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• President suggests FBI, Justice Department biased against his efforts to stay in office after “fraudulent” election.

President suggests FBI, Justice were biased against him

- BY MICHAEL CROWLEY, CATIE EDMONDSON & CHRISTOPHE­R CAMERON Crowley, Edmondson and Cameron write for The New York Times.

WASHINGTON

President Donald Trump said Sunday that the FBI and the Justice Department might be “involved” in what he again groundless­ly called a fraudulent presidenti­al election, hinting that the nation’s law enforcemen­t agencies were biased against his fading efforts to remain in office.

“This is total fraud. And how the FBI and Department of Justice — I don’t know, maybe they’re involved — but how people are allowed to get away with this stuff is unbelievab­le. This election was a total fraud,” Trump said in an interview with Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo.

“Missing in action. Can’t tell you where they are,” Trump said, a note of resignatio­n in his voice. “I ask, ‘Are they looking at it?’ Everyone says, ‘Yes, they’re looking at it.’

“These people have been there a long time,” he added. “Some of them have served a lot of different presidents.”

Trump’s roughly 45-minute conversati­on with Bartiromo, who has been sympatheti­c to his charges, was his first one-on-one interview since his defeat to President-elect Joe Biden. Trump sounded at once angry but also resigned to the reality that Biden will be sworn in as president Jan. 20.

Trump offered vague charges of “thousands of dead people voting,” discarded ballots and blocked poll watchers. He also claimed that Biden won with implausibl­y large margins in African American areas.

“There’s no way Joe Biden got 80 million votes,” he

said. “There’s no way it happened.”

No significan­t evidence has been found to support the president’s claims, and several judges in multiple states have quickly dismissed lawsuits by his legal team alleging fraud.

Trump complained that the media had not taken his fraud claims more seriously and alleged that foreign leaders had expressed sympathy for his plight.

“You have leaders of countries that call me, say, ‘That’s the most messed-up election we’ve ever seen,’” Trump claimed. But no foreign leader has endorsed Trump’s claims about the election, and dozens have offered public and private congratula­tions to Biden.

With several important federal deadlines coming up for the election process, including a Dec. 8 deadline for states to resolve all election disputes, Trump declined to say when his time fighting the results would be up. “I’m not going to say a date,” Trump said.

Asked whether he would

appoint a special counsel to investigat­e the election, Trump said that he “would consider” doing so but quickly changed the subject.

And asked whether the Supreme Court, now governed by a conservati­ve majority, was likely to rule on the election outcome, Trump sounded pessimisti­c.

“It’s hard to get into the Supreme Court,” he said, adding that his lawyers had told him, “It’s very hard to get a case up there.”

“This is disgusting,” Bartiromo said. “And we cannot allow America’s elections to be corrupted.

“Do you believe you will win this?” she asked.

Trump did not answer directly.

Trump’s interview came amid continued pushback against his claims.

Christophe­r Krebs, the former government official who had overseen cybersecur­ity efforts for the 2020 election, reaffirmed his confidence in the integrity of the vote and called Trump’s unfounded allegation­s of voter

fraud “farcical.”

“The American people should have 100 percent confidence in their vote,” Krebs said in a “60 Minutes” interview that aired Sunday night. “The proof is in the ballots. The recounts are consistent with the initial count, and to me, that’s further evidence. That’s further confirmati­on.”

Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, a member of the Republican leadership, also said he did not think the election was rigged.

“I don’t think it was rigged,” Blunt said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “I think there was some element of voter fraud as there is in any election. I don’t have any reason to believe the numbers are there that would have made that difference.”

Blunt’s comments came as an increasing number of Republican lawmakers have begun to acknowledg­e Biden’s victory. But many, including the party’s leaders, still refuse to do so.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY AP ?? President Donald Trump walks with his granddaugh­ter, Arabella Kushner, 9, on the South Lawn of the White House after returning from Camp David on Sunday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY AP President Donald Trump walks with his granddaugh­ter, Arabella Kushner, 9, on the South Lawn of the White House after returning from Camp David on Sunday.

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