The Daily Telegraph

Trump accused of ‘abuse of office’ by Biden lawyer

- By Ben Riley-smith US EDITOR

DONALD TRUMP was accused of “appalling” and “pathetic” behaviour by Joe Biden’s campaign legal adviser yesterday for inviting Republican lawmakers from Michigan to the White House just days before its election result certificat­ion is due.

The US president was expected to meet at least two senior Republican­s from the swing state’s legislatur­e as he made a controvers­ial interventi­on before the state is due to certify Mr Biden’s win there on Monday.

With the Trump campaign’s lawsuits being knocked back by courts, the president appears to be turning to political rather than legal routes to pursue his unproven claim that he was the real winner in this month’s election, despite vote counts showing the opposite.

Addressing reporters yesterday about changes to drug price rules, Mr Trump repeated his insistence that he won the election, saying in passing of the campaign “which I won, by the way”.

His latest drive appears to be pursuing the dubious idea that if certain battlegrou­nd states do not have their results certified then Republican legislatur­es there can appoint electors who will nominate Mr Trump for the presidency.

The approach is based on the idiosyncra­sies of the US electoral system. Strictly speaking, it is “electors” from states who gather in Washington DC next month and nominate the president, rather than voters, but the move would be likely to be decried as undemocrat­ic. Electors by precedent should pick the candidate who won most votes in their state.

With almost all votes counted, Mr Biden, the Democratic president-elect, won Michigan by more than 150,000 votes and a margin of almost three percentage points, a much bigger victory than Mr Trump’s win there in 2016, when he carried it by 10,000 votes.

Mr Trump was expected to meet Mike Shirkey, the leader of the State Senate, and Lee Chatfield, the speaker of the state House, in the White House yesterday. Mr Shirkey was greeted with chants of “shame on you” from some in an airport in Washington DC when he arrived yesterday.

He has previously indicated Mr Biden’s win will not be overturned by the state’s legislatur­e.

Bob Bauer, the Biden campaign legal adviser, condemned the president’s move in strong terms. “It’s an abuse of office. It’s an open attempt to intimidate election officials. It’s absolutely appalling,” Mr Bauer said during a briefing call with reporters yesterday. Given the lawsuits defeats the Trump campaign has had, he added, “it’s also pathetic”.

Some Republican­s have also spoken out. John Bolton, Mr Trump’s former national security adviser, said: “The GOP’S honour & integrity rest on the character of these two men. If they resist, we must come to their defence. If they falter, we are in trouble.”

Mitt Romney, the Utah senator and 2012 Republican presidenti­al nominee, said: “It is difficult to imagine a worse, more undemocrat­ic action by a sitting American president.”

 ??  ?? No surrender: President Trump addresses reporters at the White House yesterday in a press briefing at which he referred to the election result, adding ‘which I won, by the way’
No surrender: President Trump addresses reporters at the White House yesterday in a press briefing at which he referred to the election result, adding ‘which I won, by the way’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom