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Now, Trump doubts the election result

Donald Trump is annoyed by the discussion about a possible recount of votes. In response, he attacks Hillary Clinton - and speculates about millions of "illegal voters". What drives him?

For the Thanksgiving weekend, Donald Trump had a special message to all the citizens of the USA. "The time has come to restore confidence among the citizens, for when America is united, there is a need for peace," he said, "in a short video, that his country will be united after the violent electoral campaign There is nothing unattainable for us. "

Trump speaks of disagreements at election.
Trump speaks of disagreements at election.
These were unfamiliarly friendly sentences - but they did not last long: Apparently severely annoyed by the discussion about a possible recounting of the votes in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania the billionaire ended on the weekend again its conciliatory pitch.

Proofs? What

On Twitter, he worked on Hillary Clinton, and on Sunday afternoon, he let himself be asserted that "millions of people" had "illegally elected". If these were withdrawn, according to Trump's thesis, he would have won the majority of the votes cast, along with the electorate, which is the category in which the democrat has a clear lead.

Evidence for the allegedly so many "illegal voters"? It was not.

Many things have been experienced this year, but the fact that an elected President himself cast doubt on the result that made him the victor is already a special process.

On the way to a banana republic

Trump had a lot to do: he had to prepare the deeply divided country for government change, he had to fill his cabinet and work out the great lines of his presidency. Instead, he spreads a conspiracy theory and fires a debate about how much to trust the system. Paul Krugman, the great American economist, already sees his country on his way to a "banana republic".

On the evening of the Sunday, several possible explanations for trumps took place. The one speculated that the elector would wipe out all those who still can not accept his victory. Others said that Trump could not keep an eye on the pending re-enumerations. Others believed that he wanted to distract himself from the discussion about his conflicts of interest, or even to give a precautionary indication that voting under him could become even more difficult than anyway.

Whichever way you choose, it's really soothing. Trump soon sits in the Oval Office, and one wonders how he will actually react when there is a real crisis in his country.

Trump gives free rein to his excitement

How much the discussion about a recount of the voices in a few states occupied him, already appeared, as Trump from its luxury estate Mar-a-Lago in Florida around seven after clock on Sunday morning a whole series of Tweets settled. He recalled, among other things, that Clinton publicly declared her defeat the morning after the election night.

"We have to accept the results and look to the future. Donald Trump will be our president," Donald Trump twittered the appropriate quotations from the Democrat. The recalculation cost only money and time, criticized the billionaire: "For the same result, sad."

Trumps excitement is also astonishing in that he is actually in a quite comfortable position. The re-enumeration of Wisconsin by the Green Presidential Candidate Jill Stein is not a really promising maneuver.

Extremely unlikely

Trumps ahead of them is pretty tight with around 10,000 votes, but even if the "recount" surpasses Clinton as a winner, the Democrat would have to turn the result in Michigan and Pennsylvania, but still to move into the White House.

Whether it is recounted at all, is also open to the head of Trump in Pennsylvania: he leads with 70,000 votes, a reversal of the election result is extremely unlikely. And so it would probably only be really uncomfortable for him if the investigations showed specific manipulations on the electoral computers. But there are so far no signs.

Not even in Clinton's team is expected that the result will change.

Obama does not hold on to it

In their team, one knows how controversial Steins maneuvers is, also in the own ranks: Just in the camp of President Barack Obama, which urges on a uncomplicated and quiet change of power, one holds nothing.

Clinton's lawyers want to leave the initiative to the green candidate, but they have emphasized the need to support the recount - also to remove any doubts as to the legitimacy of the result. This was clearly reason enough to put Trump out of the picture. The "badly defeated and demoralized" Democrats would now join the Green Party, he cursed.

Instead of stepping stone's plan and letting the Democrats quarrel, Trump now risks with his interference that even those who do not consider the recount could heat up for them. If the President himself says that things have not happened on the right side, it is difficult to argue against a review.

Jill Stein could benefit from this. She is still collecting money for her trials. The next deadline to file an appeal against the result will expire this Monday - in Pennsylvania.

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