This segment, promoted by the president of the United States, features discussion of a scenario in which the Pennsylvania state legislature sends a dueling slate of Trump electors to the Electoral College.
The president tweets video of the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee telling him not to concede because "these computers in Michigan do not pass the smell test," seems like a ref to the Hammer and Scorecard conspiracy theory.
The key question this morning is whether Republican state legislators in PA, MI, GA, AZ, etc would be willing to resist a sustained Trump/Fox push to ignore the election results and submit a dueling elector slate, triggering a constitutional crisis.
That’s already been floated by Mark Levin and Sean Hannity. As Fox works itself into a frenzy over bogus election fraud claims, those calls are likely to get louder.
The best-case, non-alarmist scenario is that the right-wing media machine will now ensure that a majority of Republicans permanently refuse to accept the results of this election.
There are many worse cases, of course. But that’s the floor at this point.
Trump likely also saw Steve Scalise, the number 2 House Republican, pushing the same garbage about the election results on Fox, saying "some very questionable things happened" in key states.
Fox's analysis is that Joe Biden succeeded by taking the virus seriously, building his margin in the suburbs, and because the GOP didn't push mail-in voting.
In other words, the network's advice led Donald Trump to ruin.
Trump didn't take the virus seriously because he was listening to Fox.
His suburban strategy was built around fearmongering the Floyd protests because he was listening to Fox.
He told his supporters that mail-in ballots were a source of fraud because he was listening to Fox.
The actual impact of Trump taking Fox's advice, particularly wrt the coronavirus, proved devastating for the country.
There's a Starbucks in Trump's DC hotel and one in his NYC skyscraper.
There's no policy agenda attached to what Carlson is saying, he's not explaining what actual concrete steps should be taken to stop corporate consolidation, because his economic populism is a culture war grift.