Comments on: Election Chaos: What If Trump Won’t Go? https://www.okwassup.com/election-chaos-what-if-trump-wont-go/ News, Entertainment, Lifestyle and more! Mon, 21 Sep 2020 02:45:45 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 By: Mr.BD https://www.okwassup.com/election-chaos-what-if-trump-wont-go/#comment-13678 Tue, 15 Sep 2020 18:19:37 +0000 https://www.okwassup.com/?p=23961#comment-13678 Trump made the mistake of pissing off the military. If he refuses to go I think the CIA or somebody will get him out of there.

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By: Truthiz1 https://www.okwassup.com/election-chaos-what-if-trump-wont-go/#comment-13677 Tue, 15 Sep 2020 14:13:17 +0000 https://www.okwassup.com/?p=23961#comment-13677 [Should all scenarios lead to a Donald Trump defeat, his ego will never accept it. So, expect him to have one final trick up his sleeve. On January 19, 2021, don’t be surprised if Donald Trump resigns the presidency and accepts a full pardon from (one day only) President Mike Pence for all past, present, and future federal illegalities. However, because a presidential pardon only has jurisdiction over federal crimes and not state crimes and because New York State is prepared to charge Trump with myriad crimes the moment he leaves office, ‘The Donald’ won’t be able to fully escape the long arm of the law. So, don’t put it past Trump to flee the United States on the morning of January 20th for Russia or some foreign destination that doesn’t have an extradition treaty with the US. ] – DJ

Yes. This. I think it could all play out close to what DJ has laid out here. We shall see. 

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By: Wil https://www.okwassup.com/election-chaos-what-if-trump-wont-go/#comment-13676 Tue, 15 Sep 2020 13:31:24 +0000 https://www.okwassup.com/?p=23961#comment-13676 Five Thirty Eight:

What happens if Trump won’t go? The answer is bleak. Experts tell me that the president actually has a lot of power at his discretion to contest the election, and some of the scenarios that could bring us to the edge of a crisis are actually very plausible.

Consider this one: It’s late on Election Day, and hundreds of thousands of votes in key battleground states still have to be counted due to the increased use of mail and absentee voting because of the pandemic. As a result, media outlets have largely avoided calling the race, but based on the votes that have been counted, Trump leads in enough states to reach at least 270 electoral votes, which would be enough to win the election if his election-night lead holds. Trump claims victory, but because Democrats were much more likely  to vote by mail than Republicans, Joe Biden eventually pulls ahead because of the Democratic lean of the remaining votes — a phenomenon known as the “blue shift.”

That’s just one of the many scenarios the Transition Integrity Project, a bipartisan collection of over 100 experts, explored this summer while researching how a possible election crisis could unfold.

Rosa Brooks, a professor at Georgetown University Law School who co-founded the Transition Integrity Project, told me she and her colleagues weren’t interested in predicting the likelihood of any one scenario they looked at, but more so in understanding the range of possibilities. Ultimately, they don’t know to what extent this year’s election result will be contested — would Trump deploy federal agents from the Department of Justice to secure vote counting sites or would he just take to Twitter to bemoan the results? — but Brooks told me they do think the election will be contested at least on some level. So the question they’re asking is: How much?

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