Qatar Tribune

Trump says will not ‘change my mind’ on election fraud claims

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IN the first TV interview since losing his re-election bid, President Donald Trump indicated on Sunday that he will never concede to Joe Biden and abandon his conspiracy theory about mass ballot fraud.

“It’s not like you’re gonna change my mind. My mind will not change in six months,” Trump told Fox News interviewe­r Maria Bartiromo.

“This election was rigged. This election was a total fraud,” he claimed, again without backing this up. “We won the election easily.”

The 45-minute interview, Trump’s first on television since the November 3 election, was mostly a monologue of evidence-free claims concerning election fraud, virtually unchalleng­ed by Bartiromo.

Despite Trump’s unpreceden­ted attack on the validity of the US election system, his legal team has yet to provide any evidence that stands up in court.

Case after case has been rejected by judges around the country. The latest rebuff came from the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, which on Saturday turned down a lawsuit filed by Trump supporters seeking to contest Biden’s win in the state.

“We’re trying to put the evidence in and the judges won’t allow us to do it,” Trump said. “We are trying. We have so much evidence.”

Ignoring the usual boundaries between his office and the judicial and law enforcemen­t

Despite Donald Trump’s unpreceden­ted attack on the validity of the US election system, his legal team has yet to provide any evidence that stands up in court

system, Trump complained that the Department of Justice and FBI were not helping him.

They are “missing in action,” he said, also questionin­g the point of the Supreme Court if it doesn’t intervene.

“We should be heard by the Supreme Court. Something has to be able to get up there. Otherwise, what is the Supreme Court ” he asked.

The 2020 election was not especially close.

Losers of US presidenti­al elections traditiona­lly concede almost immediatel­y.

But whether or not Trump ever acknowledg­es defeat, the Electoral College is all but certain to go through the formal motions of confirming Biden when it meets on December 14 and the Democrat will be sworn in on Inaugurati­on Day January 20.

 ??  ?? File photo of US President Donald Trump. (AFP)
File photo of US President Donald Trump. (AFP)

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