John David and family | JFairley
John David and family | JFairley
John David made it a point to attend the March for Trump rally in D.C. last weekend.
“I am here to show everybody that the people have the ability to come out en mass and demand an investigation,” David told the North Lancaster News.
David, his wife, and their six children traveled from Lancaster to Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C. where they joined thousands of Trump supporters to protest Election Day results.
The march officially ended on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court across from the Capitol.
“What's at stake for our country is going in a socialist direction and with no return. Going socialist means dictatorship and it's hard to get out of a dictatorship if you go in that direction,” David said in an interview.
Some Republicans are questioning Election Day results after the Associated Press reported incumbent Biden won Pennsylvania’s electoral votes with 49.9% of state votes compared to 48.9% for President Trump. The results have yet to be certified.
“It’s wrong what’s happening with the elections,” David said.
CBS News reported that voter groups, represented by election lawyer James Bopp Jr., voluntarily dismissed without prejudice four lawsuits that had been filed in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Georgia.
The fact that they were voluntarily dismissed without prejudice means they can be refiled.
Among the lawsuits the Trump campaign filed in Pennsylvania is an attempt to block the certification of results that include absentee and mail-in ballots that were allegedly “improperly permitted to be cured,” according to media reports.
The Associated Press reported late yesterday that the suit was revised and the lead attorneys were changed in the case.
As previously reported, a GOP lawsuit requesting a ban on all absentee ballots that arrived after Nov. 3 is currently pending in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
It has been widely reported that Biden won 306 electoral votes compared to Trump’s 232 to earn the the White House, although the deadline for presidential electors from every state to cast their votes is Dec. 14.