President Trump called into a Pennsylvania Senate meeting Monday on the state's presidential election results, repeating unproven claims of voting irregularities. "This election was rigged and we can't let that happen.
06.11.2020 - 07:13 / foxnews.com
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told "Hannity" Thursday he will donate $500,000 to the Trump campaign's legal efforts to challenge election procedures in multiple states, including Pennsylvania, Michigan and Nevada. "I'm here tonight to stand with President Trump," Graham told host Sean Hannity.
"He stood with me, he's the reason we're going to have a Senate majority ... He helped Senate Republicans.
President Trump called into a Pennsylvania Senate meeting Monday on the state's presidential election results, repeating unproven claims of voting irregularities. "This election was rigged and we can't let that happen.
The Trump campaign is intent on pushing forward with its challenge of the Pennsylvania election results, claiming that it can still do so despite counties already certifying their results. In a letter filed with the Third Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday, Trump campaign attorney Marc Scaringi called for oral arguments as the campaign fights against a lower court’s dismissal of their case, and explained their current approach.
Eric Trump‘s wife has some thoughts, er, feelings about how this past presidential election went down! But it doesn’t really matter, because facts don’t care about her feelings!
President Trump's reelection campaign said Thursday that it is dropping a lawsuit challenging voting results in Michigan, which show Democrat Joe Biden narrowly carrying the battleground state.
The Pennyslvania Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the Philadelphia Board of Elections acted within its authority in regulating the positioning of election observers, striking another blow to the Trump campaign's post-election legal challenges. The campaign had complained that the city's original distancing prevented them from meaningfully monitoring the counting process.
Trump campaign senior adviser Kayleigh McEnany previewed "a number of affidavits" to be filed in Pennsylvania Thursday, alleging an "unequal system." "You'll hear from the president at the right moment ... right now he's letting this litigation play out, letting his lawyers take the lead on this while he stays hard at work for the American people on COVID and other matters," McEnany told "Fox & Friends" about President Trump's response to the election results.
Presidential-elect Joe Biden is now leading President Trump by more than 50,000 votes in Pennsylvania, a state where Trump is contesting the results of the election days after Biden was declared a winner. Biden has the lead by 50,481 votes, eeking ahead by a 0.75% margin-- just over the .5% needed for a losing candidate to request a recount. Still, this hasn't deterred Trump from forging ahead with election lawsuits in several battleground states, including Arizona, North Carolina, and
The Trump campaign has filed a lawsuit against Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson and Wayne County officials in which they allege that credentialed election challengers were blocked from having sufficient view of the vote-counting process, challenges against certain ballots were ignored, and as a result, ineligible ballots were tallied.
Trump 2020 Campaign Communications Director Tim Murtaugh told “Outnumbered Overtime” that he believes that the latest lawsuit the campaign filed in Pennsylvania will “prevail,” even though election lawsuits in other battleground states have been rejected.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Monday that many Democrats don't care about following election laws or precedents as long as their candidate wins. Graham told "Hannity" that recent changes to the rules in Pennsylvania and Michigan were troubling in that regard.
Donald Trump 'You're fired!' after he lost the Presidential election. The Business tycoon and TV star gave Trump his marching orders after former vice president Joe Biden clinched victory in the nail-biting US election.
Sen. Lindsey Graham announced Saturday that the Senate Judiciary Committee would investigate possible voting irregularities after receiving an affidavit from a Pennsylvania postal worker alleging a plot to backdate ballots mailed after Election Day.
Ted Johnson, Dominic Patten Joe Biden will be the next President of the United States of America.The former Vice President defeated Donald Trump today after a hard fought and historic race framed as the most important election of a lifetime.Kamala Harris, his running mate, made history as the first woman elected to the vice presidency.
Democratic nominee Joe Biden was on the cusp of securing the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency on Saturday as he increased his lead in Pennsylvania and other key battleground states -- just as President Trump forged ahead with a legal fight.
Top Pennsylvania Republicans, speaking with the press on Friday, urged people to "relax" as tensions run high in the battleground state and President Trump's campaign makes allegations of potential election-related wrongdoing, specifically in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Democratic nominee Joe Biden continues to hold a small lead over Trump, and media organizations have yet to call the race for either candidate as mail ballots, which generally skew heavily Democratic in Pennsylvania, continue to be
The Trump campaign has filed multiple lawsuits in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Georgia and Nevada as the race remains increasingly tight -- seemingly in favor of a Democratic candidate Joe Biden win. Here’s a look at the lawsuits filed and what has happened since: The Trump campaign filed a lawsuit on Nov.
A Pennsylvania appellate court handed the Trump campaign a victory Thursday by allowing it to have its representative as close as six feet away from the vote-counting process that is underway at the Convention Center in Philadelphia. A campaign witness had testified that the ballot processing area was kept at a distance from poll watchers, with the closest table roughly 15 feet away from him and the farthest approximately 105 feet from where he was permitted to observe.