Trump retweets video of suspected election cheating, Pence calls for fight on

With less than a month to go before the next U.S. president is inaugurated, Trump still does not acknowledge that he lost the Nov. 3 election to Biden. He continues to tweet reports and evidence of election fraud, while his vice president, Mike Pence, has called for a fight until “every legal vote is counted and every illegal vote is removed.

    Trump said in a video yesterday 22nd criticizing the $900 billion bill in Congress for giving the American people “ridiculously low subsidies”, “The next administration could be me”. He then retweeted a report on election fraud from the right-wing media outlet AON (America’s #1 paid news channel) on his Twitter feed on the 23rd. The report showed a video of a purple-clad woman counting ballots at a polling station in Fulton County, Georgia, putting a stack of ballots into a machine multiple times. The report also showed Biden’s vote curve suddenly plummeting to overtake Trump’s icon. Another Trump posting read in capital letters that Democrats were pouring in hundreds of thousands of votes in swing states. He had tweeted the day before that big news was coming from Pennsylvania. There are very many illegal votes in that state that shouldn’t be counted. He said, “This was a faked election.”

    Pence continues to fight

    Vice President Mike Pence continues to fight, going after this election fraud after several Trump staffers and some Republican lawmakers left. For Pence, the election is not over, according to Fox News. He said yesterday, Tuesday, speaking at Turning Point USA’s Student Action Summit in West Palm Beach, Florida, that the “presidential election is still going on “He called on the people of that rally to continue. He called on the people at that rally to keep fighting for the election. He said, “I assure you, we will continue to fight until every legal vote is counted and until every illegal vote is removed. Pence, as speaker of the U.S. Senate, is considered to have a possible opportunity to play a ruling role when the federal legislature confirms the results of electoral votes in each state on Jan. 6.