President TrumpDonald Trump: The post office will bear the name of Pearl Harbor’s oldest veterans as federal agents seek residence in Antioch in connection with the Nashville explosion on Sunday show preview: COVID-19 relief awaits signing of Trump; the government continues to deploy MORE on Sunday he announced his plans to hold a rally in Georgia to support Republican candidates the day before the two state qualifiers in the Senate.
The president made a tweet on Sunday that he will head to Georgia on Monday, January 4 to organize a rally with Sens support. Kelly LoefflerKelly LoefflerBiden works with Senate Republicans: “I’ll never embarrass them publicly” The Republican Party tries to avoid Trump’s messy fight for Ossoff Electoral College, Warnock every rake in more than 0 million (R-Ga.) I David Perdue
David PerdueBiden works with Senate Republicans: “I’ll never embarrass them publicly” Ossoff, Warnock every rake of more than 0 million judges Judge launches GOP lawsuit to close Georgia polls after business hours (R-Ga.) Before the runoffs that will determine which party controls the U.S. Senate.
“On behalf of two GREAT senators, @sendavidperdue & @KLoeffler, I will be going to Georgia on Monday night, January 4, to have a great and wonderful RALLY, “Trump posted.” So important to our country that they win! “
On behalf of two GREAT senators, @sendavidperdue & @KLoeffler, I will be going to Georgia on Monday night, January 4th, to have a great and wonderful RALLY. So important to our country that they win!
– Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 27, 2020
Loeffler and Perdue face Democratic candidates, the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, respectively, in the Jan. 5 qualifiers. Both races in the Senate were sent to the second round after neither candidate in either election won a majority of votes.
If Democratic candidates win both seats, the upper house will be split between 50 and 50, with the vice president elected Kamala HarrisKamala Harris’s historic news of 2020 and what to see during the new year Democrats will face special elections in the House. Biden and Harris publish Christmas greetings, call for continued precautions for COVID-19 MORE being the tiebreaker vote. If either Republican senator regains his seat, the Republican Party will retain control of the Senate.
Trump campaigned for the two Republican senators last month and claimed during a speech that the election had been “called” against him. Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard Pence Global COVID-19 cases exceed 80 million Note: Could Pence run and win in 2024? The Saudi Crown Prince receives his first dose of COVID-19 MORE vaccine he has also spent time in Georgia gathering support for the two Republicans.
Meanwhile, the president has refused to cede the president-elect Joe BidenJoe Biden: Biden councilor Ricchetti’s brother, hired as a lobbyist on Amazon, shows preview: COVID-19 replacement awaits Trump’s signing; the government continues to deploy vaccines Global cases of COVID-19 exceed 80 million MORE after Biden’s electoral victory, promote claims of widespread electoral fraud without presenting judicial evidence.
Democrats hope they can return to the blue Senate seats on Jan. 5 after Biden became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Peach State since 1992.
Biden has campaigned for Democratic candidates, encouraging Georgia voters to put Warnock and Ossoff in office to give him a Senate majority, in addition to the meager majority in the House for Democrats.