Phase I
Trump loses Georgia
Georgians went to the polls after a bitter campaign. Trump held onto a narrow lead for three days until President Joe Biden pulled ahead, buoyed by mail-in ballots that took longer to count. After his loss, Trump started falsely claiming Biden only won because of rampant voter fraud. He also started to take aim at Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, two Republicans who oversee the state’s election process.
November 3
Election management
November 5
Legal developments
November 6
Election management
Biden takes the lead[3] in Georgia as more mail-in ballots are tallied.
November 9
Trump falsely claims[5] he already won Georgia on Election Day.
November 11
Election management
Calls to Georgia officials
Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican and top Trump ally, privately calls[10] Raffensperger, who leaves the call thinking Graham wants him to throw out some mail-in ballots, according to Raffensperger’s recollection of it. Graham denies that he asked for any legal votes to be discarded.
Phase II
Certification crisis
After election officials initiated a hand audit of every ballot, it quickly became clear that the recount wouldn’t change the outcome. Trump started to falsely claim that officials were rigging the audit against him. After the audit confirmed Biden’s win, Raffensperger and Kemp certified the results and signed the paperwork to officially give the state’s 16 electoral votes to Biden.
November 14
Trump attacks[11] Kemp and encourages[12] election officials to “call off” the statewide audit after they say it will likely confirm Biden’s victory.
November 15
Trump falsely claims[13] Kemp is allowing “fraudulent” ballots to be counted.
November 16
November 17
Election management
November 18
November 19
Election management
Legal developments
Trump urges[20] Kemp to “get tough” and improperly reject[21] mail-in ballots – enough to “flip” the statewide results.
November 20
Election management
Trump criticizes[23] Raffensperger and Kemp on Twitter.
Phase III
Ramped up rhetoric
Trump’s options to overturn the election dwindled. He ramped up the vitriol and repeatedly attacked Kemp and Raffensperger. Election officials said they received death threats from angry Trump supporters. Trump publicly and privately pressured Kemp to use the state Legislature to overturn Biden’s win. Trump also started attacking Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Republican, after Duncan said there was no widespread fraud in the election.
November 21
Election management
November 22
Election management
November 25
Legal developments
Former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell files a new lawsuit[26] in Georgia alleging a massive anti-Trump conspiracy involving rigged voting machines.
November 27
Trump falsely claims[28] he “won” Georgia and says the results will “hopefully” be overturned.
Election management
December 1
Election management
December 3
The Georgia state Senate holds a hearing[33] about election integrity in which Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani spreads conspiracy theories[34] about widespread irregularities and fraud in the state. Trump’s legal team urges lawmakers to ignore the statewide results and appoint a slate of pro-Trump electors.
December 5
Calls to Georgia officials
Legal developments
December 6
Election management
Kemp and Duncan publicly reject calls for a special legislative session to appoint pro-Trump electors.
December 7
Election management
Raffensperger re-certifies the results[42] after the statewide machine recount is completed. The recount affirms that Biden beat Trump by just 11,779 votes out of nearly 5 million cast ballots.
Legal developments
Phase IV
Legal gambits
After failing to convince top officials to overturn the results, Trump tried a roundabout strategy by going to the Supreme Court and suing to invalidate millions of votes in Georgia and three other states he lost. This gambit was quickly rejected by the Supreme Court, and members of the Electoral College met in Atlanta to formalize Biden’s win.
December 8
Trump tweets again[47] about Kemp, Duncan and Raffensperger.
Legal developments
Trump allies file a lawsuit[48] at the Supreme Court, known as Texas v. Pennsylvania, seeking to throw out millions of votes from Georgia and other battleground states that Biden carried. Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, a Republican, says the lawsuit is “constitutionally, legally and factually wrong,” in a statement from his office.
Calls to Georgia officials
Trump privately calls[49] Carr and warns him against rallying other Republican officials to oppose the lawsuit. The call reportedly[50] lasts about 15 minutes and Trump was upset that Carr criticized the lawsuit.
December 10
Legal developments
Carr files a response[51] with the Supreme Court urging the justices to reject the Trump-backed lawsuit.
December 11
Trump publicly presses[52] Kemp, Duncan and Raffensperger to “move quickly” on his request for additional signature verification for mail-in ballots, which he says would overturn Biden’s victory.
Legal developments
December 13
Election management
Members of the Electoral College meet in Atlanta[56] and formally award Georgia’s 16 electoral votes to Biden.
Phase V
Desperate measures
In shocking phone calls, Trump privately pressured Raffensperger and another official to “recalculate” the numbers and “find” enough votes to let him win. Frustrated by the lack of fraud investigations, Trump ousted the US attorney in Atlanta. On the day Congress was set to certify the Electoral College results, Trump held an incendiary rally and incited a mob of supporters to attack the Capitol, temporarily delaying the process. After the insurrection was quashed later that night, the electoral votes were counted and Biden officially became President-elect.
December 18
December 21
December 23
Calls to Georgia officials
In a phone call to the Georgia secretary of state’s office, Trump urged their top investigator[59], Frances Watson, to find fraud in the 2020 presidential election, telling her that she would be “praised” for overturning the results. The six-minute call was recorded by Watson[60] while she was looking into allegations of irregularities with signature-matching in Cobb County, in the Atlanta metropolitan area. (Later audits found no fraudulent ballots in the county.)
“But if you go back two years, and if you can get to Fulton, you are going to find things that are going to be unbelievable… The dishonesty that we’ve heard from. But Fulton is the mother lode.”
December 28
Legal developments
A Trump loyalist inside the Justice Department, Jeffrey Clark, reportedly drafted a letter[62] urging top Georgia officials to convene the state legislature for a special session to evaluate supposed “irregularities’ in the 2020 election. The letter said, falsely, that Justice Department had identified “significant concerns that may have impacted of the outcome of the election in multiple States, including the State of Georgia.” Trump considered installing Clark as acting attorney general but decided against it after senior Justice Department officials threatened to resign[63]. Clark’s draft letter was never sent.
December 29
Election management
December 30
January 2
Calls to Georgia officials
In an hour-long private phone call, Trump pressures[70] Raffensperger to “find” the exact number of votes needed to overturn Biden’s victory. Trump also suggests to Raffensperger that he should publicly announce that he “recalculated” the election results. Raffensperger tells Trump that the election results were accurate. During the call, Trump also criticizes the US attorney in Atlanta, Byung Pak, calling him a “Never Trumper” without any evidence. CNN later reported[71] that the call occurred after 18 previous attempts by the White House to call Raffensperger’s office. CNN obtained the audio below from a source who was on the call[72] and had direct knowledge of the conversation. Read the full transcript here[73].
“So look. All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have because we won the state.”
January 3
Trump tweets[74] about the call, saying Raffensperger was “unwilling, or unable” to answer questions about alleged fraud in Georgia. In response, Raffensperger says[75] Trump’s claims are “not true” and that “the truth will come out.” Later, The Washington Post publishes[76] the full recording of the phone call.
January 4
On the eve of Georgia’s special Senate election, Trump holds a rally[77] in Dalton, Georgia, where he pledges to campaign against Kemp and Raffensperger if they run for reelection in 2022. He also falsely claims the election was “rigged” against him.
Legal developments
Pak unexpectedly resigns[78] from his post. Before his resignation, a top Justice Department official told Pak that Trump was upset that he didn’t do more to investigate allegations of voter fraud, according to The New York Times[79]. The Trump White House pushed Pak to resign, according to The Wall Street Journal[80].
January 5
Legal developments
January 6
Trump mentions “Georgia” 20 times at a rally near the White House[82]. He cites conspiracy theories about alleged irregularities and says election officials “should find those votes” needed to overturn Biden’s victory. He falsely claims Raffensperger and Kemp are “corrupt” and “defrauded us out of a win.”
During the speech, Trump urges the crowd to “fight like hell” and march to the US Capitol to pressure Vice President Mike Pence and lawmakers to block the Electoral College proceedings. Trump supporters storm[83] the Capitol and violently disrupt[84] the formal proceedings to certify Biden’s victory.
Election management
References
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This story was first posted on: https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2021/08/politics/trump-georgia-2020-election/