Toronto Star

Trump lawyers fumble as they claim election fraud

Much derision is focused on Guiliani, who couldn’t grasp basic legal concepts

- NOMAAN MERCHANT

When U.S. President Donald Trump sends lawyers to court, it seems he’s not sending his best.

Fighting to challenge an election he lost to president-elect Joe Biden, Trump has launched a barrage of lawsuits across the United States. Top Republican­s have stood behind him and said they will wait for those cases to be resolved before officially recognizin­g the winner, a standard that has no modern precedent.

But his attorneys have repeatedly made elementary errors in those high-profile cases: misspellin­g “poll watcher” as “pole watcher,” forgetting the name of the presiding judge during a hearing, inadverten­tly filing a Michigan lawsuit before an obscure court in Washington and having to refile complaints after erasing entire arguments they’re using to challenge results.

“The sloppiness just serves to underscore the lack of seriousnes­s with which these claims are being brought,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine.

Trump’s legal team has lost repeatedly in court and failed to uncover the kind of widespread fraud that might challenge Biden’s leads in several key battlegrou­nd states. His lawyers and allies have still pressed forward with asking judges and certificat­ion authoritie­s to block the results. Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and other Trump lawyers held a news conference Thursday in which they berated reporters for questionin­g their claims and cited a Michigan affidavit already dismissed by a judge. They also argued a debunked conspiracy theory that Venezuela could have hacked election results through machines used by local authoritie­s.

“I know crimes. I can smell them,” Giuliani said. Experts have noted that Trump is not employing the Republican party’s top election lawyers, including those who represente­d the GOP in the Florida recount two decades ago. Law firms have faced public pressure from Trump opponents not to fight the election on his behalf. Legal giant Porter Wright Morris & Arthur withdrew from a case in Pennsylvan­ia last week.

Attorneys at the larger, more establishe­d firms that had been representi­ng Trump have expressed concern privately about pushing a legal strategy without a body of evidence, and worry that it’s wrongly furthering a false narrative that the election was fraudulent, according to two people familiar with the litigation. The people were not authorized to speak about litigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

The day before a major argument in Pennsylvan­ia, three lawyers for Trump withdrew and were replaced in part by Marc Scaringi, an attorney and talk show host who wrote a blog post after the election referring to “president-elect Joe Biden.”

Scaringi himself had told listeners on his radio show days after the election that “there are really no bombshells” about to drop “that will derail a Biden presidency,” and noting that several of the lawsuits “don’t seem to have much evidence to substantia­te their claims.”

Much of the derision has focused on Giuliani, who appeared in court on Tuesday in the Pennsylvan­ia case. It was the first time he had represente­d a client in federal court in almost three decades.

During the hearing, Giuliani forgot the name of an opposing lawyer, misstated the name of the presiding judge and mistook the meaning of the word “opacity.”

“I’ve never seen an election lawyer handle a case as poorly as Giuliani has,” Hasen said. “The idea that the lawyer arguing the most important case in Pennsylvan­ia would not understand what it means to apply the standard of strict scrutiny (a basic concept taught to aspiring lawyers) in a constituti­onal case is mind-boggling.”

 ??  ?? Rudy Giuliani berated reporters for questionin­g Donald Trump’s claims.
Rudy Giuliani berated reporters for questionin­g Donald Trump’s claims.

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