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US elections 2020: What happens if Donald Trump refuses to concede defeat?

It would be the first time in US history that a losing candidate has not conceded

https://www.middleeasteye.net/sites/default/files/styles/article_page/public/images-story/trump-5-nov-2020-afp_0.jpg?itok=5PX3qr2jDonald Trump has cited without evidence incidents of irregularities that he claims gave the Democrats an advantage (AFP)

Joe Biden has won the US presidential election, securing more than the 270 electoral college votes needed to win the race for the White House.

Biden was projected by CNN, the Associated Press and other major news outlets, including the right leaning Fox News, as the winner of Pennsylvania on Saturday, taking his total to more than 284 electoral votes, above the threshold needed to clinch victory.

But over the past few days, incumbent US President Donald Trump has repeatedly made it clear he won't consider a Biden victory legitimate.

In a rambling press conference late on Thursday, Trump repeated the baseless claim of corruption and fraud. "If you count the legal votes, I easily win," he said. "If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us."

It's unlikely Trump will give Biden a congratulatory or concessionary phone call anytime soon, but what happens if he refuses to concede defeat?

Following Saturday's announcement, Biden is expected to be sworn in as president at noon on 20 January 2021. At that point, Trump would become a private citizen with no authority or standing in the White House.

Traditionally, the outgoing president attends his successor's inauguration on the steps of the US Capitol and is later escorted ceremoniously by the new commander-in-chief to a helicopter that would carry him to a private residence.

Former presidents usually fade into the background of American politics, avoiding public comments in the first few months after leaving office to allow the newly elected administration to lead without distraction.

In the event that there is no confirmed president on inauguration day, House Speaker and Democrat Nancy Pelosi could serve as a caretaker president, according to the Constitution's succession laws, but she would have to retain her position in Congress first.

Military intervention

In June, Biden said he was "absolutely convinced" that the military would intervene and remove Trump from office if needed. The former vice-president's campaign reiterated that message on Friday.

"The United States government is perfectly capable of escorting trespassers out of the White House," said Biden spokesman Andrew Bates.

Still, General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told NPR last month that the military would continue its position of playing no role in politics, and said he trusted US institutions to handle the election's aftermath.

"This isn't the first time that someone has suggested that there might be a contested election," Milley said.

"And if there is, it'll be handled appropriately by the courts and by the US Congress. There's no role for the US military in determining the outcome of a US election. Zero. There is no role there."

Kari Schake, expert at the American Enterprise Institute, also dismissed the idea that the military would get involved in a potential transition of presidential power.

"The Constitution provides remedies for a president refusing to leave office," Schake said in an article for Defence One magazine.

Laurence Tribe, an American legal scholar and professor at Harvard University, said that regardless of what Trump says he will do, his "concession isn't necessary or even relevant".

"The law is clear that the Joint Session of the new Congress that convenes on January 6, 2021, counts the Electoral Votes and designates the winner as the president-elect, who takes the oath as the 46th president of the United States at noon on January 20, 2021," Tribe told Middle East Eye.

"Having been defeated, Trump will have no way to exercise presidential power after that point. Federal law makes it a crime for any private citizen to purport falsely to act as an executive officer.

"That law would apply to Trump, Pompeo, Barr, Mnuchin, DeVoss, and the entire Trump cabinet. Each member’s term ends no later than noon next January 20."

The Supreme Court

The Republicans have already started legal challenges in several key battleground states, while the Democrats have hired hundreds of lawyers to defend themselves if a disputed result ends up at the Supreme Court for a decision.

Trump-led lawsuits to stop the count in Michigan and Georgia have already been dismissed by federal judges.

Election officials have continued to count votes across the country, the normal process on the days following voting.

However, unlike in previous years, states have been contending with an avalanche of mail-in ballots driven by fears of voting in person during the coronavirus pandemic.

At least 103 million people voted early, either by mail or in person, representing 74 percent of the total votes cast in the 2016 presidential election.

Mail-in ballots normally take more time to verify and count. This year, because of the large numbers of mail-in ballots and a close race, results were always expected to take longer.

If Trump could prove that postal voting led to election fraud, he would have legal standing to take the election result to the federal judiciary - all the way to the Supreme Court, which would then decide what to do. But there is no guarantee that courts would agree to even look at the case as it stands.

Even if one state court rules in Trump's favour, the issue could still be taken to the country's highest court.

"My expectation is that after a lot of litigation and false claims from President Trump, in the end a normal transition will occur. That is, President Trump will leave office peacefully," George Bisharat, professor at UC Hastings College of Law in San Francisco, told MEE.

"Tempers and suspicions are running high right now, but both will fade over time, particularly as the courts systematically dismiss the barrage of Republican lawsuits, none of which at this point seems to have any capacity to change the outcome."

Some Republicans have even cast doubt over Trump's claims, with Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania - who voted for Trump - telling CBS on Friday that there was "simply no evidence that anybody has shown me - or anyone else I'm aware of - of any kind of widespread corruption or fraud".

Ron Stockton, a political science professor at the University of Michigan - Dearborn, told Middle East Eye that, as Trump's loss becomes more clear, his backers in the Republican Party will begin to step aside and allow for Biden to step into the position of president-elect.

"Once he's wounded, they're going to abandon him," Stockton said.

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US elections 2020: The legal peril Donald Trump faces if he loses the election

His status as president has protected him so far, but Trump could be slammed with a pile of personal lawsuits should he fail to secure re-election

https://www.middleeasteye.net/sites/default/files/styles/article_page/public/images-story/US%20President%20Donald%20Trump%20looks%20down%20as%20he%20announces%20a%20new%20immigration%20proposal%2C%20in%20the%20Rose%20Garden%20of%20the%20White%20House%20in%20Washington%2C%20DC%20on%20May%2016%2C%202019%20[AFP%29.jpg?itok=aBAhJT15Donald Trump could face a litany of personal lawsuits once he leaves office (AFP)

His status as president has protected him so far, but Trump could be slammed with a pile of personal lawsuits should he fail to secure re-election.

The businessman and reality TV star is likely to face a litany of potential criminal suits, ranging from emoluments to rape charges, if Joe Biden secures enough electoral college votes on Tuesday.

'The gifts and other financial benefits President Trump has received from various foreign powers including Saudi Arabia almost certainly violated the Foreign Emoluments Clause of Article I of the US Constitution'

- Laurence Tribe, Harvard University

Trump's biographer David Johnston has even warned that the incumbent could face jail time once he leaves the Oval Office.

"Absolutely yes, if we are a nation of equal justice and Trump is convicted of serious felonies," he told the Washington Monthly.

"Whether it happens is entirely unpredictable."

Some in Washington have suggested a formal structure for investigating Trump once he becomes a private citizen again.

Congressman Eric Swalwell from California raised the idea in August of a "Presidential Crimes Commission," made up of independent prosecutors who can examine "those who enabled a corrupt president".

Ahead of the US presidential election, Middle East Eye takes a look at some of the many lawsuits Trump is currently dealing with.

Trump organisation

The most serious case Trump is facing is the Manhattan district attorney's probe into the financial workings of the Trump Organisation.

Prosecutors in the case have said in court filings that Trump could be guilty of a number of crimes, including tax, bank and insurance fraud, as well as falsifying business records.

"There are likely to be many federal crimes that investigation following Trump’s departure from office would reveal – crimes involving federal income tax evasion, wire fraud, bank fraud, insurance fraud, money laundering, and campaign finance law violations," Laurence Tribe, a professor at Harvard University, told Middle East Eye.

The New York attorneys on the case have filed a subpoena for eight years of Trump's taxes, which the president tried blocking multiple times.

In July, Trump lost an appeal that ruled he is not liable to a subpoena from a state grand jury.

Tribe said that "no presidential pardon could operate to shield Trump or anyone else from such state prosecutions".

Obstruction of justice

Within the Mueller report, the result of a two-year investigation into Russian interference in the US election that dominated headlines when it was fully revealed, Special Counsel Robert Mueller found a number of cases where Trump obstructed justice.

One of these cases was when he had suggested to FBI director James Comey to drop an investigation of his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Then, Trump fired Comey.

While Mueller stopped short of recommending criminal charges, saying that a sitting president cannot be indicted, the president may not have protection if he is out of office.

Mueller also did not clear Trump of the obstruction charges.

Whether a Biden administration would pursue charges against the president would most likely depend on who is chosen as Attorney General, Tribe noted.

Campaign finance violations

In 2018, Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to violating campaign finance laws, tax fraud and lying to banks.

Cohen, during testimony to the US Senate, said that Trump had directed him to make hush payments to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels, who claimed to have a sexual affair with the president.

Similar to the obstruction of justice case, without the office of the presidency to protect him, Trump could face charges for this. And a possible Biden administration is not likely to pardon him.

"I doubt that a Biden administration would pardon any of those crimes because the former Vice President has made clear that he would return to the practice of following normal pardon protocols and procedures," Tribe said.

"And it's exceedingly unlikely that the normal conditions for showing mercy and accordingly issuing a presidential pardon have been met with respect to a virtual crime spree on the part of Donald J. Trump."

Emoluments

Trump faces lawsuits alleging he has violated the emoluments clause of the Constitution by accepting payments from foreign and domestic officials who stay at the president's hotels.

The Foreign Emoluments Clause of the Constitution prohibits the president from accepting any benefits from foreign states unless he first obtains the consent of Congress.

Trump has received many gifts from foreign leaders, including from Saudi Arabia where he received around 80 items, including a dagger made of pure silver with a mother of pearl sheath.

Trump has also been under scrutiny for accepting money that representatives from Riyadh spent by staying at the president's hotels.

Examples of this include the Saudi government paying $270,000 at the Trump International Hotel in Washington from November 2016 to February 2017; the Kuwaiti embassy holding a celebration at the Trump hotel costing upwards of $60,000; and the Malaysian prime minister and his delegation all staying at the same hotel in September 2017.

"The gifts and other financial benefits President Trump has received from various foreign powers including Saudi Arabia almost certainly violated the Foreign Emoluments Clause of Article I of the U.S. Constitution," Tribe told Middle East Eye.

"Such orders could not be issued after Trump leaves office, however, because his departure would automatically end the violations and render judicial relief moot."

Khashoggi's murder

Last month, Hatice Cengiz, the fiancee of slain Saudi journalist and Middle East Eye columnist Jamal Khashoggi filed a lawsuit against Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, accusing the monarch of ordering the killing.

While Trump would not be tried for any part in the murder, there is a chance that he could be called upon to testify as a witness.

In an interview with American journalist Bob Woodward, Trump said he "saved his a**", referring to the crown prince and the journalist's murder.

"President Trump can certainly be issued a subpoena to appear and testify as a witness," George Bisharat, a professor at UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, told MEE.

"But he is entitled to move to quash any such summons, including on the grounds that his testimony would include no facts material to the prosecution."

If the plaintiff in the case can argue that MBS made admissions to Trump regarding details of the murder, such as the dispatch of a hit squad, the US president may be forced to appear in court.

Regardless of this, "Trump will resist such an outcome vigorously," Bisharat noted.

Qassem Soleimani

Earlier this year, Iran said it was planning to file a lawsuit at the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Trump over the killing of top Iranian General Qassem Soleimani.

While the case has yet to be filed, and the US is no longer a part of the ICC, there is strong evidence that Trump violated international law.

Agnes Callamard, UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, has previously said that the strike on Soleimani "most likely violates international law".

Still, without the proper jurisdiction, any case would only be a public relations move on the part of Iran.

"I don't believe President Trump faces a realistic possibility of indictment by the ICC due to the absence of jurisdiction over this alleged crime," Bisharat said.

The law professor noted that many of the violations Trump committed dealing with foreign countries will most likely not see their day in court. But there is still a chance that Trump will be tried for the myriad of other crimes he is accused of.

"To those who believe President Trump has committed numerous violations of law, both domestically and internationally, these may feel like disappointing conclusions," Bisharat said.

"But the possibility that President Trump may face investigation and prosecution for financial crimes, possibly by the State of New York, if not by the US Justice Department, still seems fairly high."

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.

FM

Not an ordinary jump suit...the best and most orange jumpsuit with TRUMP emblazoned at the back. His buddies Barr and that one from Briebart news who looks as though he crawled out of a gutter would look just as good in those suits too. While at it, throw in his sleazy creepy looking lawyer Giuilliani.

cain
Last edited by cain
@Tola posted:

Cain's prediction of an orange jump suit for Trump, might be revealed.

@cain posted:

Not an ordinary jump suit...the best and most orange jumpsuit with TRUMP emblazoned at the back.

His buddies Barr and that one from Briebart news who looks as though he crawled out of a gutter would look just as good in those suits too. While at it, throw in his sleazy creepy looking lawyer Giuilliani.

Cain ... One like this for Strumpovski. 

Democrats Want Death Penalty For Trump Impeachment - Daily Squib

FM
@Ramakant-P posted:

Joe Biden must first be declared the winner by Election America. Fox News and CNN cannot do that. Whenever Biden is declared the winner, he will have no problem walking Trump from the White House with the help of his Generals.

Even if Trump wins all four states still being counted he will not make 270. So no matter how you twist it, Biden won.

cain

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