President-elect
Donald Trump asserted Sunday that he would have won the US popular vote were
it not for “millions of illegal” ballots, while dramatically sharpening his
criticism of a recount in Wisconsin, calling it “a waste of time.” With the
recount threatening to revive debate about the legitimacy of Trump’s victory
— his rival Hillary Clinton won far more popular votes, while he carried the
all-important Electoral College count — Trump and his aides pushed back hard
on Sunday. Trump let fly a series of early-morning tweets in which he quoted
Clinton about the need to respect the electoral process, while continuing to
wage an extraordinarily public battle over the makeup of his future cabinet.
By late afternoon, Trump furthered that “In addition to winning the Electoral
College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of
people who voted illegally.” Trump had warned before the election that the
result might be “rigged,” but he had offered no such complaint after his
unexpected victory November 8 — until now. Neither he nor any of his aides
has offered any evidence of the “millions” alleged to have voted illegally,
nor did Trump explain why he would oppose a recount if illegal voting was
such a serious problem. No election observers have pointed to any such
widespread fraud. It was the latest bizarre twist in an increasingly rough
and jolting presidential transition, with much of it fought on social media
and on the nation’s television screens. Trump’s top aide Kellyanne Conway, in
the middle of the turbulence, appeared on Sunday to at least hint that if the
Clinton team pushes too hard on the Wisconsin recount, the president-elect
might. Source;
Guardian
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Monday, November 28, 2016
Trump says ‘millions’ voted illegally, decries recount
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