The Pak Banker

Trump to host Michigan lawmakers

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President Donald Trump will meet with the Republican leaders of the Michigan state legislatur­e on Friday at the White House, as his campaign pursues an increasing­ly desperate bid to overturn the Nov. 3 election amid a series of courtroom losses.

Meanwhile, President-elect Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with the Democratic leaders in Congress, House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, after spending most of the week huddled with advisers as he plans his administra­tion. The Trump campaign's latest strategy, as described by three people familiar with the plan, is to convince Republican-controlled legislatur­es in battlegrou­nd states that Biden won, such as Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, to undermine the election results and deliver those states to the Republican president's corner.

Trump's attempts to reverse the outcome via lawsuits and recounts have met with little success. A hand recount of Georgia's roughly 5 million votes wrapped up on Thursday, affirming Biden's victory there, while judges in three states rejected bids by the campaign to challenge vote counts.

Biden, the Democratic former vice president, has secured 306 votes to Trump's 232 in the state-by-state Electoral College that determines the winner. Each state's electoral votes, which are largely based on population, are typically awarded to the winner of the state's popular vote, which are cast in December in what is usually a formality.

A senior Trump campaign official said the idea is to sow doubt about the results in certain states while pressing Republican lawmakers to intervene by appointing their own Trump-supporting electors. Legal experts have sounded the alarm at the notion of a sitting president seeking to undermine the will of the voters, though they have expressed skepticism that a state legislatur­e could lawfully substitute its own electors.

Michigan's state legislativ­e leaders, Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey and House

Speaker Lee Chatfield, both Republican­s, will visit the White House at Trump's request, according to a source in Michigan.

The two lawmakers will listen to what the president has to say, the source said. Shirkey told a Michigan news outlet earlier this week that the legislatur­e would not appoint a second slate of electors. Trump separately reached out to a local election official in Wayne County, where Detroit is located, after she questioned whether to certify the results there. His outreach to state officials represents a shift for his re-election campaign, which has been unable to muster evidence to support the president's unfounded claims of widespread voter fraud. Election officials have said they saw no evidence of any major irregulari­ties.

Biden called Trump's attempts "totally irresponsi­ble" on Thursday, though he has expressed little concern they will succeed in preventing him from taking office on Jan. 20. Biden spent the week putting together his team. His incoming chief of staff, Ron Klain, told CNN on Thursday that Biden would announce more White House officials on Friday, after naming several senior staff members earlier this week. Biden said on Thursday he has selected a treasury secretary and could announce his pick as soon as next week.

Despite the setbacks, the Trump campaign has not abandoned its legal efforts to overturn the election results.

 ?? -REUTERS ?? Ethiopians who fled war in Tigray region, rest under trees with their belongings at the Um-Rakoba camp on the Sudan-Ethiopia border in Al-Qadarif state, Sudan.
-REUTERS Ethiopians who fled war in Tigray region, rest under trees with their belongings at the Um-Rakoba camp on the Sudan-Ethiopia border in Al-Qadarif state, Sudan.

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