Trump floats "Delay of Election" -- over UNFOUNDED mail-in voting fears

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Trump floats delaying 2020 election
despite lack of authority to do so

https://www.cnn.com/profiles/kevin-liptak-profile

CNN
By Kevin Liptak
and Betsy Klein
Thu July 30, 2020


(CNN) President Donald Trump explicitly floated delaying November's presidential election on Thursday, lending extraordinary voice to persistent concerns that he would seek to circumvent voting in a contest where he currently trails his opponent by double digits.

Trump has no authority to delay an election, and the Constitution gives Congress the power to set the date for voting.
[So, is the President trying to "De-Legitimize" the election, before hand ???]

But in his tweet on Thursday morning -- coming 96 days before the election and minutes after the federal government reported the worst economic contraction in recorded history -- Trump offered the suggestion because he claimed without evidence the contest will be flawed.

"With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most
INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great embarrassment to the USA,"
he wrote. "Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???"
[IN OTHER WORDS, KEEP HIM IN OFFICE, WITHOUT A VOTE ???]

There is no evidence that mail-in voting leads to fraud.

Trump has previously sought to stoke fear and lay the groundwork to question the election's results by promoting the idea that mail-in voting leads to widespread fraud and a "rigged" election.


His tweet comes as a spate of recent polling in battleground states -- and even states he won handily in 2016 -- show him trailing or virtually tied with former Vice President Joe Biden, and widespread disapproval of his handling of the pandemic.

Asked about the issue in a House Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday, Attorney General William Barr said he had "no reason to think" that the upcoming election will be "rigged." But he did say he believes that "if you have wholesale mail-in voting, it substantially increases the risk of fraud."

But historically, voting by mail has not led to massive voter fraud. And nonpartisan election experts say the possibility of foreign entities printing millions of fraudulent mail-in ballots this November is highly unlikely.

The President does not have the power to change the date of the election. Election Day is set by congressional statute, and most experts agree that it cannot be changed without congressional approval.

Biden has previously raised the possibility of Trump attempting to delay the election.

"Mark my words: I think he is gonna try to kick back the election somehow, come up with some rationale why it can't be held," Biden said at a virtual fundraiser in April, according to a pool report.

This story is breaking and will be updated.
CNN's Tara Subramaniam, Abby Phillip,
and DJ Judd contributed to this report.




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Trump Wants To Postpone The Election, But Americans Really Don’t



Last week, President Trump sparked a firestorm by calling for the postponement of the November election as the country prepares to vote amid the coronavirus pandemic. And although the president cannot actually delay the vote — Congress determines the federal election date — this hasn’t stopped Trump from repeatedlycasting doubt on the election results and exacerbating Americans’ already-flaggingconfidence in the integrity of the electoral process.

But so far, Trump’s idea of postponing the election isn’t very popular.

Three new polls this week found that Americans strongly oppose postponing the election, even in the face of a public health crisis.

Reuters/Ipsos found that 66 percent of registered voters opposed a delay, while just 23 percent supported it (11 percent weren’t sure).

The Economist/YouGov found that 66 percent of adults opposed postponement, compared to just 15 percent who backed it (19 percent weren’t sure).​

Politico/Morning Consult also asked voters how they felt about delaying the election, giving them three choices: Postpone the election, hold the election as scheduled but with mostly in-person voting, or hold the election as scheduled but with most Americans voting by mail. It also found that most opposed postponing: Just 7 percent backed delaying the election, down from 16 percent in April when the pollster last asked about this, while 86 percent of respondents said the election should stay on schedule, one way or another.​

 
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