Ahead of Election Day, Donald Trump and his team used some autocratic rhetoric about the 2020 cycle, which led Politico to report that some Republican officials “privately disgusted” by the president’s election-related threats. They just weren’t willing to say so on the record.
“[I]t is shocking but not surprising that they aren’t speaking up now, even when the integrity of America’s electoral system is under attack by their party’s leader,” the article noted, adding, “Efforts to solicit on the record comment from a broad range of party leaders Monday were met with indifference.”
This, of course, was before the election. Last night, the president kept the offensive against his own country’s system of elections going with a late-night White House speech in which he falsely claimed victory, followed by a series of tweets in which Trump suggested there was something nefarious about counting early and mail-in ballots.
Any chance Republicans might speak up on this, now that Election Day is over? Oddly enough, yes. NBC News reported this afternoon:
Some Republicans are not falling in line behind President Donald Trump’s attempts to falsely declare victory and seek to halt some vote-counting in the presidential race, with several GOP leaders expressing rare public rebukes of the president.
There was some evidence of this overnight, with pushback from former GOP officials who are now working in media. Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), for example, conceded on CNN last night that Trump was “wrong” to misuse provocative words like “fraud” in reference to ballots. Around the same time, former Gov. Chris Christie (R-N.J.), a Trump ally, also acknowledged on ABC that he “disagreed” with the president’s claims.









