Democrat says he is confident US military would escort
Trump from White House if he loses and refuses to leave.
By Reuters
June 11, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Democratic presidential candidate
Joe Biden said he worries President Donald Trump will
try to "steal" the November election but he is confident
soldiers would escort Trump from the White House if he
loses and does not recognize the result.
"It's my greatest concern, my
single greatest concern: This president is going to try
to steal this election," Biden said in an interview
broadcast late on Wednesday on Comedy Central's The
Daily Show.
Biden did not specify how he
thought Trump, a Republican, might try to steal the
election. But the former vice president cited Trump's
opposition to mail-in voting and said Democrats would
have lawyers present at voting locations across the
country to look out for Republican efforts to suppress
the vote.
Trump has repeatedly attacked voting by mail,
proclaiming without evidence that the expected increase
in mail-in voting would lead to widespread fraud in the
November 3 contest.
Biden said recent comments by former senior military
officials criticising Trump's response to nationwide
protests over police brutality made him confident the US
military would intervene if Trump refused to accept the
election results.
"I'm absolutely convinced they will escort him from
the White House with great dispatch," Biden said.
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Biden has often said publicly he worries Trump would
try to cheat. But his rhetoric has escalated recently as
most national polls show the former vice president
leading the president, while Trump has stepped up
criticism of voting by mail.
Trump's re-election campaign did not immediately
respond to a request for comment. Trump and his
Republican allies say mail voting is prone to fraud and
favours Democrats, even as numerous independent studies
have found little evidence of either claim.
During the 2016 presidential election campaign, Trump
refused to say during a final debate with Democratic
candidate Hillary Clinton that he would concede if
Clinton won.
Election experts and officials expect a surge in
mail-in voting this November due to concerns over the
coronavirus pandemic and warn the process could be
marred by chaos of the type already seen in primary
elections held in states during the novel coronavirus
outbreak.
A large number of mail ballots not delivered in time
to be cast or counted could lead to legal challenges
over election results. Counting mail ballots also take
more time because a voter's identity must first be
validated, raising the prospect that the election
outcome will not be known well past Election Day,
experts say.