Former U.S. Attorney Sidney Powell said Republican members of Congress should all support President Trump‘s challenge to the election if the GOP wants to hold on.
You (President Trump) won a landslide victory with more than 305 electoral votes and a majority of the general electorate, making you the highest-voting presidential candidate in U.S. history,” Powell tweeted on Dec. 30.
If the RNC wants to hold on, then every Republican should support you,” Powell said. “I’ve been told by a multi-billion dollar donor that donations don’t mean much when the election is rigged by improper means.
You won more than 305 electoral votes & the popular vote as well
You won in the greatest landslide in history.
If the #RNC hopes to survive, every Republican should stand up for you now.
A multi-billion$$ donor told me there’s no point donating at all when election is rigged. https://t.co/yXtDcel92h
- Sidney Powell
Later in the evening, Powell tweeted that the Jan. 5 runoff election for Georgia’s U.S. Senate may also have been fraudulent. How do you do (a runoff election for U.S. Senate) when the first election was such a failure and the fraud was so bad? Let’s get the first election (fraud) corrected,” she said. She said.
Because the fraud was so egregious, we don’t know that #Loeffler or #Perdue should even be in a runoff!
Maybe they already won outright.
Maybe someone else won?
How do you have a runoff from a failed and fraudulent first election?
Get the first one right first @realDonaldTrump https://t.co/5swmpxCnso
- Sidney Powell
The Republican candidates for U.S. Senate in Georgia are David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who are running against Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, respectively.
On Nov. 25, Powell filed a lawsuit in Georgia involving at least 30 counts of election fraud, asking a judge to order a reversal of the state’s certified election results. But Georgia U.S. District Judge Timothy Batten dismissed Powell’s lawsuit on Dec. 7.
Powell filed a lawsuit Dec. 11 in the federal Supreme Court against election fraud in four swing states. She said Dec. 17 that the Supreme Court delayed the Georgia and Michigan cases until mid-January, while dismissing the Wisconsin and Arizona lawsuits.
The day after Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoff election (Jan. 6) is the joint session of Congress, when the states’ electoral votes will be counted and certified.
Georgia Republican U.S. Senate candidate Loeffler had said in mid-December that she would not rule out opposing swing state electoral votes during the joint session of Congress.
More than a dozen Republican members of Congress have now said they will challenge the electoral votes on Jan. 6. The latest to follow suit is Missouri U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, the first senator to publicly announce a challenge.
But Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Senate Republican Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) and Senate Rules and Regulations Committee Chairman Roy Blunt (R-Mich.) have all advised Republican senators not to participate in the challenge.
President Trump tweeted on Dec. 26 that Democrats would see it as an act of war if the Democratic nominee was stolen, but Mitch and Republicans are doing nothing but letting it go, and that Republican senators should step up their fight for the presidency.
Mo Brooks, who first proposed the challenge on January 6, and then followed by Alex Mooney, Lance Gooden and other Republican members of Congress have also called on Republican members of Congress to unite behind President Trump.
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