San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Trump backers don’t accept outcome.

- By Anita Snow, David Goldman and Lisa Marie Pane

Chanting “This isn’t over!” and “Stop the steal,” Donald Trump supporters protested at state capitols across the country Saturday, refusing to accept defeat and echoing the president’s unsubstant­iated allegation­s that the Democrats won by fraud.

From Atlanta and Tallahasse­e to Austin, Bismarck, Boise and Phoenix, crowds ranging in size from a few dozen to a few thousand — some of whose members were openly carrying guns — decried the news of Joe Biden’s victory after more than three suspense-days of vote-counting put the Democrat over the top.

Skirmishes broke out in some cities.

Outside the Capitol in Atlanta, in the longtime Republican stronghold of Georgia, chants of “Lock him up!” rang out among an estimated 1,000 Trump supporters. Others chanted, “This isn’t over! This isn’t over!” and “Fake news!”

The streets were awash with U.S. flags and Trump banners.

No immediate violence was reported, though at one point, police moved to separate Trump opponents from supporters. Biden held a slim lead in Georgia, which hasn’t gone for a Democrat since 1992.

Jordan Kelley, a 29-year-old from Murfreesbo­ro, Tenn., drove three-plus hours to Atlanta to attend the pro-Trump rally.

“There’s election fraud going on here,” Kelley said, claiming that officials in Georgia — a state with a GOP governor and secretary of state — had improperly counted the ballots to put Biden ahead. “Even though I live in Tennessee, I’m an American, and I want to make sure Americans have a voice in the election.”

He planned to make the 10hour trip to Washington next week to demonstrat­e on the steps of the Supreme Court, where Trump and his lawyers have vowed to eventually make his case.

Underscori­ng the hard feelings on both sides of the nation’s deep political divide, anti-Trump protesters in Washington booed, yelled obscenitie­s, shouted, “Loser! Loser!” and gave the finger to Trump’s motorcade as the president returned to the White House from a golf outing Saturday.

Two signs posted in front of Trump’s Washington hotel read “Don’t be a sore loser” and “Face Reality.”

Contrary to the claims of Trump supporters, there has been no evidence of any serious vote fraud. And some Republican elected officials around the country began to distance themselves from the president and urge him to accept the outcome gracefully.

The utter rejection of Biden as the legitimate president by Trump and his supporters appears to represent something newin American political history, said Barbara Perry, presidenti­al studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.

“We typically haven’t had a leader who loses the presidency who then tells his followers, ‘This is false. This has been stolen from us,’” Perry said. “Incumbent presidents have been mad, so mad they didn’t go to the inaugurati­on, but not like this, where they are leading those people to say this is fraudulent.”

A couple of thousand Trump supporters gathered at the Pennsylvan­ia Capitol in Harrisburg. Pennsylvan­ia played a crucial role in Biden’s victory.

“If we don’t stop this today, it’ll all be over,” Bruce Fields, 66, said of news organizati­ons declaring Biden the winner. “Otherwise we can kiss freedom goodbye.”

About two dozen heavily armed men, some wearing camouflage, joined the rally.

At the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix, a crowd swelled to more than 1,000 within hours. Biden won Arizona on his way to victory in the Electoral College.

“It’s very suspicious that President Trump, with the red wave we’ve been seeing in Arizona, is struggling,” Kelli Ward, former state senator and chairwoman of the Arizona Republican Party, told boisterous pro-Trump demonstrat­ors. “I want to know if there is any discrepanc­y with the numbers coming out of the machines.”

More than 1,000 people gathered at the Capitol in Austin, with police keeping Trump and Biden supporters on opposite sides of the street. Several hundred demonstrat­ors turned out in Salem, Ore., for a “Stop the Steal” rally.

Even in a place that wasn’t close, Trump supporters gathered in droves to express support for him and vent frustratio­n over the outcome of the election. Outside North Dakota’s Capitol in Bismarck, the state’s all-Republican congressio­nal delegation joined chanting, sign-carrying protesters.

A few skirmishes broke out between Trump backers and pro-Biden and Black Lives Matters demonstrat­ors, with one BLM supporter attempting to handcuff himself to a Trump supporter. The two men began wrestling on the ground.

An officer escorted the Black Lives Matter supporter to a squad car. It was unclear if he had been arrested.

In Lansing, Mich., about 50 Trump supporters and a smaller group of marchers carrying Black Lives Matter flags converged on the state Capitol, where they pushed, shoved and shouted at one another in a tense standoff. But within moments of the race being called, a few from both sides broke into prayer, and at least one pair hugged.

Frank Dobbs, 40, of Henderson, Nev., brought a bullhorn and a Trump 2020 flag that he wrestled with in a stiff wind during a rally outside the Clark County registrar of voters office in North Las Vegas.

“It’s not over until it’s over. There’s still the courts. If ever there’s ever a time to expose widespread fraud, this is the president to do it,” Dobbs said. “The media doesn’t decide who wins the presidency. The legal voters of this country decide.”

 ?? Tom Reel / Staff photograph­er ?? Trump supporters display signs to passing cars as they fill the town square in New Braunfels on Saturday after Joe Biden was declared the next president.
Tom Reel / Staff photograph­er Trump supporters display signs to passing cars as they fill the town square in New Braunfels on Saturday after Joe Biden was declared the next president.

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