Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) on Sunday addressed claims by Republican lawmakers that he branded the 2016 election “illegitimate” and called former President Donald Trump a “fake president.”
In a speech on the Senate floor shortly after Jeffries’s appointment as leader of House Democrats was announced, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell took aim at the decision, and branded Jeffries an “election denier” who he said had “mounted reckless attacks on our independent judiciary.”
Jeffries said that it is “unfortunate” that Republicans have chosen to focus on him and his comments regarding the authenticity of the 2016 election.
“My view of the situation has been pretty clear,” Jeffries said. “I supported the certification of Donald Trump’s election. I attended his inauguration, even though there were many constituents and others across the country pushing me and others to do otherwise, and found ways to work with the Trump administration, being the lead Democrat in negotiating historic criminal justice reform. That track record speaks for itself.”
An ‘Election Denier’
McConnell in his speech on the Senate floor on Dec. 1 criticized Democrats whom he said have spent years “yelling about the importance of norms and institutions but who have themselves ”not hesitated to undermine our institutions when they are unhappy with a given outcome.”One example of such a Democratic lawmaker to have done so is Jeffries, McConnell said.
“The newly elected incoming leader of House Democrats is a past election denier who basically said the 2016 election was ‘illegitimate’ and suggested that we had a ‘fake president’” McConnell said. “He’s also mounted reckless attacks on our independent judiciary, and said that justices who he didn’t like have ‘zero legitimacy’.”
“Unfortunately, when it comes to attacking our independent judiciary, the Democrats’ new leader isn’t an outlier, he’s a representative sample,” McConnell added.
Numerous Democratic lawmakers repeatedly suggested that Trump was not legitimately elected as president, citing alleged Russian interference.
Such claims have since been overturned, with special counsel John Durham’s criminal probe into the matter disproving the Trump–Russia collusion narrative.