THISDAY

Trump May Not Accept Presidenti­al Election Result

- Zacheaus Somorin in Washington DC with agency report

Republican candidate Donald Trump may not accept the outcome of the November 8 US presidenti­al election if he loses, challengin­g a cornerston­e of American democracy and sending shockwaves across the political spectrum.

Trump’s refusal, which his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton called “horrifying,” was the standout remark of the their third and final debate and ratcheted up claims he has made for weeks that the election was rigged against him.

Asked by moderator Chris Wallace whether Trump would not commit to a peaceful transition of power, the businessma­n-turnedpoli­tician replied:“What I’m saying is that I will tell you at the time. I’ll keep you in suspense. Ok?”

Trump’s statement may appeal to his anti-establishm­ent followers, but it was unlikely to reverse opinion polls that show him losing, including in key states that will decide the election. “That is not the way our democracy works,” Clinton said during the debate. “We’ve been around for 240 years. We’ve had free and fair elections. We’ve accepted the outcomes when we may not have liked them. And that is what must be expected of anyone standing on a debate stage during a general election.”

Later she told reporters:“What he said tonight is part of his whole effort to blame somebody else for where he is in his campaign. A CNN/ORC snap poll said 52 percent thought Clinton, the former U.S. secretary of state, won the debate while 39 percent said Trump, making his first run at public office, was the victor.

Mexico’s peso currency, seen as a measure of Trump’s prospects, rose to its highest level in six weeks at the end of the debate, suggesting growing investor confidence of a Clinton victory. Trump has vowed to build a wall on the border with Mexico to keep out illegal immigrants and has said he would make Mexico pay for it.

Mainstream Republican­s were quick to denounce the comment. U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham, a former Republican presidenti­al candidate who has never warmed to Trump, said: “If he loses, it will not be because the system is ‘rigged’ but because he failed as a candidate.”

Neoconserv­ative Bill Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard political magazine, tweeted: “I deplore what Trump said and refused to say about accepting the election results. Confirms one’s judgement he shouldn’t be president.”

Ben Carson, a retired neurosurge­on who also ran for the Republican presidenti­al nomination and now supports Trump, defended him. He said Trump’s message was that “if there’s some kind of obvious fraud going on, he’s going to say something about it.”

“He didn’t say he wouldn’t accept it,” Carson told Reuters. “He said he would evaluate it at the time.”Trump’s running mate, vice presidenti­al nominee Mike Pence, said Trump“will accept the outcome”because he is going to win. But Republican strategist Ryan Williams found Trump’s statement “deeply concerning.”“You have to accept the results of the election unless there are grounds for a recount and at this point it does not appear that we’re heading for a close election,” he said.

In a debate that for the first time focussed more on policy than character, the two candidates nonetheles­s lashed out at each other. Trump, 70, called Clinton “such a nasty woman,” accused her campaign of orchestrat­ing a series of accusation­s by women who said the businessma­n made unwanted sexual advances and said that both she and President Barack Obama, her fellow Democrat, were behind disturbanc­es at his rallies.

He said the Clinton Foundation was a criminal enterprise and as a result she should not have been allowed to seek the presidency. Clinton, 68, said Trump himself had incited violence, belittled women and posed a danger to the United States. She said Trump, a former reality TV star, had in the past also complained that his show was unjustly denied a U.S. television Emmy award.

“I should have gotten it,”Trump retorted. Trump said all of the stories of sexual misdeeds were “totally false”and suggested Clinton was behind the charges. He called her campaign “sleazy” and said, “Nobody has more respect for women than I do, nobody.”

Clinton said the women came forward after Trump said in the last debate he had never made unwanted advances on women. In a 2005 video, Trump was recorded bragging about groping women against their will.

“Donald thinks belittling women makes him bigger. He goes after their dignity, their self-worth and I don’t think there is a woman anywhere who doesn’t know what that feels like,” said Clinton, the first woman to win the nomination of a major U.S. political party.

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