‘Delay Election’ tweet assailed
Democrats and GOP hit back hard at Trump’s suggestion; ‘We’re going to have an election’
President Donald Trump suggested on Thursday that the Nov. 3 general election be delayed, something he has no authority to order and that top Republicans quickly rejected.
“Never in the history of the federal elections have we not held an election, and we should go forward,” said Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the House minority leader.
Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, dismissed Trump’s suggestion in an interview with WNKY television in Bowling Green, Kentucky.
“Never in the history of the country, through wars, depressions and the Civil War, have we ever not had a federally scheduled election on time, and we’ll find a way to do that again this Nov. 3,” McConnell said.
Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco
Rubio, rivals for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination who have since become staunch Trump supporters, both dismissed the idea that
Election Day could change.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, Trump’s foremost public defender in the Senate, said there would be a safe vote in November. And officials in key swing states showed little interest in engaging on the topic.
“We’re going to have an election, it’s going to be legitimate, it’s going to be credible, it’s going to be the same as it’s always been,” Rubio told reporters at the Capitol in Washington.
Cruz agreed. “I think election fraud is a serious problem,” he said. “But, no, we should not delay the election.”
Even for Trump, suggesting a delay in the election is an extraordinary breach of presidential decorum that will increase the chances that he and his core supporters don’t accept the legitimacy of the election should he lose to former Vice President Joe Biden.
Former President Barack Obama, delivering the eulogy at Rep. John Lewis’ funeral on Thursday, lacerated Trump over voting rights without naming him, saying the electoral system was under attack.
“Even as we sit here, there are those in power who are doing their darnedest to discourage people from voting by closing polling locations and targeting minorities and students with restrictive
ID laws, and attacking our voting rights with surgical precision,” Obama said. He did not mention Trump’s suggestion of delaying the election.
Biden, speaking to Democratic National Committee members and convention delegates on a conference call Thursday, did not address Trump’s tweet.
Trump posted to Twitter minutes after the Commerce Department announced that the nation’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced, fell 9.5% during the three months ending June 30, the largest quarterly drop on record.
“With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history,” Trump wrote. “It will be a great embarrassment to the
USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???”
Rather than back off in the face of widespread criticism, Trump pinned the tweet atop his Twitter profile.
Trump has no authority to unilaterally change the date of the election, which is set by federal law. His suggestion comes as polls show him trailing far behind Biden in surveys of nearly all of the key battleground states.
Article II of the Constitution empowers Congress to determine the timing of the election. An 1845 federal law fixed the date as the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
“Only Congress can change the date of our elections, and under no circumstances will we consider doing so to accommodate the president’s inept and haphazard response to the coronavirus pandemic,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., the chair of the Administration Committee, which oversees elections.
Other top Democrats reacted with the resigned horror of a party that has for five years faced normbreaking attacks from Trump that would have been considered far out of bounds under previous presidents.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi simply quoted Article II in a tweet, while the Democratic National Committee spokeswoman Lily Adams called the president’s remarks “a desperate attempt to distract from today’s devastating economic numbers that make it clear his failed response to the coronavirus has tanked the U.S. economy.”
So far, no major Republican figures have publicly agreed with Trump’s proposal, though they have avoiding criticizing the president.
Even Fox News, a loyal Trump ally that the president watches for hours inside the White House, interpreted his proposal as a sign the president is flailing.
“It is a fragrant and flagrant expression of his current weakness,” Fox News politics editor Chris Stirewalt said during a Fox News broadcast Thursday morning. “A person who is in a strong position would never, never suggest anything like that. So Trump may be making a tactical error here by further telegraphing his weak position in the polls and his weak position for reelection.”
Carly Fiorina, who clashed with Trump during the 2016 Republican presidential primary and said last month that she would vote for Biden, called the missive “classic Trump.”
“He is desperately trying to distract from his failure to lead, the devastating consequences of this pandemic and terrible economic news,” she said in an interview Thursday. “It is certainly irresponsible and I hope every elected official, Democrat and Republican alike, will stand up and say it’s irresponsible.”