confidence in Arizona's GOP Gov. Doug Ducey in defending the integrity of the election process, unlike other Democrat governors in states like Nevada and Pennsylvania.

"Doug Ducey said this is coming down to a couple thousand votes, one way or another," Graham concluded. "I trust Arizona. I don't trust Philadelphia. I don't trust Nevada. So, everything should be on the table. Let stand with President Trump. He stood with us."

 

Alan Dershowitz to Newsmax TV: Trump Has Best Chance With Pennsylvania Lawsuit


Following the election, President Donald Trump filed lawsuits against five states, alleging that votes were counted incorrectly, and legal expert Alan Dershowitz told Newsmax TV the Constitution is on the president's side in one of those cases.

"Pennsylvania is the strongest place for President Trump to be able to bring the lawsuit because he has a pure constitutional issue there. What happened is the judiciary extended the time for accepting ballots, mail-in ballots, by three days beyond what the legislature did," Dershowitz told Thursday's "Greg Kelly Reports."

"The Constitution's Article 2 gives the power to do that to the legislature. So if all the stars aligned for president, it's unlikely they will, but if they will align for the president and he manages to lose Pennsylvania by a small number of votes reflective of the number of votes that came in late, he might very well win in the Supreme Court.''

In all, Trump has sued Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The suits against Michigan and Georgia have been dismissed.

"But for it to make a difference it has to be that Pennsylvania makes the difference in the election and that those votes make the difference in Pennsylvania. I don't think he's going to win a kind of retail challenge to particular allegations of fraud state-by-state. Those are very very hard cases to do it," Dershowitz said.

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Thursday, November 5, 2020

Crooked Democrats Try To Steal Election Cartoons





 


Dick Morris to Newsmax TV: This Was a 'Setup'


The Democratic Party expected a contested 2020 presidential election and "set up" President Donald Trump to try to overturn a "verdict" that should have never been projected by pollsters and declared too soon by the "complicitous" media, according to political analyst Dick Morris on Newsmax TV.

"The whole point of the early polls, the whole point of the paper ballots, the whole point of the delay in the counting was to establish the concept that Biden had won, or at least was too confusing to tell so the verdict could overturned," Morris told Wednesday's "The Chris Salcedo Show."

Morris, a former close adviser for former President Bill Clinton, meticulously outlined how the Democratic Party, with an assist from their friends in the mainstream media, "set up" the dominoes to fall one by one against Trump in favor of Joe Biden.

"This is all a setup," Morris began to host Chris Salcedo. "The Democratic Party planned for this. They knew they were likely to lose this election, so the first thing they did was to fake the polls that talked about how they were going to win.

"And that was to set up the presumption that Biden was going to win, so that when he won based on fraud, everybody would say, 'yeah, he was winning anyway.'"

In the lead up to Tuesday, pollsters, perhaps even to a more egregious degree than 2016, had given Biden the "presumption" of an insurmountable edge the Trump campaign could not contest.

"Then as results came in on Election Night, the Democrats constantly held up the count – in many jurisdictions the count was not completed and was left hanging in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin," Morris continued. "Then they came in with their mail-in ballots, dumped them all of a sudden, barred the Republicans from looking at them, and then announced that Biden had won."

Finally, the media pulled the final lever by delivering a narrative it is the Trump campaign seeking to undermine a free and election, Morris concluded.

"And the complicitous news media called these states for Biden; that creates a sort of presumption that Biden has won those states," he said. "And Trump is then in the position of trying to overturn that verdict."

 

Trump Sues in 3 States, Laying Ground for Contesting Outcome


President Donald Trump’s campaign filed lawsuits Wednesday in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia, laying the groundwork for contesting battleground states as he slipped behind Democrat Joe Biden in the hunt for the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House.

The new filings, joining existing Republican legal challenges in Pennsylvania and Nevada, demand better access for campaign observers to locations where ballots are being processed and counted, and raise absentee ballot concerns, the campaign said. However, at one Michigan location in question The Associated Press observed poll watchers from both sides monitoring on Wednesday.

The AP called Michigan for Democrat Joe Biden on Wednesday. Nevada, Pennsylvania and Georgia are undecided.

The Trump campaign also is seeking to intervene in a Pennsylvania case at the Supreme Court that deals with whether ballots received up to three days after the election can be counted, deputy campaign manager Justin Clark said.

The actions reveal an emerging legal strategy that the president had signaled for weeks, namely that he would attack the integrity of the voting process in states where the result could mean his defeat.

His campaign also announced that it would ask for a recount in Wisconsin, a state the AP called for Biden on Wednesday afternoon. Campaign manager Bill Stepien cited “irregularities in several Wisconsin counties,” without providing specifics.

Biden said Wednesday the count should continue in all states, adding, “No one’s going to take our democracy away from us — not now, not ever.”

Campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said legal challenges were not the behavior of a winning campaign.

“What makes these charades especially pathetic is that while Trump is demanding recounts in places he has already lost, he’s simultaneously engaged in fruitless attempts to halt the counting of votes in other states in which he’s on the road to defeat,” Bates said in a statement.

Election officials continued to count votes across the country, the normal process on the day following voting. Unlike in previous years, states were contending with an avalanche of mail ballots driven by fears of voting in person during a pandemic. At least 103 million people voted early, either by mail or in-person, representing 74% of the total votes cast in the 2016 presidential election.

Every election, results reported on election night are unofficial and the counting of ballots extends past Election Day. Mail ballots normally take more time to verify and count. This year, because of the large numbers of mail ballots and a close race, results were expected to take longer.

The Trump campaign said it is calling for a temporary halt in the counting in Michigan and Pennsylvania until it is given “meaningful” access in numerous locations and allowed to review ballots that already have been opened and processed.

The AP’s Michigan call for Biden came after the suit was filed. The president is ahead in Pennsylvania but his margin is shrinking as more mailed ballots are counted.

There have been no reports of fraud or any type of ballot concerns out of Pennsylvania. The state had 3.1 million mail-in ballots that take time to count and an order allows them to be received and counted up until Friday if they are postmarked by Nov. 3.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a CNN interview the lawsuit was “more a political document than a legal document.”

“There is transparency in this process. The counting has been going on. There are observers observing this counting, and the counting will continue,” he said.

The Michigan lawsuit claims Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, was allowing absentee ballots to be counted without teams of bipartisan observers as well as challengers. She’s accused of undermining the “constitutional right of all Michigan voters ... to participate in fair and lawful elections.” Michigan Democrats said the suit was a longshot.

Poll watchers from both sides were plentiful Wednesday at one major polling place in question — the TCF Center in Detroit, The Associated Press observed. They checked in at a table near the entrance to the convention center’s Hall E and strolled among the tables where ballot processing was taking place. In some cases, they arrived en masse and huddled together for a group discussion before fanning out to the floor. Uniformed Detroit police officers were on hand to make sure everyone was behaving.

Mark Brewer, a former state Democratic chairman who said he was observing the Detroit vote counting as a volunteer lawyer, said he had been at the TCF arena all day and had talked with others who had been there the past couple of days. He said Republicans had not been denied access.

“This is the best absentee ballot counting operation that Detroit has ever had. They are counting ballots very efficiently, despite the obstructing tactics of the Republicans.”

GOP lawyers had already launched legal challenges involving absentee votes in Pennsylvania and Nevada, contesting local decisions that could take on national significance in the close election.

In one appeal to a Pennsylvania appellate court, the Trump campaign complained that one of its representatives was prevented from seeing the writing on mail-in ballots that were being opened and processed in Philadelphia. A judge in Philadelphia dismissed it, saying that poll observers are directed to observe, not audit.

The Georgia lawsuit filed in Chatham County essentially asks a judge to ensure the state laws are being followed on absentee ballots. Campaign officials said they were considering peppering a dozen other counties around the state with similar claims around absentee ballots.

Trump, addressing supporters at the White House early Wednesday, talked about taking the undecided race to the Supreme Court. Though it was unclear what he meant, his comments evoked a reprise of the court’s intervention in the 2000 presidential election that ended with a decision effectively handing the presidency to George W. Bush.

But there are important differences from 2000 and they already were on display. In 2000, Republican-controlled Florida was the critical state and Bush clung to a small lead. Democrat Al Gore asked for a recount and the Supreme Court stopped it.

To some election law experts, calling for the Supreme Court to intervene now seemed premature, if not rash.

A case would have to come to the court from a state in which the outcome would determine the election’s winner, Richard Hasen, a University of California, Irvine, law professor, wrote on the Election Law blog. The difference between the candidates’ vote totals would have to be smaller than the ballots at stake in the lawsuit

“As of this moment (though things can change) it does not appear that either condition will be met,” Hasen wrote.

Ohio State University election law professor Edward Foley wrote on Twitter Wednesday: “The valid votes will be counted. (The Supreme Court) would be involved only if there were votes of questionable validity that would make a difference, which might not be the case. The rule of law will determine the official winner of the popular vote in each state. Let the rule of law work.”

Biden campaign attorney Bob Bauer said if Trump goes to the high court, “he will be in for one of the most embarrassing defeats a president has ever suffered by the highest court in the land.”

The justices could decide to step into the dispute over the three-day extension for absentee ballots if they prove crucial to the outcome in Pennsylvania.

Even a small number of contested votes could matter if a state determines the winner of the election and the gap between Trump and Biden is small.


 

Colorado passes resolution to throw state's electoral votes to popular-vote winner

Maybe your new next president, what a joke!

 

Colorado voters passed Proposition 113 Tuesday night, officially joining the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.

That accord seeks to unite states that are attempting to remove the disconnect between the popular vote results and the count in the Electoral College.

The effort gained steam following Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s loss in 2016 to Republican nominee Donald Trump, despite the former secretary of state having won the national popular vote. 

Colorado joined 15 other states that have voted to throw their state’s electoral votes behind the candidate that wins the national popular vote, the Denver Post reported Wednesday.

Crooked Democrats

Voters in Colorado passed the measure with 52.2% of the vote, with 88% of the vote counted, according to the Post.

Democratic nominee Joe Biden was leading in the national popular vote by more than 3 million votes as of Wednesday night, though votes were still being counted nationwide.

“The national popular vote is a very straightforward concept,” Democratic state Sen. Michael Foote, who backed the initiative, told the newspaper. “One person should always equal one vote, and the presidential candidate who gets the most votes should win the election.”

But the close margin by which the measure passed suggested that Coloradans did not overwhelmingly the bill.

“They were tricked by California billionaires, who spent millions of dollars to buy our votes for president,” former Republican state House Speaker Frank McNulty told the Post. “Colorado’s votes should be decided by Coloradans.”

“This is going to reduce Colorado’s clout, and it’s going to reduce our influence on issues like transportation, water, health care and funding for our military bases,” he added.

In 2019, Colorado lawmakers decided to assign the state’s Electoral College votes to the winner of the national popular vote in a presidential election. 

But the measure was put on the ballot by grassroots conservatives seeking to reverse the decision and ban Colorado’s participation in such a strategy. The plan seemingly backfired as Colorado became the 16th state to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.

Republicans win key Senate races, fight to keep majority from Dems


Republicans retained key Senate seats Tuesday in critical states -- setting up multiple roadblocks to Democrats' path to flip the Senate and dashing any hopes for a blue wave. 

GOP senators swatted down well-funded challenges in Texas, Iowa, South Carolina, Kansas and Montana, Fox News projected. And in the latest news Wednesday, GOP Sen. Susan Collins, a prime target for Democrats, declared victory in Maine shortly after 1 p.m. ET as her challenger Sara Gideon publically conceded that she "came up short."

"I feel that this is an affirmation of the work that I'm doing in Washington to fight hard every day for the people of Maine," Collins, a moderate, told cheering supporters Wednesday afternoon. 

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, addresses supporters just after midnight on Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2020, in Bangor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, addresses supporters just after midnight on Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2020, in Bangor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

With each win in these battlegrounds, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is one step closer to holding the GOP majority -- a feat that seemed somewhat impossible with all the money and organizing effort liberals had put into flipping the Senate and election forecasters projecting the opposite. 

Speaking to reporters shortly after 11 a.m. ET Wednesday, McConnell said it was too early to tell whether Republicans had held the majority, given the number of outstanding races, but he projected favorable outcomes for the GOP in Maine and North Carolina.

"I don't know whether I'm going to be the majority leader or minority leader ... I've been both. The majority is better," McConnell quipped.

Republican Senate candidate Sen. Joni Ernst speaks to supporters at an election night rally, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican Senate candidate Sen. Joni Ernst speaks to supporters at an election night rally, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

In one major victory, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., fended off a serious scare from Democrat Jaime Harrison, who raised a record-breaking $107.6 million to challenge the powerful Judiciary Committee chairman. During his victory speech, Graham took aim at all the liberal donors who were banking on a GOP defeat.

"To all the pollsters out there, you have no idea what you are doing. And to all the liberals in California in New York, you wasted a lot of money," Graham said. “This is the worst return on investment in the history of American politics.”

Republicans were fighting to hold a slim 53-47 majority in the Senate. As of Wednesday morning, Democrats had only picked up a net gain of one seat, after winning Colorado and Arizona, but losing Alabama.

Competitive races have yet to be called in Alaska, North Carolina, Michigan and two seats in Georgia that may not be decided until after the new Congress is sworn in next year.

Republican candidate for Senate Sen. Kelly Loeffler greets supporters as she walks on stage at an election night watch party in Atlanta, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. Loeffler will be in a run off against Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock for the U.S. Senate seat. (AP Photo/Tami Chappell)

Republican candidate for Senate Sen. Kelly Loeffler greets supporters as she walks on stage at an election night watch party in Atlanta, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. Loeffler will be in a run off against Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock for the U.S. Senate seat. (AP Photo/Tami Chappell)

At least one of the Georgia races was headed to a run-off in January between Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., and Democrat Raphael Warnock, pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church.

And Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., was beating Democrat Jon Ossoff with 94 percent of the vote counted. If Perdue secures more than 50 percent of the final vote, he'll avoid a run-off election in January and return to the Senate for another six years.

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., had a slight edge over Cal Cunningham with 93% of the results in, but McConnell said it's too early to announce a win -- despite Tillis' earlier statements of victory.

Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., speaks at a campaign event before Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., Tuesday, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020, in Southfield, Mich. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., speaks at a campaign event before Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., Tuesday, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020, in Southfield, Mich. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

Republicans could still pick up a seat in Michigan where incumbent Democratic Sen. Gary Peters is running neck-and-neck with GOP businessman John James as of 1 p.m. Wednesday. 

And GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan was comfortably ahead of Al Gross in Alaska, but with less than half the vote counted it was too early to declare a winner. 

Heading into Election night, Republicans were on defense with 12 GOP senators in competitive races, compared to only two Democrats in jeopardy.

McConnell had previously pegged the odds of retaining control at 50-50. On Wednesday he said Republicans still need to do better in the suburbs, with women and with college-educated voters, but overall he seemed to think Republicans beat the odds.

"We had overall, I think, a better election than most people thought we were going to have across the country," McConnell said. "But, yeah, we have improvement we need to make."

 

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