Kayleigh McEnany has described Monday's electoral college vote confirming Joe Biden as the nation's next president as just 'one step in the constitutional process'. The White House press secretary's assessment is the latest example of White House officials declining to accept Biden's victory, even after Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday broke his silence on the winner of the presidency, saying: 'The electoral college has spoken.'
Continue reading...Category Archives: US elections 2020
Biden campaigns for Georgia Senate Democrats following electoral college victory
Biden supports Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, who face Republican senators in January runoff elections
Joe Biden was in Georgia on Tuesday campaigning for the Democrats in crucial Senate runoff elections, a day after addressing the American public for the first time as its official president-elect.
Related: Biden should get Covid vaccine soon as possible for ‘security reasons’, Fauci says
Continue reading...Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell acknowledges Biden/Harris victory – video
Republican Mitch McConnell on Tuesday congratulated the Democratic president-elect, Joe Biden, and vice president-elect, Kamala Harris, on their election victories, ending his long silence on the outcome of the presidential race. In remarks on the Senate floor on Tuesday morning, the Senate majority leader acknowledged the Democrats' winning the White House following Monday's formal result issued by the electoral college
Continue reading...More Biden cabinet picks emerge as McConnell acknowledges victory – as it happened
- Biden reportedly selects Jennifer Granholm and others for administration
- Mitch McConnell: ‘The electoral college has spoken’
- White House still refuses to accept Biden’s win
- Biden taps Pete Buttigieg for transportation chief
- Biden rebukes Trump after electoral college victory
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Can the Radical Left “steal” an election you haven’t conceded?
This seems notable… A Trump fundraising email that implicitly concedes that he may not serve two continuous terms pic.twitter.com/WX9T01EjHo
Continue reading...Covid-19 vaccine: first US doses given to frontline workers – live
- New York ICU nurse one of the first to get coronavirus vaccine
- Wisconsin court rejects Trump’s attempt to overturn Biden’s victory
- Electors meet in four states to cast votes for president
- Trump reverses plan to give White House officials vaccine
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The US has for the first time formally blamed Iran for the presumed death of Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who went missing more than a decade ago.
As world affairs editor Julian Borger reported for the Guardian in March, when Levinson’s family said they believed he was dead:
Levinson disappeared 13 years ago on Iran’s Kish island. The US initially claimed he was there on his own initiative, but in 2013 the Associated Press revealed he had been sent on a mission there by CIA analysts who had no authority to run espionage operations. Levinson was a specialist on Russian organised crime and had not had much previous involvement in Iran.
Tehran denied knowledge of Levinson’s whereabouts until November last year, when it acknowledged that there was an ongoing case involving him before its revolutionary court.
Related: Iran says it will comply with nuclear deal if Biden lifts all sanctions
Here’s where the day stands so far:
Continue reading...Everything you need to know about the electoral college vote
The constitution demands that electors formally cast votes for president – but what is the electoral college?
Yes, Joe Biden has won and all US states have certified their election results. But the constitution demands that the electoral college formally cast its vote for president. The constitution requires “electors” to cast those votes – 538 such electors make up the electoral college.
Continue reading...Electoral college vote may be knockout blow to Trump’s ploy to subvert election
Formality to cement outcome of election takes on real political significance as Trump continues efforts to undermine results
Donald Trump on Monday could suffer a withering blow to his increasingly hopeless effort to overturn the results of the US presidential election when 538 members of the electoral college will cast their ballots and formally send Joe Biden to the White House.
Under the arcane formula which America has followed since the first election in 1789, Monday’s electoral college vote will mark the official moment when Biden becomes the 46th president-in-waiting. Electors, including political celebrities such as both Bill and Hillary Clinton, will gather in state capitols across the country to cement the outcome of this momentous race.
Continue reading...Violence flares in Washington as far-right Trump supporters clash with counter-protesters
Four people reportedly stabbed and 23 arrested in the aftermath of a march to denounce Joe Biden’s election victory
Violence has broken out in the streets of Washington DC after far-right groups clashed with counter-protesters in the aftermath of a march by conservatives protesting against US president-elect Joe Biden’s election victory.
The trouble flared as darkness fell and crowds began to disperse in the wake of a largely peaceful demonstration on Saturday by Trump supporters who allege without evidence that the 3 November election was tainted by fraud.
Continue reading...Trump loses another case challenging election results in latest legal rebuke
Supporters continue to insist election was ‘stolen’ even as electoral college prepares to confirm Joe Biden’s victory
Donald Trump lost a federal court challenge on Saturday in Wisconsin while judges said yet another case being fought there “smacks of racism”.
Continue reading...After the fact: the five ways Trump has tried to attack democracy post-election
Republicans in 2020 have established what may be a new template for subverting the vote that could haunt elections for years
The decisive rejection by the US supreme court of an attempt by one state, Texas, to throw out election results in four other states might prevent the recurrence of such an effort in future presidential elections.
But the Texas lawsuit was not the only unprecedented attack to be leveled on US democracy during the November presidential election, and other such efforts could escalate in, or echo through, future elections for an unknown time to come.
Continue reading...Supreme court rejects Trump-backed Texas lawsuit aiming to overturn election results
Court blocks baseless effort by Republicans to undo Joe Biden’s victory in four states
The US supreme court has unanimously rejected a baseless lawsuit filed by Texas seeking to overturn the presidential election result, dealing the biggest blow yet to Donald Trump’s assault on democracy.
In a brief, one page order, all nine justices on America’s highest court dismissed the longshot effort to throw out the vote counts in four states that the president lost: Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Continue reading...Pfizer/BioNTech Covid vaccine approved by panel clearing way for FDA authorization for emergency use – live updates
- FDA’s expected approval will allow millions of doses to be shipped
- 3,124 deaths sets new record two weeks after Thanksgiving holiday
- President Trump makes no public comment on death toll
- Crunch time for intensive care beds as US faces dark pandemic winter
- Biden reportedly set to nominate Katherine Tai as top US trade envoy
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The Trump administration, which had arranged five federal executions before the president leaves office, plans to kill Brandon Bernard – a 40-year-old man that activists say was wrongfully convicted.
Berard was 18 at the time of the crime he as been convicted fo occured.
The planned killing of #BrandonBernard tonight is a national disgrace. https://t.co/vA6bbG9h0R
Related: Justice department plans to execute five inmates before Biden's inauguration
Matthew Cantor reports:
Each election season as campaigns ramp up get-out-the-vote efforts, socially awkward Americans face a dilemma: is it possible to help salvage democracy without having to cold-call anyone?
Related: Letter-writers look to get out the vote in Georgia – with a personal touch
Continue reading...States targeted in Texas election fraud lawsuit condemn ‘cacophony of bogus claims’
Attorneys general from both parties reject baseless allegations in case filed with US supreme court
Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin on Thursday urged the US supreme court to reject a lawsuit filed by Texas and backed by Donald Trump seeking to undo Joe Biden’s victory, saying the case has no factual or legal grounds and makes “bogus” claims.
“What Texas is doing in this proceeding is to ask this court to reconsider a mass of baseless claims about problems with the election that have already been considered, and rejected, by this court and other courts,” Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania’s Democratic attorney general, wrote in a filing to the nine justices.
Continue reading...Texas sues four states over election results in effort to help Donald Trump
Long-shot lawsuit against Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin is latest legal effort intended to reverse Biden’s victory
The state of Texas, aiming to help Donald Trump upend the results of the US election, decisively won by Joe Biden, said on Tuesday it has filed a lawsuit against the states of Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin at the US supreme court, calling changes they made to election procedures amid the coronavirus pandemic unlawful.
Continue reading...Trump election fraud claims are hurting our state, says Georgia official – video
Brad Raffensperger, Georgia's secretary of state, warned that Donald Trump's repeated claims the election had been stolen were causing damage, after two separate recounts confirmed Joe Biden had won the state. 'We have now counted legally-cast ballots three times, and the results remain unchanged,' Raffensperger said. 'Disinformation regarding election administration should be rejected. Integrity matters. Truth matters.'
Continue reading...Van Jones: ‘Joe Biden is a romantic idealist in the age of cynicism and snark’
The CNN commentator tells how, too tearful to read his notes, he spoke from the heart – and for millions of Americans – after Biden’s win
- Anya Taylor-Joy: ‘I likened Beth’s passion for chess to my passion for acting. It’s a calling’
- See the Observer’s faces of 2020 in full
When the US presidential election was finally called for Joe Biden on 7 November, the CNN commentator Van Jones made a tearful speech live on air that captured in two minutes the frayed emotions of a contest that had dragged on for days. A regular on CNN over the past decade, Jones trained as a lawyer at Yale and has spent more than 25 years fighting for criminal justice reform. A special adviser for green jobs in the early days of the Obama administration, he crossed party lines to work with the Trump administration in 2018, helping to draft the First Step Act and drawing criticism from fellow progressives in the process. Jones, who is 52 and was born in Tennessee, lives in Los Angeles and has two sons with his ex-wife Jana Carter.
Tell me about the lead-up to that CNN speech and the state of your nerves.
We were all just exhausted. We had been doing 17-hour days, for five days. We knew that it was going to be a long, slow count, but that doesn’t mean that your body and heart and soul can endure it with perfect equipoise. When it was finally called, my phone started blowing up with text messages from Muslim friends, friends from immigrant communities. One guy said, “I’m not crying, you’re crying,” just as a little a joke about how emotional everybody was. And it just hit me what a burden we’ve all been carrying, especially people who are in harm’s way of the president’s rhetoric. When they switched over to our panel, and Anderson [Cooper] asked me how I was doing, I couldn’t see my notes – you see me looking down trying to read them but my eyes are full of tears. So I just started free associating. I just had to speak from the heart.
Trump’s attacks on election integrity ‘disgust me’, says senior Georgia Republican
- Lieutenant governor: ‘Trump did not win the state of Georgia’
- President made numerous false claims in incoherent speech
- Does a Trump presidential library – or theme park – lie ahead?
Donald Trump’s attacks on Republican officials in Georgia and insistence his defeat by Joe Biden must be overturned are disgusting, the Republican lieutenant governor of the southern state said on Sunday.
Related: Just 27 of 249 Republicans in Congress willing to say Trump lost, survey finds
Continue reading...‘If I lost, I’d be a very gracious loser’: Trump pushes false fraud claims in Georgia – video
Donald Trump campaigned for two Republican senators in Georgia on Saturday, at a rally that some in the party feared could end up hurting their chances by focusing on his efforts to reverse his own election defeat. In his first rally appearance since he lost to Joe Biden, Trump repeated baseless claims of widespread fraud in the presidential election. The crucial January runoff will determine which party controls the Senate
Continue reading...Trump rails against election result at rally ahead of crucial Georgia Senate runoff
President falsely claims he was ‘cheated’ and calls for people to vote in coming Senate races that will decide control of chamber
Donald Trump has held his first political rally since losing the presidential election, delivering an incoherent speech laced with baseless conspiracies theories about election fraud and attacks on Republican state officials in Georgia who have refused to help him subvert the results.
In front of a crowd of thousands of mostly maskless, non-socially distanced supporters in south Georgia, Trump repeatedly claimed, falsely, that he had won the presidential election, and called for those in government with “courage and wisdom” to help him reverse the result.
Continue reading...Just 26 of 249 Republicans in Congress willing to say Trump lost, survey finds
- Two congressmen tell Washington Post Trump beat Biden
- Does Trump really plan to absolve himself and his family?
Only 26 of 249 Republicans in Congress are willing to admit Joe Biden won the presidential election, a survey found on Saturday.
Related: Trump heads for Georgia but claims of fraud may damage Senate Republicans
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