WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has denied a media report that claimed that he intended to declare victory on election night if projections showed that he was leading in the race to the White House.
Trump’s remarks came a few hours after news website Axios reported on Sunday that the President has privately discussed plans to declare victory on Tuesday night even though it might take a few days for all mail-in ballots to be counted in some states, reports Xinhua news agency.
Speaking to reporters after arriving in Charlotte, North Carolina, Trump said that was a “false report,” while noting that he thinks “it’s a terrible thing when ballots can be collected after an election”.
On October 29, the Supreme Court ruled that Pennsylvania election officials can accept absentee ballots arriving three days after election day, handing Democrats a victory in a legal fight, and prompting criticism from Trump.
The President added he thought it was “terrible when we can’t know the results of an election the night of the election in a modern-day age of computers”.
As some states do not allow processing mail-in ballots until Election Day (November 3), such as key swing state Pennsylvania, analysts have warned that the winner of the presidential election may still be unknown when polling is over, and the final results could be delayed for days.
A record number of voters are casting their ballots by mail in this election due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
According to the US Election Project, more than 93 million Americans had already voted as of Sunday night, with over 59 million mail ballots.
Trump has repeatedly denounced mail-in ballots, claiming without evidence that a wider use of mail-in ballots could lead to massive voter fraud.
According to a poll of likely voters conducted by the New York Times and Siena College released on Sunday, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden holds an advantage over Trump in the key swing states of Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Florida and Arizona.
In large swing state Florida, Biden is ahead of Trump by 3 points, 47 per cent to 44 per cent, but the lead is within the margin of error (3.2 percentage points), the poll showed.
In Pennsylvania, Biden’s home state, the Democratic challenger is leading by six points, 49 per cent to 43 per cent, with a 2.4-percentage-point margin of error, according to the poll.
Trump defeated former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in all of the four states in 2016, winning Wisconsin and Pennsylvania by less than 1 percentage point.
Flipping any of these states would boost Biden’s chance of winning the tight election race.