abcnews.go.com 
<https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-suggests-delaying-2020-election-power-designated-congress/story?id=72074375>
  


Trump suggests delaying 2020 election, a power designated to Congress


ABC News

5-6 minutes

  _____  


The move comes as polls show Trump trailing Biden in battleground states.


In a remarkable move by a sitting president, President Donald Trump for the 
first time Thursday morning suggested delaying the presidential election over 
his persistent false attacks that mail-in voting would lead to the "most 
INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history." 

"With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will 
be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great 
embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, 
securely and safely vote???" the tweet reads.

Not only have election experts debunked theories of widespread fraud with the 
use of mail ballots, it is also not within the power of the president to change 
the date of the election. 

While individual states control their own primaries, the date of the general 
election has been a matter of federal law since 1845, and it would require an 
act of Congress to delay past the first Tuesday of November. The Constitution 
also mandates that the president's term ends on Jan. 20 and the swearing in of 
the new president and vice president on that same date. 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi citied those rules in a tweet of her own responding 
to the president.

GOP Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell also slapped down the idea, telling 
<https://twitter.com/MaxWinitz/status/1288860037230874624>  WNKY's Max Winitz 
in a phone interview Thursday the date is set and citing past American 
elections that have taken place during crises. 

"Well never in the history of the country through wars, depressions and the 
Civil War have we ever not had a federally scheduled election on time. And 
we'll find a way to do that again this November 3," McConnell said. 

Presidential historian Michael Beschloss was quick to tweet a reminder that 
there has never been a successful move to "delay the election" for a president.

Trump appears to be the only one floating the extreme measure months out from 
Election Day. 

The Trump campaign even sought to walk back Trump's tweet as just "raising a 
question" in a statement to ABC News.

"The President is just raising a question about the chaos Democrats have 
created with their insistence on all mail-in voting," said Hogan Gidley, Trump 
2020 national press secretary. 

Trump's suggestion follows an unfavorable report out Thursday that the U.S. 
economy contracted at a record-shattering 32.9% last quarter. It also comes 
amid poor polling numbers on his handling of the deadly coronavirus 
<https://abcnews.go.com/health/coronavirus>  pandemic and on the same morning 
of the funeral for late Rep. John Lewis, who devoted his life to voting rights.

Trump in April was asked about delaying the election amid the coronavirus and 
said, "I never even thought of changing the date of the election." 

"Why would I do that? November 3. It's a good number. I look forward to that 
election," he added at the time.

But Trump's likely opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, predicted at an 
April virtual fundraiser that Trump would try to delay the election. 

"Mark my words: I think he is gonna try to kick back the election somehow, come 
up with some rationale why it can't be held," Biden said.

Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and a senior White House adviser, also didn't 
rule out possibly delaying the election when asked in May, saying, "I'm not 
sure I can commit one way or the other, but right now that's the plan." 

Though Trump cited mail-in voting fraud as his reason for seeking to delay the 
election, experts say there isn't any evidence of widespread fraud with the 
practice.

"Mail ballot fraud is incredibly rare and legitimate security concerns can be 
easily addressed," according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York 
University School of Law, a non-partisan law and policy think tank. 

Tom Ridge, a Republican who previously served as the governor of Pennsylvania 
and was the nation's first secretary of Homeland Security, recently told ABC 
News, "There is absolutely no antecedent, no factual basis for [President 
Trump's] claim of massive fraud in mail voting."

Even current Trump administration official Christopher Krebs, director of the 
Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security 
Agency, said earlier month that an increase in mail-in voting this year could 
improve election integrity because there will be more paper records. 

"Auditability is a key element of being able to determine the integrity of a 
vote," Krebs said. 

ABC News checked in July with nearly 30 U.S. Secretaries of State, none of whom 
expressed doubts in their ability to protect the integrity of their state 
elections. 

Those elections officials also expressed confidence that they would be able to 
effectively carry out expanded mail-in voting in November, despite Trump's 
repeated claims of rampant voter fraud. 

ABC News' Kendall Karson, Ben Siegel, Mariam Khan, Alexander Mallin and Luke 
Barr contributed to this report. 

 

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