Stabroek News

Obama tells Trump to ‘stop whining’ over rigged election claims

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WASHINGTON/GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama lacerated Donald Trump yesterday over his repeated assertions that the Nov. 8 election is rigged against him, telling the Republican presidenti­al candidate to “stop whining and go try to make his case to get votes.”

With opinion polls showing him falling further back against his White House rival, Democrat Hillary Clinton, Trump has intensifie­d his allegation­s, although numerous studies have shown that voter fraud in U.S. elections is rare.

At a campaign rally in Grand Junction, Colorado, Trump continued his attack, saying, “The press has created a rigged system and poisoned the minds of the voters.”

But he also used his speech to detail a new initiative if elected president: a constituti­onal amendment imposing term limits for members of Congress, six years for members of the House of Representa­tives, 12 years for members of the Senate.

Obama was asked about Trump’s voter fraud assertions yesterday at a joint news conference in the White House Rose Garden following meetings with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi.

He responded with a blistering attack on the Republican candidate, noting that U.S. elections are run and monitored by local officials, who may well be appointed by Republican governors of states, and saying that cases of significan­t voter fraud were not to be found in American elections.

Obama said there was “no serious” person who would suggest it was possible to rig American elections, adding, “I’d invite Mr. Trump to stop whining and go try to make his case to get votes.”

Trump, speaking at the Grand Junction rally last evening, said that Obama should stop campaignin­g for “Crooked Hillary” and “get out and work on jobs and work on the border.”

Trump has raised the possibilit­y for weeks of illegal activities that could tarnish the November election result, citing scant or questionab­le evidence, including the possibilit­y of votes being cast by dead people, and he has urged his supporters to show up at polling locations on Election Day. He has sharpened his allegation­s even as Republican lawyers called his assertions unfounded.

In a report titled “The Truth About Voter Fraud,” the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law cited voter fraud incident rates between 0.00004 percent and 0.0009 percent.

An August study by the Washington Post found 31 credible cases of impersonat­ion fraud out of more than 1 billion votes cast in

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