The White House has largely backed off Donald Trump’s recent rhetoric about delaying the 2020 election, but the president isn’t done warning of a looming calamity.
President Donald Trump on Friday continued to deliver warnings of chaos surrounding the use of mail-in ballots in November’s election, predicting that the upcoming general election will be “the greatest election disaster in history.”
The Republican added, in reference to the upcoming election, “This will be catastrophic for our nation. You’ll see it. I’m always right about things like this.” At the White House gathering, which lasted less than an hour, Trump described election-related developments as a looming “disaster” six times.
According to the transcript, a reporter soon after asked, “If the system is a disaster, as you say, why not commit to putting in resources to fix it?” Trump largely dodged the question, instead saying, “They’re not prepared for an onslaught of millions of ballots pouring in. They’re not prepared. They’re not prepared.”
About an hour earlier, NBC News’ Peter Alexander asked White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, “[I]f the president is so worried about how long it’ll take to count ballots in the election, then why isn’t the president and this White House doing everything it can to secure more funding for staffing and other resources to make sure that we can have a safe and proper election?”
McEnany didn’t answer directly, either.
Oddly enough, Trump is brazenly lying about key details, but his broader warning isn’t necessarily ridiculous. In fact, the prospect of an election disaster is alarmingly real. The U.S. Postal Service, for example, which will play a key role to play in delivering and retrieving ballots, is struggling badly as a result of measures imposed by Trump’s handpicked postmaster general.
Much of the country is also dealing with a shortage of poll workers, especially among seniors who are acutely at risk for the coronavirus. What’s more, because so many voters are unfamiliar with the vote-by-mail process, there’s a very real threat of widespread errors, leading to ballots that go uncounted.
Election Day is exactly 13 weeks from tomorrow, and there’s no shortage of experts who believe the United States simply isn’t prepared to administer a fair and safe process. State officials are scrambling to deal with the logistical challenges, but time is running out.
It’s against this backdrop that the sitting American president — whose name will be on the ballot in three months — believes the upcoming election will be “the greatest election disaster in history.” All of which leads to questions Trump is wholly unprepared to answer: what is he prepared to do to prevent this disaster? Where’s the White House’s plan? Why are the president and his team opposed to a series of possible solutions that would make voting more secure?









