Politics & Government
Pompeo, Senate Republicans Chime In On Trump Claims Of Stolen Election
Some Republicans in Congress are backing legal challenges to voting results in states won by President-elect Joe Biden.

By
Ariana Figueroa - November 10, 2020
WASHINGTON β Some Republicans in Congress are agreeing with President Donald Trumpβs baseless claims that the election was stolen from him, and backing legal challenges to voting results in states won by President-elect Joe Biden.
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βFor the integrity of the electoral process, and the system that we have chosen to effectuate our democracy, we have got to allow our courts to hear these allegations of voting irregularities by the president and anyone else who wants to bring them forward,β Republican Sen. John Kennedy, of Louisiana, told reporters on Tuesday, according to a Capitol pool report.
The Associated Press called Biden the winner on Saturday after the Democratic nominee gained the more than 270 electoral college votes needed to declare victory. Meanwhile, Trump has falsely said he won the election.
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The Trump administration has not announced any transition plans to usher in a new presidency. Some administration officials, like Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a former congressman from Kansas, have said there will be a βsmooth transition to a second Trump administration,β and insisted that the presidential election has not been decided.
βWe have a post-election process in law, in this country, and any candidate has the right to pursue and they do that all the time,β Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, of Florida, said to reporters about the presidentβs decision to file lawsuits alleging voter fraud in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania.
βPresident Trump is 100 percent within his rights to look into allegations of irregularities and weigh his legal options,β said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky.
While Republican lawmakers stick with the president, world leaders, such as Canadaβs Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, among others, have acknowledged Biden as the president-elect and are setting up meetings with him.
Many senators have also called for waiting until all states have finished counting votes.
GOP Sen. Roy Blunt, of Missouri, refused to accept that media outlets called the race and said the outcome wouldnβt be known until Dec. 14, which is the deadline for electors in the states to cast their votes.
βThe president wasnβt defeated by huge numbers. In fact, he may not have been defeated at all,β Blunt said to reporters on Tuesday, according to a Capitol pool report.
Only five Senate Republicans have publicly acknowledged that Biden is the president-elect: Sens. Susan Collins, of Maine, Pat Toomey, of Pennsylvania, Mitt Romney, of Utah, Lisa Murkowski, of Alaska, and Ben Sasse, of Nebraska.
βPresidential transitions are important, and the president-elect and the vice-president-elect should be given every opportunity to ensure that they are ready to govern on January 20th,β Collins said in a statement.
Democrats are also pushing back, criticizing Republicans for entertaining the presidentβs lawsuits and remarks about voter fraud.
βThe Republicans have no legal case,β Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, of New York, said during a news conference Tuesday. βThey are politically distraught.β
When GOP Sen. Joni Ernst was asked about voter fraud in her state of Iowa β a state that Trump won β she expressed doubt it had occurred.
βI donβt believe so,β she said. βIowa has a really great election system, and I trust the integrity of our process.β
House Republicans, such as Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, of California, have gone a step further and have falsely claimed that Trump won the election.
βPresident Trump won this election,β McCarthy said during a Fox News interview. βSo everyone whoβs listening, do not be quiet. Do not be silent about this. We cannot allow this to happen before our very eyes.β
Some newly elected House members have also backed the president and have claimed without evidence that Biden is stealing the election.
Reps.-elect Majorie Taylor Greene, of Georgia, and Lauren Boebert, of Colorado β both backed by the conspiracy group QAnon β have tweeted that they refuse to accept the election results.
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