The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Trump tweets ‘he won’ after Biden victory

- KEVIN FREKING

President Donald Trump has appeared to acknowledg­e for the first time that Joe Biden has won the White House, but made clear he would not concede and would kept trying to overturn the election result.

His statements came in tw e e t s that included baseless claims about the November 3 presidenti­al vote, which state and federal officials say was safe and secure. The president tweeted that “he won”, something he had not said before publicly, though he said the Democrat’s victory was only “in the eyes” of the media.

Mr Biden defeated his rival by winning back a trio of m id -western battlegrou­nd states: Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia, and topped the 270 elec toral vote threshold to clinch the presidency.

So far, Mr Biden has 77.5 million votes, the most ever by a winning candidate, to Mr Trump’s 72.3 million.

The president has previously refused to accept the results of the election and he dug in again yesterday, saying: “I concede NOTHING! We have a long way to go.”

Even while seemingly acknowledg­ing Mr Biden’s victory, he also argued without evidence that the former vice-president only won because the election was “rigged”.

Mr Trump then made some unsubstant­iated complaints about access for poll watchers and vote

tabulation­s, and asserted “WE WILL WIN!”. Twitter soon posted warning labels about the tweets.

Election officials from both political parties have stated publicly that the election went well and internatio­nal observers confirmed there were no serious irregulari­ties.

Mr Trump’s campaign has tried to mount legal challenges across the

country, but many have been thrown out and none included any evidence that the outcome might be reversed.

More than a week after election day, Mr Trump has neither called Mr Biden nor made a formal concession, and White House officials insisted they are preparing for a second term.

In recent days, Mr Trump appeared to be inching

closer to acknowledg­ing the reality of his loss.

In comments in the Rose Garden about a coronaviru­s vaccine on Friday, Mr Tr u m p said his administra­tion would “not be going to a lockdown” to slow the spread of Covid-19, and added that “whatever happens in the future, who knows which administra­tion it will be? I guess time will tell.”

 ??  ?? RALLY: Thousands of people take part in a pro-Trump Maga march in Washington, DC.
RALLY: Thousands of people take part in a pro-Trump Maga march in Washington, DC.

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