US President-elect calls Clinton’s effort to force recount in three states as ‘sad’, adding ‘nothing will change’.
Hillary Clinton’s decision to join an effort to force recounts of votes from the November 8 election in up to three crucial states has been labelled “sad” by US President-elect Donald Trump who added “nothing will change”.
In a Twitter post early on Sunday, Trump said Clinton, his Democrat rival, had already “conceded the election when she called” him prior to his victory speech in the early morning of November 9.
“So much time and money will be spent – same result! Sad,” Trump tweeted, posting part of Clinton’s speech telling her supporters to accept that “Donald Trump is going to be our president”.
READ MORE: Hillary Clinton makes concession speech in New York
Kellyanne Conway, a senior Trump adviser, also called Clinton’s decision to join a recount effort “incredible”.
She told CNN that the president-elect has been “incredibly gracious and magnanimous” to Clinton, yet she is joining an effort to try to “somehow undo the 70-plus electoral votes that he beat her by”.
Conway added that Trump had not ruled out the possibility of pursuing a criminal investigation into Clinton’s use of a private email server while being the US Secretary of State, even if the President-elect had earlier indicated he would move past the issue.
Green Party candidate Jill Stein is pushing for recounts in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
Trump earlier responded to that effort calling it a “scam” .
Trump won Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, and as of Wednesday, held a lead of almost 11,000 votes in Michigan, with the results awaiting state certification on Monday.
Clinton leads the national popular vote by close to two million votes, but Trump won 290 electoral votes to Clinton’s 232, not counting Michigan.
It takes 270 electoral votes to win the presidency, and the three states in question could tip the electoral balance to Clinton in the remote event that all flipped to her in recounts.
State officials in Wisconsin said on Friday that they were moving forward with the first presidential recount in state history.
Protestors bearing signs and banners take to the streets near Chicago’s Trump Tower showing their opposition to the election of Trump as president [EPA] |