President Donald Trump on Wednesday told Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) that it’s too early to stop fighting to overturn the election after the longtime Kentucky senator congratulated Joe Biden following the Electoral College vote.
It’s “too soon to give up,” Trump continued. The “Republican Party must finally learn to fight,” he said. “People are angry!”
The remarks were shared alongside a Daily Mail article about Republicans turning on McConnell after he made his remarks about Biden on the floor of the Senate on Tuesday.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, McConnell drew a torrent of critical comments.
“Every ‘Republican’ that isn’t fighting for @realDonaldTrump’s 2020 landslide victory is supporting the Chinese Communist Party takeover of America,” wrote Congress member-elect Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, on Twitter.
Retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn wrote that “millions & millions & millions” of Americans “stand behind” President Trump’s legal challenges.
“We won’t fail or cower like some in the Republican Party have shown,” tweeted Flynn, who was recently pardoned by Trump.
“We’re still looking at all the legal stuff that’s happening with the legal cases and we’ll make our decision after we’ve seen all the legal challenges,” Paul told CNN on Dec. 10.
To challenge a state’s Electoral College votes, at least one House member and Senator have to object. Then, a complex series of votes and debates will ensue.
A spokeswoman for Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) told The Epoch Times about a week ago that the effort to challenge votes is “madness,” pointing to a public comment made by the Utah senator.
“It would be saying, ‘Look, let’s not follow the vote of the people, let’s instead do it [sic] what we want.’ That would not be the way a democratic republic ought to work,” Romney told reporters in Washington.
Over the past month, Trump has alleged that there was significant election fraud that swung the presidential race from him to Biden. His lawyers attempted to challenge the results in lawsuits filed in Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, and Georgia.