Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump says he’ll leave the White House if Biden is affirmed the winner

- By Josh Wingrove

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said he’ll relinquish power if the Electoral College affirms Democrat Joe Biden’s win, but he signaled he may never formally concede defeat and may skip the Democrat’s inaugurati­on.

Trump fielded questions from reporters on Thursday for the first time since his election defeat, speaking at the White House after a Thanksgivi­ng teleconfer­ence with members of the military.

He rehashed for about 25 minutes a series of allegation­s his legal team has so far made but provided little or no evidence for — and thus hasn’t raised in court appearance­s — while saying flatly that Biden couldn’t have received 80 million votes from the American people.

The defiant and occasional­ly conspirato­rial exchange in the White House’s diplomatic room included a brief acknowledg­ement of the reality facing him. When Trump was asked if he’d physically leave the building if the Electoral College affirms Biden’s victory, he replied, “Certainly I will, and you know that.”

He swiftly returned, though, to unloading a series of attacks and criticizin­g the election — including calling Georgia’s Republican secretary of state an “enemy of the people.” Trump said he’d soon stage a rally in Georgia, where voters return to the polls in early January for a pair of runoff Senate races that will determine control of the chamber.

Pressed on whether he would ever acknowledg­e defeat, Trump said it would “be a very hard thing to concede,” even if the Electoral College confirms Biden’s victory. “If they do, they’ve made a mistake,” he said. “This election was a fraud.”

There is no evidence of a widespread fraud in the U.S. election, and numerous states have certified the results. Trump’s objections are aimed at Democrats and Republican officials alike.

The Electoral College electors in each state are due to vote Dec. 14. Certificat­es recording the electoral vote results in each state must be received by the president of the Senate no later than Dec. 23. Biden is certified as the winner, or is leading, in states totaling 306 electoral votes, well above the victory threshold of 270.

Trump acknowledg­ed he was running out of time to present evidence of the massive fraud he was sketching out — a signal that the evidence may never come. “The whole world is watching and the whole world is laughing at our electoral process,” he said.

Trump repeatedly circled back to Biden’s raw vote total, insisting the Democrat couldn’t have done so well as compared to previous Democratic candidates, although population growth historical­ly drives growth in voting numbers, and the charged 2020 election cycle resulted in high turnout at every step.

“This is not a candidate that can get 80 million votes,” he said of Biden. “The only way he got 80 million votes is through a massive fraud.”

Trump declined to say if he’d attend Biden’s inaugurati­on, as is the custom for an outgoing president. “I’ll be honest, I know the answer, but I just don’t want to say it yet,” he said. He also said that it’s “not right” that Biden has begun picking a Cabinet.

He ran through a series of states while disputing their results, including some that have already certified Biden’s victory, such as Pennsylvan­ia.

“There’s no way I lost Pennsylvan­ia,” Trump said. He claimed he also won Wisconsin, which Biden won but where a partial recount sought and paid for by Trump’s campaign is underway.

Trump made a passing reference to state-level lawmakers, hinting that he might still urge state legislatur­es to reject the results entirely and appoint their own electors to flip the state to him. “We’re in courts and we’re also in front of legislatur­es,” he said. One of Trump’s lawyers, Jenna Ellis, said Wednesday in Pennsylvan­ia that the state legislatur­e should consider intervenin­g.

In Pennsylvan­ia, “the Republican statehouse, they’re starting to see what’s going on there,” Trump said. A day earlier, he called into a de facto hearing in Gettysburg, repeating his unfounded allegation­s of fraud and calling for the election to be overturned.

At one point, Trump told reporters on Thursday, “don’t let Joe Biden take credit for the vaccines” — another sign that he is coming to terms with his defeat.

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