How Trump may try to challenge the election results if he loses again

Hume

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Widespread false information​

It could again take several days to declare a winner, as some swing states like Pennsylvania and Arizona take longer than others to count votes. As the public waits for results, false narratives could quickly spread.

Trump has a long history of blaming his electoral shortcomings on nonexistent voter fraud. In 2020, Trump falsely claimed victory on election night, even though full results weren’t known for days. He could do the same this year — and now misinformation and disinformation can spread even faster because of sophisticated artificial intelligence-generated content and a hands-off approach from social media platforms.

 

Widespread false information​

It could again take several days to declare a winner, as some swing states like Pennsylvania and Arizona take longer than others to count votes. As the public waits for results, false narratives could quickly spread.

Trump has a long history of blaming his electoral shortcomings on nonexistent voter fraud. In 2020, Trump falsely claimed victory on election night, even though full results weren’t known for days. He could do the same this year — and now misinformation and disinformation can spread even faster because of sophisticated artificial intelligence-generated content and a hands-off approach from social media platforms.

:magagrin:
 

Weeks-long recounts​

Recounts are likely to spring up if the results are close, and they could last for weeks, particularly if they get bogged down in lawsuits over whether officials followed proper procedures.
After Trump lost Wisconsin in 2020, he used a recount to try to throw out hundreds of thousands of ballots. The state Supreme Court rejected his arguments in a 4-3 decision. A fight in 2024 could again come down to one or more state high courts, including in battlegrounds like North Carolina and Arizona, where conservatives control the courts.
 

Congress stalls certification​

When House members are sworn in on Jan. 3, their first task will be to elect a speaker. In 2023, it took four days and 15 votes to elect a speaker. Later that year, it took three weeks to choose a new leader. Congress would be in uncharted territory if it didn’t have a speaker by Jan. 6, when it must meet to certify the presidential results. The House can perform few functions without a speaker, according to historians, and in October 2023 was largely immobilized while members debated who should lead them.
 
derp derp

he is a private citizen - this is as retarded as claiming he stopped a border bill while being a private citizen
He did. There is no dispute about that. The bill was ready to go out the door and he made some phone calls demanding they stop it. Trump did not care about fixing the border. It is what he was running on and he did not want to lose it. It was no. 1 campaign issue.
 
He did. There is no dispute about that. The bill was ready to go out the door and he made some phone calls demanding they stop it. Trump did not care about fixing the border. It is what he was running on and he did not want to lose it. It was no. 1 campaign issue.
even had he placed such a call -which is a fabrication - he is a private citizen and holds no weight.

you are desperate and lying because this is a losing issue and you know it
 
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