Overview: Trump targets Michigan lawmakers to subvert election results
Running out of legal options to override an election loss, Trump is resorting to raw political pressure -- using the powers and prestige of the presidency to target battleground states and try to overturn the results of the election.
In an extraordinary last-ditch gambit, Trump has invited Republican members of the Michigan Legislature to the White House Friday, as he attempts to thwart the electoral process in a state Biden won by more than 150,000 votes.
The aim appears to be for Trump to influence the lawmakers ahead of the state's board of canvassers meeting on Monday so they would try to override the certification of the state’s vote -- setting up the potential for the GOP-controlled legislature to choose its own slate of pro-Trump electors to vote for the president at the Electoral College's December meeting.

The prospect of the Michigan legislature intervening in a process that it is not involved in by state law is not one that has been publicly embraced in Lansing. And on Capitol Hill, at least one Republican is slamming Trump’s decision.
Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who voted to remove Trump from office during his impeachment trial, eviscerated the White House invitation, saying, “It is difficult to imagine a worse, more undemocratic action by a sitting American President.”
Trump is putting similar pressure on Georgia's GOP Gov. Brian Kemp -- who, following a hand-count audit affirming Biden as the winner, now must sign the state’s vote certification by Friday at 5 p.m. -- calling on him a tweet to "get tough." Trump could request a recount in the state, but he still trails Biden by just over 12,000 votes.

The president may try to flip Arizona as well -- where the state's GOP governor has said he wait until the legal challenges play out -- but with a string of, so far, unsuccessful legal challenges to the results from and unsubstantiated claims of fraud from the Trump campaign and its allies, there are no viable pathways left for the president.
Trump, who typically relishes in the spotlight, has largely hunkered inside the White House since the election, but he may break his silence on Biden’s transition with a public appearance at 2:30 p.m. to talk prescription drug prices.
Biden, meanwhile, is pressing forward with what he can while the Trump administration continues to stonewall his ascertainment. He’s meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in Wilmington, Delaware, Friday where they’re expected to address Trump and the prospects for passing another COVID-19 relief bill that Biden wants.

It all comes as Senior House Democrats seek to have Emily Murphy, the embattled administrator of the General Services Administration, explain why she's refused to formally acknowledge Biden apparent victory over Trump -- and are demanding a briefing from her by Monday.






