Trump has been so much obsessed with himself that he did not care to ask his team to gather pieces of evidence prior to filing cases of voter frauds against the Biden team. His team’s lawyers are now admitting that they do not have enough evidence.
In a Pennsylvania court hearing this week, on one of the many election lawsuits brought by President Donald Trump, a judge asked a campaign lawyer whether he had found any signs of fraud from among the 592 ballots challenged. The answer was no. The lawyer, Jonathan Goldstein said, “Accusing people of fraud is a pretty big step. We are all just trying to get an election done.”
Trump has not been so cautious, and constantly insisting without evidence that the election was stolen from him even when election officials across the US from both parties say that there has been no conspiracy.
Trump recently took aim at Philadelphia, the Democratic stronghold that helped push President-elect Joe Biden over the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the race. The president accused a local Republican election official there, Al Schmidt, of ignoring “a mountain of corruption & dishonesty.” Twitter added a label that said that the election fraud claim is disputed.
Trump loyalists have filed at least 15 legal challenges in Pennsylvania alone in an effort to reclaim the state’s 20 electoral votes. There is action, too, in Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and Michigan. In court, his lawyers are now treading a precarious line between advocating for their client and upholding their professional oath.
Legal ethicists and pro-democracy activists have questioned the participation of lawyers in this quest, as Trump clings to power and President-elect Joe Biden rolls out his agenda.
“This maybe an attempt to appease the ego in chief, but there are real-world consequences for real people that come out of that. The attempt to soothe the president’s ego is not a victimless crime.” said Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt, a former Justice Department elections official. Al Schmidt told CBS’ “60 Minutes” that his office has received death threats simply for counting votes. Schmidt said in an interview that aired Sunday, “From the inside looking out, it feels all very deranged. Counting votes cast on or before Election Day by eligible voters is not corruption. It is not cheating. It is democracy.”
Untold voters, however, are accepting Trump’s claim about a rigged election and are donating to his legal fund. A law firm involved in the election suits, Ohio-based Porter Wright Morris & Arthur, appeared to have taken down its Twitter feed on Tuesday after it was inundated with attacks. The firm declined to address questions from The Associated Press about the feed in a statement issued on Wednesday that said that it had a long history of election work.
A second firm, Jones Day, said that it was representing not the Trump campaign but the Pennsylvania GOP, in a litigation before the U.S. Supreme Court over the three-day extension to accept mail-in ballots.
Nationally, the strategy is being run by Trump allies such as Rudy Giuliani, the president’s personal attorney, political operative David Bossie, who is not an attorney, and Jay Sekulow, a lead lawyer during the president’s impeachment trial this year. Interestingly, Bossie had recently tested positive for COVID-19.
The low point of the effort undoubtedly came Saturday, when Giuliani held a news conference outside Four Seasons Total Landscaping in Philadelphia just after the race was called for Biden. Standing in the shadow of a sex shop and a crematorium, just down the road from a state prison, Giuliani called a disgruntled poll watcher to the microphone to discuss the “shenanigans” in the city. Political observers tuning in from nearby Trenton, New Jersey, immediately recognized the man as a convicted sex offender and perennial candidate for office.
In another head-scratching moment, as the campaign tried to stop the vote count in Philadelphia last week, a judge tried to get to the bottom of a Republican complaint about observer access in the room where election workers were processing mail-in ballots.
U.S. District Judge Paul S. Diamond asked, “I am asking you as a member of the bar of this court, are people representing the Donald J. Trump for president (campaign) in that room?” To this the Trump campaign lawyer Jerome Marcus replied, “There is a nonzero number of people in the room.” Diamond made the two sides forge an agreement and threatened to charge them with contempt if they did not keep the peace.
Some of the suits filed on Trump’s behalf appear to be hastily thrown together, with spelling errors (like: “ballet” for “ballot”), procedural mistakes, and little to back up their claims. Judges have been skeptical. In Michigan, Judge Cynthia Stephens dismissed one filing as “inadmissible hearsay within hearsay”. When Trump’s lawyers appealed, the next court kicked the filing back as “defective”.
The Trump campaign has so far scored just one small victory, allowing their observers to stand a little closer to election workers processing the mail-in ballots in Philadelphia. But the litigation keeps coming usually centered on accusations from partisan poll watchers, who have no auditing role in the election that something untoward may have happened, without evidence to back it up.
Experts doubt that the suits can reverse the outcome in even a single state, let alone the election. Trump aides and allies have privately admitted as much, suggesting that the challenges are designed more to stoke his base.
While the Trump campaign is going haywire trying to satisfy the ego of the current or rather outgoing president, incoming POTUS Biden and his transition team members are confident that nothing can stop the transition. The only thing that now concerns the observers is that how will things pan out in Washington on the day of the inauguration on January 20, 2021.
The author is a member of Amity center of Happiness