WASHINGTON – As President-elect Joe Biden prepares to name his first slate of Cabinet appointees, more Republicans are starting to push for the transition to officially begin and calling on their conservative colleagues to openly acknowledge his victory.
Chris Christie, the Republican former governor of New Jersey, called the conduct of President Donald Trump's legal team, which has indulged in a web of conspiracy theories about voter fraud, "a national embarrassment," given the blistering dismissals of their lawsuits in court and their failure to produce evidence of widespread improprieties.
"They allege fraud outside the courtroom, but when they go inside the courtroom, they don't plead fraud and they don't argue fraud," Christie, a longtime Trump ally, said on ABC's "This Week" on Sunday. "Elections have consequences, and we cannot continue to act as if something happened here that didn't happen."
The Trump campaign on Sunday disavowed Sidney Powell, one of the lawyers who had floated many of those baseless claims, even though she had appeared at a news conference alongside Trump lawyers and campaign officials and been embraced by allies.
Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., on Saturday congratulated Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on their victory, saying that the president had "exhausted all plausible legal options to challenge" the state's result after a federal judge dismissed a Trump campaign lawsuit challenging the election outcome there.
Many of the strongest denunciations of the president's refusal to concede have come from Republicans like Christie and Toomey, who are no longer in office or have announced their retirement. But as Trump has continued to deny the results of the election in an unflinching assault on the democratic process, a few more sitting lawmakers have tiptoed up to join them in subtly urging the president to at least begin the transition process.
Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the No. 3 Republican in the House, on Friday became the most senior Republican to urge Trump in a statement to begin "respecting the sanctity of our electoral process" should the nation's courts continue to reject his legal team's challenges to the outcome.
Still, most Republican lawmakers have not challenged Trump, in part because they fear that a public acknowledgment of Biden's victory could undercut support from their conservative base before two critical Senate runoff elections in Georgia in January.