Friday, November 20, 2020

Giuliani sweats profusely while falsely accusing Biden of ‘horrible’ crimes…

Rudy Giuliani sweated so much during a press conference Thursday that streaks of what appeared to be dark hair dye streamed down his cheeks, making for a bizarre juxtaposition as the ex-mayor insisted without evidence that Democrats stole the election from President Trump.

Giuliani, who’s spearheading the Trump campaign’s bumbling legal battle to overturn Joe Biden’s election, did not appear to notice the black liquid dripping down from his sideburns, though he kept dabbing pearls of sweat from his face with a napkin.

It’s unclear what caused Giuliani’s profuse perspiration. Four other Trump campaign attorneys present for the press conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington did not appear clammy.

Rudy Giuliani wearing a suit and tie: Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for President Trump, speaks during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

© Jacquelyn Martin Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for President Trump, speaks during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for President Trump, speaks during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. (Jacquelyn Martin/)

Sweating aside, Giuliani’s press conference was called to amplify Trump’s completely unfounded claim that Democratic officials used mail-in ballots to rig the Nov. 3 election against him.

“This is real! It is not made up!” Giuliani, who served as a federal prosecutor in New York in the 1980s, shouted at reporters in the room, as the black liquid smeared his face. “There is nobody here that engages in fantasy. I have tried a hundred cases. I prosecuted some of the most dangerous criminals in the world. I know crimes. I can smell them.”

Sidney Powell, one of Giuliani’s fellow Trump attorneys, piled on by falsely claiming Trump won the election “by a landslide.” She also took the conspiracy theory-mongering a step further than Giuliani.

Biden’s decisive victory, Powell claimed, was facilitated by “communist money through Venezuela, Cuba and likely China,” with operatives from the countries hacking into voting machines used in some states.

There’s not a shred of evidence for any of Powell’s outlandish claims.

In fact, election officials from both parties in all 50 states have asserted that the Nov. 3 contest was remarkably secure, and even the Trump administration’s own top cybersecurity official, Chris Krebs, said there were no irregularities or fraud. Trump fired Krebs this week in retaliation.

Despite the total lack of evidence, Trump’s team of lawyers have pushed ahead with filing a flurry of long-shot lawsuits alleging that an insidious voter fraud plot carried Biden to victory and that millions of ballots should be thrown out as a result.

Giuliani brought the matter to a new low Thursday as he accused Biden personally of committing crimes.

“He doesn’t get asked questions about all the evidence of the crimes that he committed,” Giuliani said without explaining what crimes Biden supposedly committed.

“What’s going on in this country is horrible,” he added.

One component of the Trump campaign’s dubious web of accusations involve the idea that Republican election watchers weren’t allowed to stand close enough to poll workers in Pennsylvania and other states. 

© Provided by New York Daily News Rudy Giuliani steps away after speaking at Thursday's press conference.

Giuliani tried to drive home that point by referencing a scene from the 1992 movie “My Cousin Vinny,” which he called “one of my favorite law movies, because he comes from Brooklyn.”

“These people were further away than ‘My Cousin Vinny’ was,” the Brooklyn-born Giuliani said of the poll watchers. “They couldn’t see a thing!”

Most of the Trump campaign’s lawsuits have been thrown out by judges who note that the wild assertions of voter fraud are baseless.

On Thursday, a judge in Georgia dismissed a Trump campaign-backed lawsuit seeking to block certification of Biden’s razor-thin victory in the state. A few hours before that ruling, the Trump campaign withdrew a similar lawsuit in Michigan, where Biden won by more than 100,000 votes.

Still, Giuliani vowed to keep filing more lawsuits.

Giuliani’s dark comedy continues as fluids drip down his face, becomes the talk of latest press spectacle

“We’re about to file a major lawsuit in Georgia. That will be filed probably tomorrow,” he said.

The ex-mayor also lashed out at the FBI after a reporter asked why the agency isn’t getting involved if election crimes are as rampant as the Trump campaign claims.

“I don’t know where the FBI has been for the last three years,” he said. “What do we have to do to get the FBI to wake up? Maybe we need a new agency to protect us.”

Victoria Toensing et al. holding a sign: Giuliani is seen jokingly 

Giuliani is seen jokingly "looking for the FBI" in response to a reporter's question about where the FBI has been amid the Trump campaign's baseless claims of mass voter fraud. (Jacquelyn Martin/)

Trump, who has barely been seen in public since losing the election, cheered on his lawyers from the White House.

Donald Trump filming 'Wall Street' sequel: Hands off the hair!

“Lawyers now on,” he tweeted as the nearly two-hour-long press conference got underway. “An open and shut case of voter fraud. Massive numbers!”

Giuliani repeatedly insisted in the press conference that the campaign’s failed lawsuits are packed with evidence of Democratic voter fraud.

“All you’ve got to do to find out if I’m misleading you at all is to look at the lawsuits,”

However, Giuliani sang a different tune when pressed under oath by a federal Pennsylvania judge earlier this week on the specifics of one of the campaign’s fraud-claiming lawsuits.

“This is not a fraud case,” Giuliani admitted during a Tuesday hearing in that suit.

Trump’s refusal to concede is beginning to have dire consequences.

Biden said this week that he’s concerned his administration will be behind the ball on shipping doses of a potential COVID-19 vaccine because Trump has blocked the incoming president’s transition team from accessing federal distribution plans.


Monday, November 9, 2020

Trump est « à 100 % en droit » de contester les résultats selon McConnell

Mitch McConnell 
Le chef de la majorité républicaine au Sénat

Le chef de la majorité républicaine au Sénat Mitch McConnell a jugé lundi que Donald Trump était « à 100 % en droit » de contester les résultats de la présidentielle, mais n’a pas repris à son compte les accusations de « fraude » brandie par le président sortant.

« Le président Trump est à 100 % en droit d’examiner les allégations d’irrégularités et de peser ses options légales », a-t-il déclaré dans l’hémicycle, lors de sa première intervention depuis l’annonce, samedi, de la victoire du démocrate Joe Biden à la présidentielle.

Évoquant des « fraudes » sans apporter de preuve, Donald Trump refuse de concéder sa défaite et a annoncé vouloir demander des recomptages et déposer des plaintes dans les États où les résultats sont très serrés.

Dans un discours très prudent, Mitch McConnell, l’un des hommes les plus puissants de Washington, s’est bien gardé de faire siennes les accusations du milliardaire républicain et a même semblé minimiser la portée des actions de la Maison-Blanche.

« Une poignée de recours en justice de la part du président ne signe pas vraiment la fin de la République », a-t-il déclaré. Ils « ne représentent aucune sorte de crise », a-t-il insisté.

Affichant sa confiance dans les institutions, il a assuré que les États-Unis se réveilleront avec un nouveau président le 21 janvier, sans s’avancer sur son nom.

À quelques exceptions près, dont l’ancien président George W. Bush et trois sénateurs modérés, les républicains n’ont pas encore ouvertement reconnu la défaite de Donald Trump.

La grande majorité de son camp s’est retranché dans un silence prudent, et seul son cercle rapproché s’est fait l’écho de ses accusations.

Le sénateur Lindsey Graham, un proche allié, a incité M. Trump lundi à « continuer à se battre ». Mais même lui a laissé entendre que ces efforts pourraient être vains.  

« J’encouragerais le président Trump, si ses efforts ne suffisent pas, […] à ne pas laisser ce mouvement mourir, à réfléchir à se représenter » en 2024 et à créer des plateformes qui pourraient l’aider à « garder ce mouvement en vie », a déclaré M. Graham sur Fox News Radio.

Source:AFP