Biden Builds Transition Effort as Republicans Continue Charges

(updated Nov. 11) Speaking to reporters after making remarks on the Affordable Care Act, President-elect Joe Biden said the transition is "well underway."  "We’re going to be going, moving along in a consistent manner, putting together our administration in the White House and reviewing who we’re going to pick for the cabinet positions," Biden said. "And nothing’s going to stop that,"  As one example, today the Biden-Harris Transition announced Agency Review Teams.  Meanwhile Republicans continued to press charges of election fraud, including a Trump campaign lawsuit in Michigan.  

Vice President Joe Biden

Remarks

November 10, 2020


VICE PRESIDENT-ELECT KAMALA HARRIS:
Good afternoon. Today, the Supreme Court heard arguments in a case that could strike down the Affordable Care Act in its entirety. If the Supreme Court agrees with the opponents of the Act, their decision could take healthcare away from 20 million Americans. It could take away protections from more than 100 million people with pre-existing conditions in our country, and hurt the millions of Americans who have come to rely on the Affordable Care Act.

Getting rid of the Affordable Care Act will take us backwards to a time when people could charge a woman more for her healthcare than they could charge a man simply because she’s a woman, to a time when pregnancy could be considered a preexisting condition. It will take away free birth control and contraceptive coverage for women. This is all happening at a moment when our country is suffering through a pandemic that has claimed more than 238,000 lives.

And we all know that if the Affordable Care Act is struck down, communities of color would be hit particularly hard: Black, Asian, Hispanic, and native American, because they are at a greater risk of pre-existing conditions from asthma to diabetes, to lupus. And they are also three times as likely to contract COVID-19, and twice as likely to die as others.

Now, I know we all know that we just had an election in America, an election where healthcare was very much on the ballot. Our country had a clear choice in this election. Each and every vote for Joe Biden was a statement that healthcare in America should be a right and not a privilege. Each and every vote for Joe Biden was a vote to protect and expand the Affordable Care Act, not to tear it away in the midst of a global pandemic. And Joe Biden won the election decisively with more votes than have ever been cast in American history. It amounts to 75 million voices and counting, calling on the Supreme Court to see this case for what it is: a blatant attempt to overturn the will of the people. And the president-elect and I cannot let that happen.

And now it is my honor to introduce President-Elect, Joe Biden.

PRESIDENT-ELECT JOE BIDEN:
Thank you, Kamala. Good afternoon, everyone.

This morning, as was stated, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments on the case of grave importance to the American people. This case represents the latest attempt by the far-right ideologues to do what they’ve been, repeatedly failed to do for a long time—in the courts, in the Congress, in the court of public opinion over the last decade to eliminate the entirety of the Affordable Care Act.

Twice already the Supreme Court has upheld the landmark law. In 2012, and again in 2015. And the Congress, expressing the popular will of the American people on a bipartisan basis, has rejected numerous attempts, numerous efforts by President Trump to erase the law as well. Now, in the middle of a deadly pandemic that has infected more than 10 million Americans—nearly one in every 32 Americans—often with devastating consequences to their health, these ideologues are once again trying to strip health coverage away from the American people.

The goal of the outgoing administration is clear from the brief they filed in the Supreme Court. It asserts, and I quote, “The entire ACA thus must fall.” End of quote.

Now, I’m not naive about the fact that healthcare is an issue that has divided Americans in the past, but the truth is the American people are more united on this issue today than they are divided. Recently as last month, a leading survey found that American people want to keep the Affordable Care Act in place by an overwhelming margin of 58% to 36%. 79% of the American people, including nine out of 10 Democrats, eight out of 10 independents, and two thirds of Republicans want to keep the ACA protections for people with pre-existing conditions, which would be eliminated if this lawsuit were to succeed.

This doesn’t need to be a partisan issue. It’s a human issue. It affects every single American family. We can’t subvert the growing consensus of the American people based on an argument put forward in the briefs seeking to invalidate the law that even many conservative legal scholars, including in a national review, consider to be, quote “ridiculous.”

Let’s be absolutely clear about what’s at stake. The consequences of the Trump administration’s argument are not academic or an abstraction. For many Americans, they are a matter of life and death in a literal sense. This argument will determine whether healthcare coverage of more than 20 million Americans who acquired it under the Affordable Care Act will be ripped away in the middle of the nation’s worst pandemic in a century.

Over 100 million people, as the vice president-elect pointed out, over 100 million people with pre-existing conditions like asthma, diabetes, cancer could once again be denied coverage.

Whether complications from COVID-19 like lung scarring and heart damage will be the next flood of preexisting conditions that could be used as an excuse to jack up premiums or deny coverage altogether. For millions of survivors who have struggled, won and fought the coronavirus, fought against the loss of their life.

This argument is going to determine whether women, as is pointed out, will once again be charged higher premiums, just because they’re women, or seniors will see their prescription drug costs go up. And like kids, who whether or not they can stay on their parents’ plans til age 26, Whether annual lifetime benefits will be reimposed, so someone can walk in and say, “Die in peace. You’ve run out of your coverage.”

This isn’t hyperbole; it’s real. As real as it gets. When the  family is faced with the awful news of a child’s diagnosis of leukemia or a mom forced to battle against breast cancer, an accident that leaves loved ones unable to live the life they’ve always known. It stops your heart. It stops your heart. It wrenches your entire world right off its axis when that happens. And many of you know that from your own personal experiences. Believe me, I know the feeling, and too many American families do as well.

In that moment, the very last thing on your mind, the very last thing that should be on your mind, is whether you can afford the treatment. The Affordable Care Act was created to put a stop to that inhumanity. It was created to ensure that families, thrust into their worst nightmare of their lives, could focus not on money, but on the fight that really matters.

Obamacare is a law that every American should be proud of. It’s why people with pre-existing conditions are protected in this country. It’s a law that delivered vital coverage, as I said before, for 20 million Americans that did not have coverage. It’s a law that reduced prescription drug price costs for nearly 12 million seniors. It’s a law that saved lives and spared countless families from financial ruin. So, this effort to bypass the will of the American people, the verdict of the courts in the past, the judgments of Congress, in my view is simply cruel and needlessly divisive.

Regardless of the outcome of this case, I promise you this: beginning on January 20th, the Vice President-elect Harris and I, we’re going to do everything in our power to ease the burden of healthcare on you and your families. I promise you that. As I said, I will protect your healthcare like I protect, like it were my own family. We’ve been unfortunately significant consumers of healthcare.

That starts by building on the Affordable Care Act with the dramatic expansion of healthcare coverage and bold steps to lower healthcare costs. My transition team will soon be starting its work to flesh out the details so that we can hit the ground running, tackling costs, increasing access, lowering the price of prescription drugs.

Families are reeling right now. Particularly, the reporters in this room and others listening, you’ve interviewed a lot of these people around the country as you’ve gone all over the world, all over the country. Enduring illnesses, faced with risky choices, losing their employer plans in droves. Over 10 million have already lost their employer plans. They need a lifeline, and they need it now. They shouldn’t have to hold their breath; they shouldn’t be in that position. Waiting to see if the Supreme Court is going to wrench away the peace of mind they’ve come to now rely on.

So we’re going to get right to work. I promise you. Addressing the issues that families are talking about around the kitchen tables this morning, making sure that they can get in bed tonight with the peace of mind that they deserve, and fulfilling our moral obligation to ensure that here in America healthcare is a right for all, not a privilege for a few.

So, come January, we’re going to work quickly with the Congress to dramatically ramp up healthcare protections, get Americans universal coverage, lower healthcare costs as soon as humanly possible. That’s the promise I make to you. We’re going to fight for your family’s health coverage the same way we fight for our own family’s health coverage. We want every single American to know, if you’re sick, if you’re struggling, if you’re worried about how you’re going to get going to get through the day, we will not abandon you. That is a promise. We’ll not leave you to face these challenges alone. We’re going to get through this. We’re going to get through it together. And we’re going to build a healthcare system that puts you and your families first, and that every American can be proud of.

I want to thank you all for listening. May God bless you. May God keep you safe in this COVID environment, and may God protect our troops.

Now, I’m told that we’re going to have… You’re going to take five questions?

....Okay.

REPORTER (Mike Memoli, NBC News): Thank you, Mr. President-elect. During the campaign, you said you were not naïve about how difficult it would be to unite the country.

It’s now three days after you were projected as the president-elect. The president himself says he has won this election, his own administration has not moved forward to give you access to what you need to do to begin the work of your transition.

Just a few minutes ago, The Secretary of State, when asked if he would cooperate with a smooth transition, he said, “There will be a smooth transition to a second Trump administration.”

I wonder if you have a message for the president who may well be watching right now, and how do you expect to be able to work with Republicans when so many have thus far refused to even acknowledge your victory?

BIDEN: Well, first of all, we’re already beginning the transition. We’re well underway. And the ability for the administration in any way, by failure to recognize our win, does not change the dynamic at all in what we’re able to do. We’ve announced yesterday, as you know, the health group that we put together. Today, we’re going to be going, moving along in a consistent manner, putting together our administration in the White House and reviewing who we’re going to pick for the cabinet positions. And nothing’s going to stop that. And so, I’m confident that the fact that they’re not willing to acknowledge we won at this point is not of much consequence in our planning and what we’re able to do between now and January 20th.

REPORTER FOLLOW UP: Your response to Secretary Pompeo? And I’m also wondering you warned during the campaign that as the walls closed in on the president, he would behave more erratically. Yesterday, he fired his defense secretary on Twitter. Are you worried that he’s disabling the government? And what are you saying to the world leaders who are calling you at this point about the situation here?

BIDEN: Well, first of all, I’m letting them know that America is back. We'e going to be back in the game. It’s not America alone, number one, I’ve had the opportunity to speak with now six world leaders and the response has been very fulsome, energetic, and they’re all looking forward to being able to, from Great Britain, to France, Germany, to Canada, et cetera, and Ireland. And so, I feel good about the ability to—I said when we announced that the next president is going to inherit a divided country and a world in disarray. The reception and welcome we’ve gotten around the world from our allies and our friends has been real, and having a number of other calls to return, and so I feel confident that we’re going to be able to put America back in the place of respect that it had before.

REPORTER: Thank you, sir.

REPORTER (Jeff Zeleny, CNN): Mr. President-elect, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has suggested today that he may not recognize the outcome of this election until the Electoral College meets next month. Have you spoken to your long-time friend in the Senate, Mr. McConnell, and what do you make of his specific comments over the last 24 hours?

BIDEN: I haven’t had a chance to speak to Mitch. My expectation is that I will do that, not too distant future. I think that the whole Republican Party has been put in the position, with a few notable exceptions, of being mildly intimidated by the sitting president. But there’s only one president at a time. He’s president. We’re going to have the Electoral College ,will be making their judgment in December. It’ll be announced in early January. But in the meantime, I hope to get a chance to speak to Mitch.

REPORTER FOLLOW-UP: If I could follow up, without transition funding will you be able to go through with the proper transition that’s needed? Would you like to access to the PDB [President's Daily Brief] and will you authorize legal action or would that be too divisive, do you believe?

BIDEN: We can get through without the funding. We’re in a position that we feel very good about our, there’s nothing that slows up our efforts to put things together. Obviously, the PDB would be useful, but it’s not necessary; I’m not the sitting president now. And so we don’t see anything as slowing us down, quite frankly.

REPORTER: Thank you.

REPORTER: Thank you, Mr. President-elect, and congratulations to you both. Have you tried to reach out at all to the president, and if he is watching right now, what would you say to him?

BIDEN: Mr. President, I look forward to speaking with you.

REPORTER FOLLOW-UP: And you say that you are being able to move ahead without interruption, but to Jeff’s point, presumably at some point you will need access to more classified information, to secure facilities and the like. What options are you considering? How will you move ahead if the president continues to refuse to concede?

BIDEN: Well, look, access to classified information is useful, but I’m not on a position to make any decisions on those issues anyway. There’s one, as I said, one president at a time and he will be president until January 20th. It would be nice to have it, but it’s not critical. And so, we’re just going to proceed the way we have. We’re going to do exactly what we’d be doing if he had conceded and said we’ve won, which we have, and so there’s nothing really changing.

REPORTER FOLLOW-UP: But not ruling out legal action?

BIDEN: No, I don’t see a need for legal action, quite frankly. I think the legal action is, you’re seeing it play out with the actions he’s taking. And so far there is no evidence of any of the assertions made by the president or Secretary of State, Pompeo. [laughs] Secretary of State Pompeo.

REPORTER: Thank you, Mr. President-elect. Democrats are on track to lose a handful of seats in the House of Representatives. That could make it harder to pass legislation with just Democratic votes, so I’m just curious: how does that impact your plans for what priorities you think you can get through this Congress, especially if the Senate remains in GOP control? And during the lame duck, will you be coordinating with Speaker Pelosi on how she should be negotiating with Republicans?

BIDEN: Well, I’ve spoken to the Leader and I’ve spoken to the Minority Leader in the House, and one of the urgent things that need be done is people need relief right now. Right now. Small businesses, people who are about to be evicted from their homes because they can’t pay their mortgage, unemployment insurance. What’s going to happen is you’re going to see, what people don’t realize is the failure to provide state and local assistance, you’re going to see police officers, firefighters, first responders laid off. And I think the pressure is going to build.

But the fact is that I would hope that the president at least has the, the sensitivity and knowledge to know that a lot of people are in real trouble right now, between now and the time we get elected, 'til we get sworn in. And so it’s my hope and expectation, I’m sure that the Speaker of the House, as well as the Minority Leader, are working right now with the priorities they have laid out.

REPORTER FOLLOW-UP: But do you plan to be active in those negotiations, working with Speaker Pelosi to represent Democrats on the table?

BIDEN: Well, we’ve been talking and they know my views, and I support what they’re doing.

REPORTER CONTINUES: And then my second question was about the Senate. Do you plan to campaign in Georgia before your inauguration to help Democrats in the two runoff races there as they try to flip the Senate? And how important is a Democratic-held Senate to your agenda?

BIDEN: Well obviously, it’d be much better if we had a tie in the Senate, which means that vice president become incredibly important beyond what she already is—but we’re going to do anything we can that they think we can do to help.

REPORTER CONTINUES: And does a Democratic Senate help your cabinet chances? Does that change how you consider who you nominate to cabinet posts?

BIDEN: No, I don’t think so. I take McConnell at his word. I understand he said that he will make it clear who he’s prepared to support and not support, and that’s a negotiation that I’m sure we’ll have. Look, one of the things that I would do as president-elect and when I become president is lay out to Republicans, as well as the Democrats, who we intend to name for each cabinet position.

I hope we’re able to be in a position to let people know at least a couple that we want before Thanksgiving. And we’ll just work this out.

Look, I am not a pessimist, as you know, and I think there are enough Republicans who’ve already spoken out, and I think there’ll be many more— Not many more, there’ll be a larger number once the election is declared and I’m sworn in, to be able to get things done. I think they understand. For example, I can’t imagine there not being a willingness on the part of Republicans. There’s going to be significant pressure to deal with health care. Their own constituencies are in that position. So, I'm not, I think we can get a lot done.

REPORTER: Thank you.

AIDE: ...one last question...

REPORTER: Sir, what do you say to the Americans that are anxious over the fact that President Trump has yet to concede and what that might mean for the country?

BIDEN: Well, I just think it’s an embarrassment, quite frankly. The only thing that— How can I say this tactfully? I think it will not help the president’s legacy. I think that I know from my discussions with foreign leaders thus far that they are hopeful that United States’ democratic institutions are viewed once again as being strong and enduring. But I think at the end of the day, you know, it’s all going to come to fruition on January 20th, and between now and then my hope and expectation is that the American people do know and do understand that there has been a transition. Even among Republicans who are people who voted for the president. I understand the sense of loss; I get that. But I think the majority of the people who voted for the president, a lot voted for him, a significantly smaller number, but a lot voted for him, I think they understand that we have to come together. I think they’re ready to unite, and I believe we can pull the country out of this bitter politics that we’ve seen for the last, last five, six, seven years.

REPORTER FOLLOW-UP: And just to follow up on a previous question, how do you expect to work with Republicans if they won’t even acknowledge you as president-elect?

BIDEN: They will. They will.

Thank you all so very much.  Thank you.

###

Biden for President 
November 10, 2020

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by President-elect Joe Biden in Wilmington, Delaware

Good afternoon, everyone.

This morning the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case of grave importance to all Americans.

This case represents the latest attempt by far-right ideologues to do what they have repeatedly failed to do — in the courts, in Congress, and in the court of public opinion over the last decade: eliminate the entire Affordable Care Act.

Twice already, the Supreme Court has upheld this landmark law — in 2012 and 2015.

And the Congress, expressing the popular will of the American people and on a bipartisan basis, has rejected the numerous efforts of President Trump to erase the law as well.

Now, in the midst of a deadly pandemic that has infected more than 10 million Americans — nearly one out of every 32 of our people — often with devastating consequences to their health; these ideologues are once again trying to strip health coverage away.

The goal of the outgoing Administration is clear from the brief they filed with the Court.

It asserts, quote: “The entire ACA thus must fall.”

Now, I’m not naive about the fact that health care is an issue that has divided Americans in the past.

But the truth is, the American people are more united on this issue today than they are divided.

As recently as last month, a leading survey found that Americans want to keep the Affordable Care Act in place by an overwhelming margin of 22 percent.

Seventy-nine percent of Americans — including nine out of ten Democrats, eight out of ten Independents, and two-thirds of Republicans — want to keep the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions, which would be eliminated if this lawsuit were to succeed.

This doesn’t need to be a partisan issue.

This is a human issue. It affects every single American family.

And we can’t subvert the growing consensus of the American people based on arguments put forward in the briefs seeking to invalidate the law that even many conservative legal scholars, including in the National Review, consider to be ridiculous.

Let’s be absolutely clear about what’s at stake here.

The consequences of the Trump Administration’s argument are not academic or an abstraction.

For many Americans, they are a matter of life and death.

This argument will determine whether the health coverage of more than 20 million Americans will be ripped away in the middle of the worst public health crisis in a century.

Whether 100 million people with pre-existing conditions like asthma, diabetes, and cancer could once again be denied coverage.

Whether complications from COVID-19, like lung scarring and heart damage, will become the next flood of pre-existing conditions that could be used as an excuse to jack up premiums or deny coverage altogether for millions of survivors who have struggled and won the fight of their lives against coronavirus.

This argument will determine whether women can once again be charged higher premiums just because they are women.

Whether seniors will see their prescription drug prices go up.

Whether kids will still be able to stay on their parents’ plans up to age 26.

And whether annual and lifetime limits on your benefits will be re-imposed.

This isn’t hyperbole — this is real. As real as it gets.

When a family is faced with that awful news of a child diagnosed with leukemia, a mom forced to battle against breast cancer, an accident that leaves a loved one unable to live the life they’ve always known — it stops your heart.

It wrenches your entire world off of its axis.

Believe me — I know that feeling. Too many American families do.

And in that moment, the very last thing on your mind — the very last thing that should be on your mind — is whether you can afford treatment.

The Affordable Care Act was created to put a stop to that inhumanity.

It was created to ensure that families thrust into the worst nightmare of their lives could focus not on money, but on the fight that really matters.

Obamacare is a law that every American should be proud of.

It’s why people with pre-existing conditions are protected in this country.

It’s a law that delivered vital coverage to more than 20 million Americans.

It’s a law that reduced prescription drug costs for nearly 12 million seniors.

It’s a law that has saved lives and spared countless families from financial ruin.

So this effort to bypass the will of the people, the verdict of the courts, and the judgment of Congress is simply cruel and needlessly divisive.

But regardless of the outcome of this case, I promise you this:

Beginning on January 20th, Vice President-elect Harris and I are going to do everything in our power to ease the burden of health care on you and your families.

That starts by building on the Affordable Care Act with a dramatic expansion of health coverage and bold steps to lower health care costs.

My transition team will soon be starting its work to flesh out the details so that we can hit the ground running tackling costs, increasing access, and lowering the price of prescription drugs.

Families are reeling right now, enduring illnesses; forced into risky choices; losing their employer plans in droves.

They need a lifeline now.

They shouldn’t have to hold their breath, waiting to see if the Supreme Court is going to wrench away the peace of mind they’ve come to rely on.

So we are going to get right to work, addressing the issues that families are talking about around their kitchen tables.

Making sure that they can go to bed at night with the peace of mind they deserve.

And fulfilling our moral obligation to ensure that, here in America, health care is a right for all, not a privilege for the few.

So, come January, we will work quickly with Congress to dramatically ramp up health care protections, get America to universal coverage, and lower health care costs as soon as humanly possible.

That is our promise to you: we will fight for your family’s health coverage the same way we would fight for our own.

And we want every single American to know, if you’re sick; if you’re struggling; if you’re worried about how you’re going to get through the day —

We will not abandon you.

We will not leave you to face these challenges alone.

We are going to get through this together.

And we are going to build a health care system that puts you and your family first and that every American can be proud of.

Thank you.

God bless you and may God protect our troops.

###

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer
November 10, 2020

Schumer Floor Remarks: Every Day That Goes By Without The Republican Party Acknowledging And Accepting The Results Of The Election Is Another Day Americans’ Faith In Our Democracy Declines

Washington, D.C. — Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) today spoke on the Senate floor regarding the Republican Party’s failure to accept the results of the election and how it is making the American people lose faith in our democracy. Below are Senator Schumer’s remarks, which can also be viewed here:

On another matter.  I don’t think many of us expected President Trump to leave the office of the presidency with grace—a quality he has not once demonstrated during his long career in business or his very short career in public life. But the extent to which the Republican Party is legitimizing the president’s assault on our democracy is infuriating, and deeply, deeply wrong.

The president is not merely bringing forward well-founded legal challenges. He is not simply taking advantage of the ability to request a recount in states where one is possible. He is declaring himself to be the winner of an election that he lost. He is claiming to win states that he lost. His legal team is filing scores of frivolous, unsubstantiated lawsuits. He is undermining faith in our elections and poisoning our democracy during one of the most delicate moments in our constitutional system: something we treasure, the peaceful transfer of power.

The president has fired the Secretary of Defense, threatening the continuity of our national security policy because he’s having a temper tantrum. Not only does this put at risk a smooth transition in one of the most sensitive and critical areas of our government, it creates an opening for our adversaries to take advantage of instability and inexperience.

The current Attorney General of the United States has made a show of authorizing federal probes into supposed election fraud, lending a veneer of false credence to the president’s delusions. It violates the longstanding tradition of avoiding even the appearance of law enforcement interference in our elections. Almost immediately, Attorney General Barr’s decision prompted the chief of the Justice Department’s election’s crimes branch to resign in protest.

The Government Services Administrator has still not signed the paperwork necessary for the Biden transition team to begin its work.

And here in the Senate, the Republican leader and several Republican members are trying to give their president air cover.

Yesterday, in the same breath that Leader McConnell celebrated the re-election of certain Republican Senators, he declined to congratulate the winner of the presidential election because the election results have not been officially certified. The political right seems eager to celebrate the results it approves of while delaying judgment and casting doubt on the results it doesn’t. The Republican leader could not even mention two words—Joe Biden—who, regardless of what Republican Senators think, will be the next President of the United States.

Two Republican members of this chamber have called on their own Secretary of State, a fellow Republican, to resign—for no other apparent reason than the fact that President Trump did not win their state. They alleged that the Secretary of State did not deliver “honest and transparent elections.” That’s really a stunning charge in the United States of America. That’s the kind of thing you hear about in banana republics and dishonest elections.

Surely, United States Senators would have some evidence that, in the world’s premier democracy, an entire state’s election was not conducted “honestly” as they say.  Surely, you must think those Senators have incredible substantial and weighty proof of such a scandalous and alarming allegation. But you would be wrong. The two Senators provided no evidence— not even a shred—to back up their claims.

Senators—three in total—have congratulated the next President and Vice President of the United States on their victory and called on the nation to come together. The rest have either been silent or outright sympathetic towards the President’s completely unsubstantiated claims of election fraud.

So look, here is where we are. Every major media outlet, including Fox News, has projected that Joe Biden will be the next president of the United States. Kamala Harris will be the next Vice president of the United States. Not because the media declared them to be, but because more than 76 million Americans voted them into office. There has been no evidence of widespread voter fraud or any indication that the results might suddenly flip in not one, but several states.

The country is ready to move on from four years of tumultuous and incompetent administration. The institutions of our government will ensure it, on January 20th, no matter what the current president claims, but they cannot ensure faith in our democracy in the hearts and minds of the American people. That’s a project for both parties: to confer legitimacy on an election in which, yes, half the country will be disappointed, but after which the entire country must pull together.

And every day that goes by without the Republican Party acknowledging and accepting the results of the election is another day Americans’ faith in our democracy declines.

###


Donald J. Trump for President, Inc.
November 10, 2020

Collins Presses Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger

Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. released the following statement from Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.), who leads President Trump’s campaign’s recount team in Georgia:

“As we begin the recount process, there are three things we are formally requesting today from Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. First, there must be a full comparison of absentee ballots cast and in-person and provisional ballots cast throughout the state. Second, there must be a check for felons and other ineligible persons who may have cast a ballot. Third, and most importantly, the Secretary of State should announce a full hand-count of every ballot cast in each and every county due to widespread allegations of voter irregularities, issues with voting machines, and poll watcher access. We can – and we will – petition for this in court after statewide certification is completed if the Secretary of State fails to act, but we are hopeful he will preemptively take this action today to ensure every Georgian has confidence in our electoral process.”  

- Congressman Doug Collins (R-Georgia)

True the Vote
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 10, 2020

True the Vote Laser Focused on Georgia Ballot Count; Calls on Army of Volunteers to Assist the Effort

HOUSTON, Texas – True the Vote Founder and President Catherine Engelbrecht released the following statement regarding the contested elections in Georgia:

"Yesterday, Georgia’s two sitting Senators jointly called for the resignation of their state’s Secretary of State – a member of their own party – due to the egregious mismanagement of the state’s ballot counting efforts, which remain underway. The Office of Georgia’s Governor followed up with a critical statement calling on the Secretary of State to take a serious look at numerous allegations of fraud and irregularities. While the media and others may be content to move on from our most recent election, we cannot ignore the fact that votes are still being counted in numerous states and all states’ elections have yet to be certified.

"True the Vote is committed to fact-checking credible allegations from start to finish, and our eyes are laser-focused on the state of Georgia. We are calling our entire network of volunteers to mobilize in key areas across Georgia, where they will be on the ground, serving election workers and observing the ballot count, ensuring that every legal vote is counted and every illegitimate vote is not.

"Never in our history has there been such blatant disregard for election integrity. During these pivotal times, we refuse to stand on the sidelines. True the Vote will keep fighting to ensure 2020 election returns reflect the principle of 'one vote for one voter' and to repair our broken elections once and for all."

True the Vote recently launched Validate the Vote, an initiative that establishes a whistleblower fund in excess of $1 million to support those who come forward with credible evidence of criminal malfeasance, takes the steps to resolve illegal actions through litigation, and ensures the final vote tally is valid to maintain public confidence in the U.S. election system. True the Vote has already received thousands of reports to our Election Integrity Hotline from citizens in Georgia and around the country.

The following is a timeline of key dates surrounding this contested election:

  • Dec. 8: "Safe Harbor" – date by which states must certify results and assign electors. If an election is in dispute, state legislatures may assign electors.
  • Dec. 14: Electors meet in their states to cast votes for the president and VP.
  • Jan. 3: New Congress is sworn in; 117th session starts.
  • Jan. 6: Electoral votes are counted in House chamber by members of House and Senate; if neither candidate has 270 electoral college votes, the election is in dispute.
  • Jan. 20: Inauguration Day – new president takes oath of office. In a disputed election, the House will appoint the president and Senate will choose the VP.

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True the Vote (TTV) is an IRS-designated 501(c)3 voters' rights organization, founded to inspire and equip volunteers for involvement at every stage of our electoral process. TTV empowers organizations and individuals across the nation to actively protect the rights of legitimate voters, regardless of their political party affiliation. For more information, please visit www.truethevote.org.

Texans for Dan Patrick [Campaign Committee of Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick]
November 10, 2020

Patrick Offers Up to $1 Million in Rewards for Voter Fraud Whistleblowers & Tipsters

“President Trump’s pursuit of voter fraud is not only essential to determine the outcome of this election, it is essential to maintain our democracy and restore faith in future elections.”

HOUSTON TX – Lt. Governor Dan Patrick announced that starting today he will pay up to $1 million to incentivize, encourage and reward people to come forward and report voter fraud. Whistleblowers and tipsters should turn over their evidence to local law enforcement. Anyone who provides information that leads to an arrest and final conviction of voter fraud will be paid a minimum of $25,000.

“I support President Trump’s efforts to identify voter fraud in the presidential election and his commitment to making sure that every legal vote is counted and every illegal vote is disqualified. President Trump’s pursuit of voter fraud is not only essential to determine the outcome of this election, it is essential to maintain our democracy and restore faith in future elections.

“The Democrats have no one to blame but themselves for creating suspicion of final vote totals. Not allowing Republican poll watchers to observe the vote count in multiple states, in some cases blocking their view with poster board, last minute changes in election laws in battleground states, ignoring the deadline to vote and accepting ballots for days after the election, ignoring postmarks and signature checks, not verifying that mail-in ballots were being sent to people who were alive or living in the state and voting machines that have been a concern for over a decade all raise serious questions.

“This lack of transparency has led many to believe that the final count is not accurate in states where the winner was determined be a very small percentage of the vote.

“In Texas we know voter fraud is real. In just the last 60 days, we have had three major arrests on voter fraud including a social worker who was arrested last week for allegedly registering almost 70 developmentally disabled adults to vote without their signature or consent.

“In Texas, we also know that it is possible to provide the results of mail-in ballots on Election Day. We counted 970,000 mail-in ballots last Tuesday – a 55% increase over 2018 – and added those results to the in-person voting total before midnight on Election Day. The delays in counting mail-in ballots in other states raises more questions about voter fraud and potential mistakes.

“When all legal votes are tallied and all illegal votes are discarded, then America can have a greater level of confidence in the election process.

“President Trump is absolutely right to pursue every allegation of voter fraud and irregularities, just as Al Gore did in 2000. Every candidate for public office has this right. My goal is to ensure that, regardless of the outcome, every American has faith in our electoral process and our democracy.”
More information about Dan Patrick is available at www.DanPatrick.org.

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Donald J. Trump for President, Inc.
November 10, 2020

Trump Campaign Files Suit In Michigan, Citing Irregularities, Incompetence, and Unlawful Vote Counting

President Trump’s re-election campaign today filed a federal lawsuit in Michigan citing multiple witness accounts of irregularities, incompetence, and unlawful vote counting. The suit relies on affidavits from witnesses who say they saw election officials counting ineligible ballots, counting batches of the same ballots multiple times, counting illegal late ballots and pre-dating them, accepting ballots deposited in drop boxes after the deadline, and duplicating ballots illegally. It also documents how defendant Wayne County used faulty ballot tabulators that miscounted votes for President Trump as votes for the Biden-Harris ticket.

The complaint also documents illegal and official intimidation and interference with lawful election challengers, harassment of Republican challengers tolerated or perpetrated by election officials, and arbitrary and unequal treatment of Republican challengers. Multiple witnesses gave alarming reports of fraud, intimidation, and interference, such as seeing about 50 ballots being fed multiple times into a ballot scanner, provisional ballots being placed in a tabulation box, ballots received after Election Day being pre-dated and counted, and officials in Wayne County covering windows of the counting center to prevent observers from lawfully monitoring the ballot counting process.

“The 70 million Americans who voted for President Trump deserve transparency into the potentially unconstitutional conduct documented here. The numerous reports we have heard from credible witnesses of Michigan's election processes are alarming. Every American should have faith in our electoral process and know that their legal vote was both counted and protected. Unfortunately, based on several witnesses’ accounts, that seemingly is not what occurred in the state of Michigan,” said Matt Morgan, Trump 2020 campaign general counsel. “As we have said from the beginning, our campaign will continue to ensure all Americans can trust in a free and fair election, and this lawsuit is a noteworthy step toward achieving that goal.”

The federal suit was filed in the Western District of Michigan against Wayne County and the Michigan Secretary of State on behalf of Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. and individual Michigan citizens and voters seeking declaratory and emergency injunctive relief. With this lawsuit, we seek to stop certification of Michigan election results until defendants have verified and confirmed ballots were cast and tabulated in accord with the law and to ensure no unlawful ballots were cast.

The campaign's filings are available here:
Complaint
Exhibit One
Exhibit Two
Exhibit Three
Exhibit Four