Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Trump defiant, but says of his future: 'who knows'

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WASHINGTON, Nov 14, (AFP) - Donald Trump said Friday that “time will tell” if he remains president, in a momentary slip of his unpreceden­ted refusal to concede his election defeat and help Democrat Joe Biden prepare to take power.

Trump broke his silence after a week without on- camera comments, speaking at a Rose Garden event to herald the imminent authorizat­ion of a coronaviru­s vaccine.

During a short speech about the vaccine work, Trump insisted that he would never again call for a lockdown to curb the virus' spread.

Then he added: “Hopefully, the, the whatever happens in the future, who knows which administra­tion it will be, I guess time will tell.” The hint of doubt in Trump's mind came despite him continuing to push a conspiracy theory that mass fraud -- for which no evidence exists -- robbed him of victory in the November 3 election.

On Friday, Trump tweeted thanks to supporters backing his claim that the “Election was Rigged” and said he might “stop by and say hello” at rallies planned in Washington on Saturday.

A number of groups under the banners of “Stop The Steal”, “Million MAGA March” and

“Women for America First” have planned rallies for the day.

Speakers are reportedly to include prominent Trump supporters, including US Representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who has promoted the farright QAnon conspiracy theory.

QAnon adherents claim Trump is waging a secret war against a global liberal cult of Satanworsh­ipping pedophiles.

Trump continues to block Biden's ability to prepare his transition ahead of inaugurati­on on January 20 and he has filed numerous lawsuits -- unsuccessf­ully -- to challenge vote counts around the country.

On Friday, a judge in Michigan issued another rejection of Republican claims of fraud.

Trump was speaking just after television networks projected results in the final two undeclared states -- Biden winning the former Republican stronghold of Georgia in an extremely close race, and Trump getting North Carolina.

Those last tallies gave Biden a solid overall final win in the stateby- state Electoral College that decides the presidency with 306 votes against Trump's 232.

Trump hunkers down

Throughout the post- election period, Trump has been absent in public at least from normal presi

dential duties and notably silent about dramatical­ly soaring coronaviru­s infection rates around the country and steadily rising deaths.

He has only left the White House to play golf twice and to attend a brief Veterans' Day ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery.

Earlier Friday, Trump attended a briefing in the Oval Office on the vaccine search -- one of the first times he has had official business on his public schedule since the election.

But Trump did not take questions after his Rose Garden remarks. He hasn't had any sort of press conference since the election and his last public remarks were on November 5, when he falsely claimed to have won.

According to the website factba. se, which keeps track of Trump's pronouncem­ents, this was the longest he'd gone without speaking on camera since he became president.

Alternate realities

Despite his own intelligen­ce officials' declaratio­n Thursday that the election was “the most secure in American history,” Trump and his right- wing media allies show no sign of giving up their quest to get the results overturned.

“President Trump believes he will be President Trump, have a second term,” spokeswoma­n Kayleigh McEnany said on Fox News. White House trade advisor Peter Navarro also told Fox Business on Friday that “we think he won that election.” “We are moving forward here at the White House under the assumption that there will be a second Trump term,” he said.

Biden, meanwhile, is steadily preparing to take over on January 20 and the list of world leaders accepting that he will be the new president keeps lengthenin­g.

China was the latest nation on board, with a foreign ministry spokesman saying “we express our congratula­tions.” However, Biden's newly appointed chief of staff, Ron Klain, told MSNBC late Thursday that moves by Trump to block the incoming administra­tion from access to confidenti­al government briefings posed a growing risk.

Klain highlighte­d the inability to join in on preparatio­ns for rolling out the Covid vaccine in “February and March when Joe Biden will be president.” “The sooner we can get our transition experts into meetings with the folks who are planning the vaccinatio­n campaign, the more seamless,” he said.

Top Republican­s remain outwardly loyal to Trump, but there appears to be widening discomfort within the party over the blocking of Biden's transition team.

Senator James Lankford told Tulsa Radio KRMG earlier this week that he was giving Trump until the end of the week to allow Biden access to the daily presidenti­al intelligen­ce briefing or “I will step in. “

 ??  ?? (L) President-elect Joe Biden and (R)Donald Trump
(L) President-elect Joe Biden and (R)Donald Trump

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