Los Angeles Times

For Trump, chaos in and chaos out

In his final days, the president continues to make baseless claims.

- By Chris Megerian Times staff writers Janet Hook and Eli Stokols contribute­d to this report.

As he did from the start, the president is making baseless claims in his f inal days.

WASHINGTON — For the White House holiday parties that began this week, the decor was a mix of holiday fantasy and pandemic reality. A toy train scooted around a table festooned with garlands while a masked military band played. Servers stood behind plexiglass to hand out filet mignon and white chocolate truff les to champagnes­ipping guests.

President Trump made only a brief appearance, speaking from behind a lectern at the kind of indoor gathering that public health officials have warned could spread the deadly coronaviru­s, and after earlier White House events, held outdoors, sickened a number of attendees.

“It’s been an amazing four years. We are trying to do another four years. Otherwise, I’ll see you in four years,” he said, according to two people who attended the fete.

Trump is spending his final weeks in the White House much like he spent his first — indulging in delusions and spreading chaos.

He has threatened to veto the annual defense spending bill, which includes pay raises for troops and other essential funding, unless Congress includes an unrelated provision to punish social media companies that he claims are biased against him. He’s planning a string of pardons even as newly unsealed court records reveal that federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing an alleged cash- for- pardons bribery scheme. He’s refusing to back down from his faltering attempts to overturn Joe Biden’s election victory, and reportedly considerin­g firing his attorney general for not backing him up.

“He thinks that he won,” said a source close to Trump who requested anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons. Trump’s unpreceden­ted behavior as a lameduck president is a f inal rebuttal to the persistent hopes of some supporters — and even some detractors — that he would grow into the world’s most powerful job. Instead he’s replaced the lies about the crowd size at his inaugurati­on with lies about his votes for reelection, and this time undermined many Americans’ faith in the democratic process.

In a new broadside Wednesday, Trump uploaded a 46- minute video to Facebook in which he unspooled a series of debunked conspiracy theories about the election while standing behind a White House lectern affixed with the presidenti­al seal.

“I am determined to protect our election system, which is under coordinate­d assault and siege,” he said.

He veered from grievance to grievance, revisiting old wounds from the Russia investigat­ion and his impeachmen­t in between his false allegation­s about rigged voting machines and fraudulent mail ballots. Trump said he was “prepared to accept any accurate election result,” but baselessly claimed Biden won only because of cheating.

“There is still plenty of time to certify the correct winner of the election, and that’s what we’re fighting to do,” he said.

The video was posted one day after Atty. Gen. William Barr, in a rare public break with the president, said there was no evidence that illegal voting determined the result. “To date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election,” Barr told the Associated Press.

Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press secretary, declined Wednesday to say whether Trump still had confidence in Barr. In a nod to his penchant for announcing firings on Twitter, McEnany told reporters that “if the president has any personnel announceme­nts, you’ll be the first to know it.”

McEnany attempted to gloss over Barr’s comments, saying he was referring only to criminal investigat­ions, not the civil litigation that the president has been pursuing. However, almost all of Trump’s many lawsuits have failed. In his video, he claimed illogicall­y that the federal judges who had ruled against him actually believed that he’d won the election.

The president has also failed in his efforts to persuade Republican state lawmakers in political battlegrou­nds won by Biden, including Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, to ignore their states’ votes and appoint pro- Trump electors to the electoral college on Dec. 14.

With few options available, Trump has begun calling into pseudo- hearings held by Republican­s in several states to publicize farfetched allegation­s of voter fraud.

“This is the greatest scam ever perpetrate­d on our country,” he said Monday to a group in Arizona, his voice transmitte­d from the phone of one of his lawyers, Jenna Ellis, who held it to a microphone.

Most Republican­s have refused to speak out against Trump’s falsehoods, and he has feuded with the ones who have not assisted his attempts to overturn Biden’s win. He’s attacked Doug Ducey and Brian Kemp, the Republican governors of Arizona and Georgia, respective­ly, after they certified Biden’s victories in their states. And he ignored pleas from Gabriel Sterling, a GOP election official in Georgia, who said his conspiracy theories were inspiring violent threats. “Someone’s going to get killed,” Sterling said Tuesday, addressing his comments directly to the president.

Trump plainly was unmoved. “Rigged Election. Show signatures and envelopes. Expose the massive voter fraud in Georgia,” he tweeted even as he shared a video of Sterling’s remarks.

The president’s f lailing through his final weeks in off ice has threatened to jeopardize military funding, which Congress has approved annually for the last 59 years in bipartisan votes.

The target of his anger is Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, which limits website owners’ legal liability for content posted by users. Trump accuses social media companies of censoring him and other conservati­ves, and he called the provision “a serious threat to our National Security & Election Integrity.”

“Therefore, if the very dangerous & unfair Section 230 is not completely terminated as part of the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act ( NDAA), I will be forced to unequivoca­lly VETO the Bill when sent to the very beautiful Resolute desk. Take back America NOW. Thank you!” Trump tweeted on Tuesday night, using one of the same online platforms that he’s raged against.

Congressio­nal leaders appear willing to call the president’s bluff and move the legislatio­n forward anyway. Their stance ref lects their confidence that a Trump veto probably would be easily overridden.

Sen. James M. Inhofe ( R-Okla.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that he agrees with Trump about the internet matter but that the issue “has nothing to do with the military.”

“We ought to do away with 230,” he said. “But you can’t do it in this bill.”

 ?? Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? WHEN NOT railing against the election, President Trump has frequently gone golf ing since his defeat.
Alex Brandon Associated Press WHEN NOT railing against the election, President Trump has frequently gone golf ing since his defeat.

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