New York Daily News

GIVE IT UP, DON!

Even Trump loyalist Barr blows hole in prez’s talk of voter fraud conspiracy

- BY MICHAEL MCAULIFF, DAVE GOLDINER AND CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Even Bill Barr knows it’s over for President Trump.

The typically Trump-loyal attorney general admitted Tuesday that the Justice Department hasn’t uncovered any evidence to back up the president’s baseless claim that widespread voter fraud facilitate­d Joe Biden’s election victory.

“To date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have affected a different outcome in the election,” Barr said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Barr’s the most senior Trump administra­tion official to break with the president’s refusal to admit defeat over unfounded allegation­s that Democrats in as many as six states somehow rigged the election for Biden.

The implicit rebuke is particular­ly stinging, as Barr has been one of Trump’s most ardent allies and a key player in his bid to undermine the various federal investigat­ions targeting his campaign’s ties to Russia.

In an apparent effort to please Trump, Bar separately told the APP that he had given spe-cial counsel status too John Durham, the U.S. attorney tasked withh investigat­ing the origins of the FBI’s original Trump-Russia probe.

The designatio­n gives Durham additional protection­s that will likely allow him to continue his investigat­ion after Biden takes office on Jan. 20. The Durham probe — which critics view as a Trumpian effort to tarnish the legitimacy of the Russia inquiries — has not produced any substantia­l indictment­s.

Despite the Durham olive branch, Trump’s legal team bristled at Barr for acknowledg­ing the reality of Biden’s election win.

“With all due respect to the attorney general, there hasn’t been any semblance of a Department of Justice iinvestiga­tion,” Rudy Giuliani, who leads tthe Trump team, said in a statement. “His opinion appears to be without any knowledge or investigat­ion oof the substantia­l irregulari­ties and evidence of systemic fraud.”

Democrats, meanwhile, were furious with Barr for his Durham designatio­n.

“Barr is using the special counsel law for a purpose it was not intended: to continue a politicall­y motivated investigat­ion long after Barr leaves office,” said House Intelligen­ce Chairman Adam Schiff

(D-Calif.). “Having politicize­d the Department of Justice from his first days in office, it is a fitting coda that Barr should seek to do so in his last. Yet, none of this will ever change the truth about what the Trump campaign did, why Trump lied about it, and why he obstructed justice.”

The attorney general was later spotted at the White House, but it was unclear if he was meeting with Trump.

Before the election, Barr parroted Trump’s unsubstant­iated claims that mail-in voting is vulnerable to fraud.

He also issued an unusual memo last month directing U.S. attorneys across the country to pursue “substantia­l allegation­s” of voting irregulari­ties — a directive that prompted the Justice Department’s top elections crime official to step down in protest as it went around longstandi­ng agency protocols.

In Tuesday’s interview, Barr said U.S. attorneys and FBI agents have investigat­ed a number of specific complaints alleging fraud in the election.

But he said they’ve uncovered no evidence of any irregulari­ties that are substantia­l enough to change the outcome of the election, which Biden won by more than 6 million votes, producing a 306-to-232 margin in the Electoral College.

“They are not systemic allegation­s,” Barr said. “Some have been broad and potentiall­y cover a few thousand votes. They have been followed up on.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he suspects Barr may face the ax over his admission.

“I guess he’s the next one to be fired. Since he now, too, says there’s no fraud,” Schumer said.

Christophe­r Krebs, the Trump administra­tion’s top cybersecur­ity official, got the boot last month after acknowledg­ing that the 2020 election was secure and unhampered by widespread irregulari­ties.

Trump, undeterred by Barr’s comments, kept thumbing out fact-challenged tweets from the White House, including one that confusingl­y called on Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp to cancel the Jan. 5 runoff elections in the state that will determine which party controls the Senate next year.

“Call off election. It won’t be needed. We will all WIN!” Trump tweeted.

Like Krebs, election officials from both sides of the aisle in all 50 states have said there were no signs of widespread problems with the election.

The issues Trump’s allies have pointed to are typical, such as minor problems with signatures and postal marks on mail-in ballots, as well as small numbers of votes miscast or lost.

 ??  ?? Attorney General William Barr, one of President Trump’s biggest defenders, admitted Tuesday that there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud.
Attorney General William Barr, one of President Trump’s biggest defenders, admitted Tuesday that there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Attorney General William Barr (r.) said Tuesday that the Justice Department didn’t see any evidence of fraud that would overturn President Trump’s loss in last month’s presidenti­al election. Barr did give special counsel status to U.S. Attorney John Durham (below) who is looking into origins of TrumpRussi­a probe.
GETTY IMAGES Attorney General William Barr (r.) said Tuesday that the Justice Department didn’t see any evidence of fraud that would overturn President Trump’s loss in last month’s presidenti­al election. Barr did give special counsel status to U.S. Attorney John Durham (below) who is looking into origins of TrumpRussi­a probe.
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