“Absolutely”: it’s time for Trump to give in, says Barack Obama

It’s time for U. S. President Donald Trump to turn in to President-elect Joe Biden, because there is no situation that opposes the outcome of the election, said his predecessor, Barack Obama.

Trump, who refuses to give in, has 232 votes at the Electoral College, defied the electoral effects in the states, adding Pennsylvania, Nevada, Michigan, Georgia and Arizona, and called for a recount in Wisconsin.

In all of those states, he alleged that there was electoral fraud and electoral abuse.

Biden has 306 of the 538 electoral school votes, up from half the 270 race.

“Absolutely,” Obama told CBNS News ’60 Minutes’ in an interview that aired Sunday when asked if he thought it was time for Trump to award.

“Well, I mean, I think it’s time you probably granted, the day after the election, or not later than two days after the election. When you look at the numbers objectively, Joe Biden will have easily won. There is no situation in which any of those states would turn around, and in fact not enough to oppose the outcome of the election,” Obama said.

More than courtesy of a concession, Trump’s White House refuses to deliver the same budget and amenities for the incoming administration. President-elect Biden does not get secret national security reports as Trump did when he was president-elect, Obama has argued.

Claiming that a president is an official, Barack Obama said they were occupants of the office, through design.

“And when the time is up, it is your duty to put the country first and think beyond your own ego, your own interests and your own disappointments. My recommendation to President Trump is, if necessary at this defeated level of the game that we as someone who gave priority to the country, it is time for you to do the same, “he said.

In response to a question, Barack Obama said American adversaries have noticed that the country is weakening, only as a result of this election, but in recent years.

“We have these divisions within the political framework that are convinced that they can exploit. There’s an old adage that means partisan politics prevents the water’s edge, isn’t there?That when it comes to our foreign policy, it’s America. America, not the divided states of America,” said Barack Obama, whose most recent e-book, ‘The Promised Land’, will come to market later this week.

<< We went through a presidency that ignored a total set of fundamental institutional norms, the expectations we had for a president that had been observed through Republicans and Democrats before, and perhaps most importantly, and most disconcertingly, what we have noticed is what other people call the breakdown of the facts, anything that accelerated through outgoing President Trump, the feeling that not only do we not have to say the fact, but that the fact doesn't even matter," he said.

When asked about Trump’s accusations of widespread voter fraud, Obama said the president doesn’t like to lose and never admits the loss.

“I’m more concerned about the fact that other Republican leaders, who obviously know better, agree with this, fill it this way. This is a step in the delegitimation not only of Joe Biden’s new administration, but also of democracy at large. harmful path,” he says.

“We would never settle for our own children behaving this way if they lost, would we?I mean, if my daughters, in some kind of competition, pouge and then accuse the other aspect of cheating when they lose when there’s no evidence that I think there’s been this feeling in recent years that literally everything is allowed and justified to get power,” he said.

And it’s not exclusive to Ettas-Unis. There are strong men and dictators in the world who think that “I can do anything to stay in power. I can kill people. ” I can put them in jail. I can make false choices. I can eliminate ‘journalists’. But that’s not what we’re meant to be, and one of the signs that I think Joe Biden sends to the world is that ”No, the values we preach and believe in, and subscribed to — we still believe,’ the former president said.

Barack Obama sought out the new president to set a new tone.

“This won’t solve all the impasses in Washington. I think we’ll have to work with the media and generation corporations to locate tactics to better inform the public about the ups and conditions that ensure we can separate facts from fiction. “I think we want to paint locally,” he said.

Noting that there is a set of traditions the United States has followed in the nonviolent power movement, Barack Obama said the outgoing president congratulated the new president, the government, and the agencies for cooperating with the arrival of the new government.

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“The president-elect is invited to the Oval Office and then, on opening day, the president invites the president-elect to the White House and a small reception. And then he moves to the opening site, and the president who oversteer sits there and is a component of the audience while the new president is sworn in,” he said.

“And at this point, the outgoing president is a citizen like everyone else and owes the new president the opportunity to do his thing on behalf of the American people. We’ll have to see if Donald Trump does the same. That’s not yours. “But you know that hope is eternal. There’s a promised land somewhere,” Obama said.

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