Trump says he'll accept election result if he wins, reserves right to challenge

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Trump says he'll accept election result if he wins, reserves right to challenge
Josh Lederman And Jill Colvin
DELAWARE, Ohio — The Associated Press
Published Thursday, Oct. 20, 2016 1:01PM EDT
Last updated Thursday, Oct. 20, 2016 2:59PM EDT

Donald Trump kept floating the possibility Thursday that he’ll challenge the results of the presidential election if there’s a “questionable result,” while teasingly promising to embrace the outcome “if I win.”

The Republican presidential nominee said he would accept “a clear election result” but was reserving his right to “contest or file a legal challenge” if he loses. It was his first attempt to explain his stunning warning a day earlier in the final debate that he might not accept the results.

On Thursday, Trump brushed off the likelihood of that happening with a confident prediction that “we’re not going to lose.”

“I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election,” Trump said. Then after letting that vow hang in the air, he added, “If I win.”

Trump’s musings about hypothetical Election Day scenarios came as his campaign was reeling from widespread astonishment over his refusal to commit to the time-honoured American tradition of the election’s loser acceding gracefully to the winner. Trump has warned repeatedly of impending, widespread voter fraud, despite no evidence to support him and plenty of evidence to the contrary.

Asked at the debate whether he’d accept the outcome, Trump said: “I will tell you at the time. I will keep you in suspense.”

That ominous rejoinder sent immediate shockwaves through the campaign, as Trump’s supporters tried to soften his remarks and fellow Republicans sought even more distance from their own nominee. The distraction deprived Trump of the comeback moment he sorely needed, despite a sometimes more-measured and poised performance in Wednesday’s third and final debate.

The Republican National Committee, whose chief mission is to get the GOP nominee elected, was put in the remarkable position of disputing its own candidate, with a spokesman saying the party would “respect the will of the people.” Even some of Trump’s most ardent supporters felt it was a step over the line. Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee said it was “imperative that Donald Trump clearly state” he’ll accept the results.

Democrats piled on, hoping Trump’s words would drag him down and Republican Senate and House candidates along with him. Though postelection challenges are not uncommon when few votes separate candidates, it’s extraordinary for a candidate to raise the prospect before Election Day.

“The things that Donald Trump is saying and doing is genuinely a threat to the democratic process, which is based on trust,” said Vice-President Joe Biden as he campaigned for Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire. He said Trump was questioning “the legitimacy of our democracy.”

As he entered the campaign’s final stretch Thursday, Trump tried to turn the tables on Clinton by accusing her of “cheating” and suggesting she should “resign from the race.” He cited a hacked email that showed Clinton’s campaign was tipped off about a question she’d be asked in a CNN town hall meeting during the Democratic primary.

“Can you imagine if I got the questions? They would call for the re-establishment of the electric chair, do you agree?” Trump asked supporters at a rally in Ohio.

Trump’s effort to shift the conversation back to Clinton centred on an email from longtime Democratic Party operative Donna Brazile to Clinton’s campaign in March with the subject line “From time to time I get the questions in advance.” It contained the wording of a death penalty question that Brazile suggested Clinton would be asked.

Brazile, now the acting Democratic National Committee chairwoman, was a CNN contributor at the time she sent the email, one of thousands disclosed publicly by Wikileaks after Clinton’s campaign chairman’s emails were hacked. Clinton’s campaign has said Russia was behind the hack.

“She used these questions, studied the questions, got the perfect answer for the questions and never said that she did something that was totally wrong and inappropriate,” Trump said of Clinton. He said that Brazile should resign as the head of the DNC.

All that was overshadowed by Trump’s stunner about the election’s results, which marked the culmination of weeks of escalating assertions that “this election is rigged” against him and that Clinton was trying “to steal it.” Trump’s campaign — and even his daughter — had tried to reframe his claim by insisting he was referring to unfair media treatment, leading Trump to contradict them by saying that no, he was referring to actual fraud.

There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud. U.S. elections are run by local elected officials — Republicans, in many of the most competitive states — and many of those officials have denied and denounced Trump’s charges.

But Trump’s campaign pointed to Al Gore and George W. Bush in 2000 as Exhibit A for why it would be premature for Trump to say he’d acquiesce on Nov. 8. Yet that election, which played out for weeks until the Supreme Court weighed in, didn’t centre on allegations of fraud, but on proper vote-counting after an extremely close outcome in the pivotal state of Florida led to a mandatory recount.
 
Donald Trump says he would accept 'a clear' election result, but challenge a 'questionable' one
When asked during debate if he would accept a loss, Republican candidate said: 'I'll keep you in suspense'
Thomson Reuters Posted: Oct 20, 2016 2:04 PM ET Last Updated: Oct 20, 2016 5:54 PM ET

campaign-2016-trump.jpg

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Delaware, Ohio, on Thursday, where he said he reserves the right to challenge any election result he deems 'questionable.' (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)

Trump2.jpg


Trump calls Clinton a 'nasty woman'

Republican Donald Trump on Thursday said he would accept a "clear" election result but reserved the right to file a legal challenge, clarifying his stance a day after he refused to promise he would trust the outcome if he loses on Nov. 8.

"Of course, I would accept a clear election result, but I would also reserve my right to contest or file a legal challenge in the case of a questionable result," Trump said at a rally in Ohio.

He also said he would accept the results if he wins, and alleged without evidence that Democrat Hillary Clinton's campaign was trying to "rig" the election — a claim he has repeated multiple times in recent weeks.

Asked on Wednesday at the final U.S. presidential election debate with Clinton if he would accept a losing outcome, Trump said he would "keep you in suspense."

Clinton seized on the remark, calling it "horrifying."


GettyImages-615701758crop.jpg

'I will look at it at the time': Trump on whether he will accept election results

Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway on Thursday tried to defend Trump, saying in television interviews he was "putting people on notice" about voting irregularities.

"We'll have to see what happens," she told ABC News, adding that Trump "was willing to accept the election absent widespread fraud."

John McCain denounces remarks
Republican Senator John McCain, who lost the 2008 presidential election to Barack Obama, says he conceded defeat "without reluctance" even though he didn't like the outcome.

'That's not just the Republican way or the Democratic way. It's the American way. This election must not be any different.- Senator John McCain
McCain said in a statement that he doesn't know who will win this election. But he says the loser has always congratulated the winner and called them "my president."

"That's not just the Republican way or the Democratic way. It's the American way. This election must not be any different," McCain said.

McCain did not mention Trump by name in his statement.

Obama calls Trump 'unfit'
At a Clinton rally in Florida, President Barack Obama encouraged voters to "reject somebody who proves himself unfit to be president every single day in every single way."

Obama said he doesn't believe Trump represents the values of Florida. He said Trump has failed to pay employees who have worked for him in the past, and that he hasn't released his tax returns as other major party candidates have done for decades.

Obama also took Republican Senator Marco Rubio to task for continuing to support Trump even though he's called Trump a "con artist." The president said Rubio's actions were the height of cynicism. "Come on man," Obama said.

Several times — when Obama mentioned Trump's actions and the crowd would boo — the president turned to a familiar phrase: "Don't boo, vote."

More allegations of sexual misconduct
Unlike Rubio, McCain withdrew his tepid endorsement of Trump after a 2005 video surfaced of Trump bragging about groping women.

Since its release, multiple women have come forward to allege Trump touched or groped them without their consent. Trump has denied all the allegations.

STILL_KarenaClips.jpg


Another woman alleging assault by Trump comes forward5:47

Another woman entered the fray on Thursday with allegations the Republican candidate groped her.

Speaking to reporters at a New York news conference, Karena Virginia alleged Trump grabbed her arm and touched her breast after a tennis tournament in 1998.
 
who care,难道他还想造反不成。
 
Shock after Donald Trump calls Hillary Clinton ‘such a nasty woman’ during the debate
Julie Bykowicz, The Associated Press | October 20, 2016 10:25 AM ET

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump asserted in the final presidential debate that no one respects women more than he does. Yet in its closing moments, standing onstage with the first major-party female presidential nominee in U.S. history, he called Hillary Clinton “such a nasty woman.”

Political pundits of both parties expressed shock at the snipe, with many on social media and cable news identifying it as one of the Republican nominee’s worst moments of the 90-minute meetup in Las Vegas.

Instantly, the Twitter hashtag “nastywoman” was born, with social media users making mostly positive comments about the Democratic nominee, and entrepreneurs began marketing T-shirts. A website riffing on it — nasty women get (expletive) done — redirects visitors to Clinton’s campaign donation page.

The people running Clinton’s Twitter account also made sure to highlight the disparity between Trump’s statement earlier, “Nobody respects women more than me,” and his “nasty woman” utterance.

And, in fact, when Trump claimed that “nobody has more respect for women than I do,” some audience members in Las Vegas laughed — moderator Chris Wallace was quick to scold them. “Please, everybody,” he said.

Trump defenders, including conservative radio host Mark Levin, argued that both men and women can be “nasty” and that there was nothing sexist about his remark.

Just before Trump said that, Clinton seemed to get under his skin.

She’d been talking about her proposal to preserve Social Security and Medicare. Her plan, she noted, would raise taxes on the wealthy, including her and Trump. And then she added of the billionaire, who in the 1990s took nearly a $1 billion write-off for business losses: “Assuming he can’t figure out how to get out of it.”

As she continued talking Trump interjected, “Such a nasty woman.” He raised his right hand to point his finger and shook his head, letting his mouth drop open in apparent disgust.

Clinton let the comment roll off her and continued pressing her case. She told reporters aboard her plane after the debate, “I just didn’t pay any attention to that.”
 
在电台上听到他的那句大喘气的话,正在转弯的我,差点笑的双手离开方向盘
 
在电台上听到他的那句大喘气的话,正在转弯的我,差点笑的双手离开方向盘

“I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election,” Trump said. Then after letting that vow hang in the air, he added, “If I win.”
 
“I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election,” Trump said. Then after letting that vow hang in the air, he added, “If I win.”
臭农民头条。
 
“I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all of the people of the United States that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election,” Trump said. Then after letting that vow hang in the air, he added, “If I win.”
然后说后面那句前,支持者发疯一样鼓掌叫好,然后他说了后面那句,我感觉之后有一秒的停顿,安静,然后又有不少支持者叫好鼓掌 LOL
wtf,I like this guy
 
我现在基本同意闯王n对1的说法,n包括他自己。比如说不打算接受选举结果,还有在这种场合下骂女人:such a nasty woman
伤不了对手,直接中伤自己。
 
不懂就问,为什么右派电台CFRA的早晨节目,也在一个劲地批闯王? 不是保守党的媒体应该支持共和党吗?
 
不懂就问,为什么右派电台CFRA的早晨节目,也在一个劲地批闯王? 不是保守党的媒体应该支持共和党吗?
第一次辩论后,这台有不少支持闯王的,承认人他rude,但是有治国方略,而希拉里言之无物。
 
这种大喘气的说话方式使我耳目一新!:D 我把它当笑话听,搞不懂你们为什么这么认真。
 
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