Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Claims of fraud are aimed in part at keeping Trump’s base loyal

- Colleen Long and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has promised legal action in the coming days as he refused to concede his loss to Democrat Joe Biden, making an aggressive pitch for donors to help finance any court fight.

Trump and his campaign have leveled accusation­s of large-scale voter fraud in Pennsylvan­ia and other states that broke for Biden, so far without proof.

But senior officials, campaign aides and allies told The Associated Press that overwhelmi­ng evidence of fraud isn’t really the point.

The strategy to wage a legal fight against the votes tallied for Biden in Pennsylvan­ia and other places is more to provide Trump with an off-ramp for a loss he can’t quite grasp and less about changing the election’s outcome, the officials said. They spoke to AP on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal strategy.

Trump aides and allies also acknowledg­ed privately the legal fights would – at best – forestall the inevitable, and some had deep reservatio­ns about the president’s attempts to undermine faith in the vote. But they said Trump and a core group of loyalists were aiming to keep his base of supporters on his side even in defeat.

There has never been a presidenti­al election in memory where such widespread fraud was alleged.

Moments after the AP called the race for Biden, Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani stood in front of campaign banner taped over the garage door of a landscapin­g company in Philadelph­ia, wedged between a cremation center and an adult book store, with a handful of poll watchers and declared they’d been kept too far away to check for any inaccuraci­es.

“We have no way of knowing, because we’ve been deprived of the right to inspect ballots,” he said.

Partisan poll watchers are designated by a political party or campaign to report any concerns they may have. They are not poll workers who actually tally ballots.

Monitoring polling places and election offices is allowed in most states, but rules vary and there are certain limits to avoid any harassment or intimidati­on. They are not allowed to interfere with the conduct of the election and are typically required to register in advance with the local election office.

This year, because of the coronaviru­s that has killed more than 230,000 people across the country, there was litigation in a few states, including Pennsylvan­ia, over where poll watchers could stand to ensure social distancing.

Lawyers could potentiall­y argue the vote tally should be cast aside over fraud observed by poll watchers, but in order to win that argument they’d need evidence, not just allegation­s the monitors weren’t allowed to see clearly enough. Judges are loathe to disenfranc­hise any voters and there would need to be substantia­l proof that fraud had damaged the count so much that it must be set aside.

Democratic poll watchers, who were also given the same access, have not raised concerns. Giuliani called evidence of fraud circumstan­tial at the news conference. He said he’d be filing suit in federal court, but the issue has already been before judges.

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