Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Trump Attorney Dragged After Saying Biden Should Have To Prove He Won 'Legally And Legitimately'

Trump Attorney Dragged After Saying Biden Should Have To Prove He Won 'Legally And Legitimately'
Fox News; Joe Raedle/Getty Images

It's been nearly a week since President-elect Joe Biden won the crucial swing state of Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes, bringing him above the 270 required to win the White House.

Breaking with centuries of tradition, President Donald Trump is refusing to concede and allow a transition of power to get underway.


Trump's team is following his lead, filing numerous lawsuits across multiple states falsely alleging voter fraud and other improprieties.

Meanwhile, media personalities on his campaign are amplifying the President's lies that widespread voting fraud tipped the election to Biden.

Senior Legal Advisor for the Trump campaign, Jenna Ellis, is continuing the Trump campaign's quixotic efforts to unconstitutionally secure a second term for their dear leader.

On Thursday, Ellis asked why Biden was "afraid" to prove that he won the election "legally and legitimately."

Throughout Trump's numerous scandals, the term "burden of proof" has frequently been deployed from his defenders. It means that plaintiffs accusing a defendant of a crime are burdened with proving beyond a reasonable doubt that said crime was committed.

During the President's impeachment trial in the Senate earlier this year, the President's lawyers argued that the House impeachment managers had to prove that Trump improperly withheld congressionally approved aid from Ukraine for political benefit.

In the White House's own impeachment memorandum, Trump's defense team wrote:

"Senators should convict on articles of impeachment against a President only if they find that the House Managers have carried their burden of proving that the President committed an impeachable offense beyond a reasonable doubt."

Ellis herself wrote of the impeachment proceedings:

"[I]t's the Democrats' burden to prove their case. Much of the media spin over the past months since the impeachment inquiry has begun focused on how well the president would "defend himself." Although his team did an excellent job defending him, he doesn't actually have to."

The burden of proof is a basic legal standard, but apparently—according to Ellis—this standard argued by Trump's defenders doesn't apply to Biden.

People saw right through the absurdity of the argument.






People soon demanded that Ellis "prove" things of her own.



The Trump campaign has yet to prove the allegations of widespread voter fraud they're claiming.

More from People/donald-trump

Dave Davies (left) and Moby (right) are at the center of a renewed debate over Lola and its cultural legacy.
John Lamparski/Getty Images; Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

Kinks Guitarist Dave Davies Vehemently Shuts Down Moby's Accusations That 'Lola' Is 'Transphobic'

A decades-old rock classic is back under scrutiny, but Dave Davies isn’t letting Moby’s critique of "Lola" go unanswered. In a Guardian “Honest Playlist” Q&A, Moby singled out the track as one he “can no longer listen to,” arguing that its lyrics haven’t aged well.

The “South Side” singer didn’t hold back in his critique:

Keep ReadingShow less
Seven dogs walking home to Changchun, Jilin province, China
@Yoda4ever/X

Corgi Hailed As Canine Hero After Leading Six Other Stolen Dogs 17km Home Across Highways And Fields

Seven dogs who were stolen from their village in Changchun, Jilin, in China, made a brave escape and returned home on a journey that would make Shadow, Sassy, and Chance from Homeward Bound proud.

The seven canine companions are known around their community for wandering around and playing together, until one day the seven of them were stolen and put on a truck, likely to be taken to the black market.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
CNN

Trump Just Compared His Idea To Put ICE Agents In Airports To The Invention Of The Paper Clip—And, What?

Speaking to reporters about whose idea it was to deploy ICE agents to U.S. airports amid a partial government shutdown that has caused exceptionally long delays at TSA lines nationwide, President Donald Trump weirded people out when he compared the decision to the invention of the paper clip.

Samuel B. Fay patented the first bent-wire paper clip in 1867—about 159 years ago. The now-familiar “Gem” paper clip design commonly sold in office supply stores appeared around 1892, roughly 134 years ago, and was never patented in the United States.

Keep ReadingShow less
Madonna (right) and Julia Garner revisit the singer’s iconic Venice gondola scene from "Like a Virgin."
Madonna/YouTube; @madonna/Instagram

Madonna And Julia Garner Just Recreated Her Iconic 'Like A Virgin' Gondola Ride In Venice—And Fans Are Obsessed

Madonna is revisiting one of the most iconic moments of her career, and this time, she’s not doing it alone. While in Venice filming The Studio season two, the pop legend teamed up with Julia Garner to recreate her unforgettable gondola ride from the Like a Virgin music video, instantly sending fans into a frenzy.

The iconic 1984 global hit, directed by Mary Lambert, was partially filmed on location in Venice.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Alex Wong/Getty Images

A Trump Tweet From 2016 Is Going Viral For Perfectly Predicting What's Happening Right Now

There's always a tweet, and now one of President Donald Trump's old tweets has resurfaced and gone viral as Trump announced he would deploy ICE agents to U.S. airports amid a partial government shutdown that has caused exceptionally long delays at TSA lines nationwide.

ICE agents are still getting paid during the shutdown, unlike TSA agents, who are currently working unpaid and struggling amid the affordability crisis. News outlets have confirmed ICE agents have been deployed in airports that serve Democratic strongholds, particularly John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia Airports (New York), O'Hare International Airport (Chicago), and others.

Keep ReadingShow less