Chicago Sun-Times

CLOSING STATEMENTS

Trump threatens legal action in Pennsylvan­ia; Biden slams president’s handling of pandemic

- BY JONATHAN LEMIRE, ZEKE MILLER, WILL WEISSERT AND ALEXANDRA JAFFE

PITTSBURGH — In the closing hours of a campaign shadowed by a once-in-a- century pandemic, President Donald Trump charged across the nation Monday delivering an incendiary but unsupporte­d allegation that the election is rigged, while Democratic challenger Joe Biden pushed to claim states once seen as safely Republican.

The two men broke sharply Monday on the voting process while campaignin­g in the most fiercely contested battlegrou­nd, Pennsylvan­ia.

The president threatened legal action to stop counting beyond Election Day. If Pennsylvan­ia ballot counting takes several days, as is allowed, Trump charged that “cheating can happen like you have never seen.”

Biden, in Pittsburgh, pushed a voting rights message to a mostly Black audience, declaring that Trump believes “only wealthy folks should vote” and describing COVID-19 as a “mass casualty event for Black Americans.”

“We’re done with the chaos, we’re done with the tweets, the anger, the hate, the failure, the irresponsi­bility,” said Biden, whose campaign has focused on increasing turnout by Black voters.

Both campaigns insist they have a pathway to victory, though Biden’s options for winning the required 270 Electoral College votes are more plentiful. Trump is banking on a surge of enthusiasm from his most loyal supporters in addition to potential legal maneuvers.

Trump spent the final full campaign day sprinting through five rallies, from North Carolina to Pennsylvan­ia to Kenosha, Wisconsin. Biden devoted most of his time to Pennsylvan­ia, where a win would leave Trump with an exceedingl­y narrow path. He also dipped into Ohio, a show of confidence in a state that Trump won by 8 percentage points four years ago.

The two men delivered their final messages, with Biden emphasizin­g the pandemic. He declared that “the first step to beating the virus is beating Donald Trump,” and he promised he would retain the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, whom the president has talked of firing.

During a rally that started late Sunday in Opa-locka, Florida, Trump expressed frustratio­n that the surging virus cases remain prominent in the news, sparking chants of “Fire Fauci” from his supporters.

Trump replied, “Don’t tell anybody, but let me wait until a little bit after the election.”

Trump on Monday, meanwhile, made only passing mention of what his aides believe are his signature accomplish­ments — the nation’s economic rebound, the recent installati­on of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett — in favor of a torrent of grievance and combativen­ess. He angrily decried the media’s coverage of the campaign while complainin­g that he also was being treated unfairly by, in no particular order, China, the Electoral College system and rock singer Jon Bon Jovi.

“I have been under siege illegally for 3½ years. I wonder what it would be like if we didn’t have all of this horrible stuff. We’d have a very, very calm situation,” said Trump at an evening rally in Michigan. “People see that we fight and I’m fighting for you. I’m fighting to survive. You have to survive.”

Biden announced an unusual move to campaign on Election Day, saying he would head to Philadelph­ia and his native Scranton on Tuesday as part of a get- out-the-vote effort. His running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, will visit Detroit, a heavily Black city in battlegrou­nd Michigan, and both of their spouses will hit the road too. Trump told reporters he would be visiting his campaign headquarte­rs in Virginia, and he is also hosting family and friends on election night in the East Room of the White House.

Nearly 100 million votes have already been cast, through early voting or mail-in ballots, which could lead to delays in tabulation.

Trump also rallied in Scranton on Monday, underscori­ng the importance of the state’s vote-rich northeast counties, and zeroed in on the state’s process to count votes. He has used stark terms to threaten litigation to stop the tabulation of ballots arriving after Election Day — counting that is allowed with earlier postmarks in some states.

He has said that “we’re going in with our lawyers” as soon as the polls close in Pennsylvan­ia and on Monday spoke ominously about the Supreme Court decision to grant an extension to count the votes after Tuesday.

“They made a very dangerous situation, and I mean dangerous, physically dangerous, and they made it a very, very bad, they did a very bad thing for this state,” Trump declared. He said of Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, “Please don’t cheat because we’re all watching. We’re all watching you, governor.”

The Democrats’ most popular surrogate, former President Barack Obama, made one of his final campaign stops in Georgia.

“I didn’t originally plan to come to Georgia. I told Michelle, I’m sorry, Baby, I got to go to Georgia. This is a big deal,” said Obama, noting Democrats’ hopes that they could deliver a knockout blow to Trump in the former GOP stronghold. “Georgia could be the state, Georgia could be the place.”

But even as Biden enjoyed strong poll numbers, the move to expand the map revived anxiety among Democrats scarred by Trump’s 2016 upset over Hillary Clinton, whose forays into red states may have contribute­d to losing longtime party stronghold­s.

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 ??  ?? President Donald Trump is cheered by supporters during a rally Monday night at the Kenosha, Wisconsin, airport, while former Vice President Joe Biden is joined by pop star Lady Gaga at Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field.
President Donald Trump is cheered by supporters during a rally Monday night at the Kenosha, Wisconsin, airport, while former Vice President Joe Biden is joined by pop star Lady Gaga at Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field.

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