“I did my job,” he said.
Mr. Biden said courts rejected “dozens and dozens” of legal challenges filed by Mr. Trump and his team and that recounts in Georgia and Wisconsin affirmed Mr. Biden’s win in those battleground states.
The president-elect also slammed a Texas lawsuit that sought to invalidate the election results in Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, saying it represented “a position so extreme we’ve never seen it before.”
Mr. Trump, more than a dozen state attorneys general, and more than half of the Republicans in the U.S. House had supported the lawsuit, which was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court.
After Electoral College Votes, More Republicans Warily Accept Trump s Loss
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A handful of GOP lawmakers acknowledge Trump s loss
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President Trump still shows no sign he will concede.
President Trump has suffered a string of losses in his attempt to reverse his defeat.Credit.Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times
Dec. 14, 2020
Despite recently suffering the most consequential in a string of defeats in his quest to subvert the results of November’s election, President Trump continued to insist over the weekend that his plans to challenge his loss were “not over.”
“It’s not over. We keep going,” Mr. Trump said in an interview with Fox News that aired on Sunday and was taped on Saturday at the Army-Navy football game. “And we’re going to continue to go forward.”
No Labels, Planning Centrist Push in New Congress, Taps Larry Hogan
The bipartisan organization has selected the Maryland governor, a Republican, as a leader, ramping up its campaign to influence the new Congress.
Gov. Larry Hogan has become increasingly involved with the organization in recent months.Credit.Andrew Mangum for The New York Times
Dec. 15, 2020
WASHINGTON The bipartisan political organization No Labels named Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland, a Republican, as its new national co-chairman on Tuesday as it pushed lawmakers to embrace centrist policies in a new Congress.
Mr. Hogan, who is trying to play a larger role in national politics as his second term as governor of a solidly Democratic state draws to an end in 2022, joins former Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, Democrat of Connecticut, in leading the organization, which supports the 50-member House Problem Solvers Caucus and a smaller group of eight centrist senators.