Brazil’s Bolsonaro Says Aware of Fraud in US Presidential Election

Isabel van Brugen
By Isabel van Brugen
November 30, 20202020 Election
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Brazil’s Bolsonaro Says Aware of Fraud in US Presidential Election
President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro talks to the press after voting during the municipal elections at Vila Militar in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Nov. 29, 2020. (Luis Alvarenga/Getty Images)

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said on Nov. 29 that he is aware of “a lot of fraud” in the U.S. presidential election, and that he will hold off declaring the victor amid contested election results.

“I have my sources of information that there really was a lot of fraud there,” Bolsonaro told reporters while casting a ballot in municipal races. “Nobody talks about that. If it was enough to define [victory] for one or the other, I don’t know.”

“I am holding back a little more,” the conservative Brazilian leader added when asked if he would recognize Biden as president-elect.

He also expressed doubts about Brazil’s current electronic voting system, which he has suggested is vulnerable to fraud. He has urged the country to return to a paper ballot system for the 2022 presidential election.

Trump this year pushed homeland security to encourage states to use paper ballots, as part of efforts to secure the election.

“You need to have a more reliable way to vote and the count has to be public,” Bolsonaro continued.

“You cannot have half a dozen people count the vote nationwide,” he said of measures currently in place for consolidating the ballots.

A number of news outlets have declared Biden the winner of the 2020 presidential election. The Epoch Times won’t declare a winner until all results are certified and any legal challenges are resolved.

While media outlets can make their own projections as to the winner of the election, state electors and the Electoral College are the bodies that are officially tasked with declaring a presidential winner. Each state has different deadlines for when officials must certify their election results, and the Electoral College votes on Dec. 14. The Joint Session of Congress will then read the votes on Jan. 6, 2021.

Trump’s campaign and Republicans have filed a flurry of lawsuits in battleground states citing evidence of voter fraud, with appeals in some cases expected to escalate to the Supreme Court.

The president vowed to prove that he won the 2020 presidential election after the General Services Administration (GSA) indicated in a letter that it had made some transition resources (pdf) available for Biden.

GSA Administrator Emily Murphy in her letter explicitly stated that the presidency has not been decided, and that the winner of the presidential election is still to be determined by the electoral process as detailed in the Constitution.

Murphy also added that she was threatened to announce the start of the transition process prematurely before independently deciding to issue the letter on Nov. 23.

“Our case STRONGLY continues, we will keep up the good fight, and I believe we will prevail!” Trump wrote in a Twitter post last week.

Mimi Nguyen Ly and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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