Protesters demand all votes be counted as lawsuit draws Team Trump to Pennsylvania
Trump campaign launching lawsuit to temporarily halt vote counting in the state
The demonstratorscame to the downtown intersection in front of Philadelphia's convention centre preparedto give Eric Trump, RudyGiuliani and others on the president's campaign team anearful about democracy and the importance of counting all votes.
"They're not welcome here," said Sula Kritikos, a lawyer. "All I know is my vote has not been counted. And I'm here to let people know my vote has not been counted."
But Team Trump never showed up at their planned news conference at the intersection.Instead, they held it in front ofAtlantic Aviation near the Philadelphia International Airport, away from the protesters.
They announcedthe launching of a lawsuit to addressthe "massive cheating" they allege is going on in the statewith the tallying of the votes.
"It's a shame that we have to do that," said Eric Trump, son of U.S. President Donald Trump. "It's the last thing that we wanted to do. It's the last thing my father wanted to do, but this is rampant corruption, and it can't happen."
There have actually been no reports of fraud or any other type of ballot concerns out of Pennsylvania. The state had more than 3.1 million mail-in ballots, which take time to count, and an order allows them to be counted up until Friday if they are postmarked on or before Nov. 3.
WATCH | Trump advisers on efforts to halt vote counting In Philadelphia and oversee tally:
Trump's lead in Pa. narrows
Democraticpresidential candidate Joe Biden edged closer to victory on Wednesday, with wins in Michigan and Wisconsin bringing his electoral vote totalto253 compared to Trump's214. A candidate needs 270 electoral college votes to win the presidency.
Pennsylvania, one of the surprise Rust Belt states that went to Trump in his 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton, holds 20 electoral votes. Those would be enough to earn Biden the White House. Trump was leading in the state, but by Thursday night, that lead had shrunkto 0.4 percentage points as more voteswere counted.
WATCH | Protesters converge on Pennsylvania as counting continues:
'Temporarily halt counting'
But Justin Clark, Trump's deputy campaign manager, said in a statement on Wednesday that the campaign is "suing to stop Democrat election officials from hiding the ballot counting and processing from ... Republican poll observers."
He said the campaign wants "to temporarily halt counting until there is meaningful transparency and Republicans can ensure all counting is done above board and by the law."
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said in a news conference the state isgoing to fight "every single attempt to disenfranchise voters."
"These attempts to subvert the democratic process are simply disgraceful," he said.
WATCH | Pennsylvania secretary of state outlines the latest on vote-counting process:
Team Trump'spresence in Philadelphia, along with thedozens of protesters ready to shout them down, and the dozens of police officers standing by,highlighted the elevated tensions in the city of brotherly love over the counting of votes.
"Just making sure all votes are counted, all legitimate votes are counted," said Tom McCarthy, one of the protesters who had come downtown to protest Team Trump.
"The move to stop the counting of votes, particularly during a pandemic, seems like a move to steal the election."
'He knows what ballots do'
Other, more vocal social activists also showed up at the intersection, many reciting what they consider to beTrump's list of crimes.
"He wants to shut down this election ... he knows what ballots do," said Samantha Rise.
A few Trump supporters also swung by, and while the rhetoric heated up at times between theanti-Trump and pro-Trump sides, under the watchful eyes of dozens of police officers, it never escalated beyond words.
Steve Faust, who works near the intersection,came by to see what the commotion was about. ABiden supporter, Faustsaidhe was shockedat how well Trump had performed in the state.
"I just can't believeit's as close as it is," he said. "It's so disappointing to know that this many peoplethink things are just peachy keenand just [willing] to vote him in again. Ijust don't understand it."
WATCH | Protests over vote count spread to several cities:
Thescene unfolded under the backdrop of the city'sconvention centre, where election workers were still tabulating the votes. In fact, the Philadelphia city commissioners were live streaming that work.
Protesters and journalists eventually dispersed as word got out that the news conference wouldn't be happening.
Not long after, however, a couple hundredmore people gathered in front of city hall for a similar protest, many holding banners that read, "Count every vote" and 'Black votes matter."
WATCH | Where the vote countstands Thursday:
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With files from The Associated Press