News

Europe Politely Asks Trump to Count All the Votes Before Declaring Victory

Donald Trump's baseless claim to have already won the presidential election drew measured criticism from Europe, although leaders largely kept quiet.
Simon Childs
London, GB
A member of "Democrats Abroad" demonstrates in front of the Brandenburg Gate, near the US embassy in Berlin. Photo:
A member of "Democrats Abroad" demonstrates in front of the Brandenburg Gate, near the US embassy in Berlin. Photo: JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP via Getty Images

Donald Trump’s premature claim to have won a US presidential election which is still too close to call has prompted European politicians to call for all votes to actually be counted before a winner is declared. 

European Commission chief spokesperson Eric Mamer said, “We are awaiting that the authorities in charge of the vote count announce the results. We will abide by whatever announcement is forthcoming officially by the relevant US authorities, and we think that everybody should do likewise,” Politico reported.

Advertisement

The remarks were seen as an indirect rebuke to Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša, who tweeted: “It’s pretty clear that American people have elected @realDonaldTrump @Mike_Pence for #4moreyears. More delays and facts denying from #MSM, bigger the final triumph for #POTUS. Congratulations @GOP for strong results across the #US”. 

Twitter added a health warning to the tweet, saying: “Official sources may not have called the race when this was tweeted.” Elsewhere there was implicit criticism of Trump from European politicians who stressed that all votes had to be counted.

Iratxe García Pérez, leader of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament tweeted, “Time to wait for the final results of #USAElections2020, in full respect of the electoral process. Trump’s behaviour undermines US democracy. Hoping that @JoeBiden will bring new hope both to US citizens and to the whole world.” 

Saskia Esken, co-leader of the German Social Democratic Party told the Rheinische Post newspaper, “A candidate, even if he is the incumbent president, who calls for postal votes not to be counted, is acting anti-democratically.”

Other politicians warned that American democracy was at risk. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted: “Crucial hours and days ahead for the integrity of US democracy. Let’s hope we start to hear the voices of Republicans who understand the importance of that.” 

Advertisement

Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, German Minister of Defence and leader of the Christian Democratic Union party said that the election had not been decided yet, and warned that a “battle over the legitimacy of the result” had begun. “That’s a very explosive situation” she said.

In the UK, foreign secretary Dominic Raab was criticised for failing to call out Trump’s baseless claims of victory. Asked on BBC News whether Trump was right to say “there is fraud on the American public and frankly we did win this election” before the result was clear, Raab said, “You are asking me to comment on the campaign commentary from both sides and indeed the pundits which, forgive me, I’ll refrain from doing.”

“I’m fully confident that the US system with all its checks and balances in it will produce a definitive result and we’ll, as a close friend of America, watch and see how it turns out.”

Shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy told Sky News: “I think it’s perhaps not surprising but it is deeply shocking to hear a presidential candidate in one of the, if not the most powerful country in the world suggest that democracy will be overridden and that votes don’t count… I found it deeply shocking that the foreign secretary was unable to stand up for that principle.” 

“Britain has believed in democracy, has sought to advance democracy throughout the world throughout our history. Now is not the moment to row back on that commitment. We have to be absolutely clear that we stand with the American people… Britain has to be absolutely clear on that as we would with any other country in the world”

At Prime Minister’s Questions, Labour leader Keir Starmer asked Boris Johnson to agree that it is not for a candidate to call the results of an election. Johnson said, “Of course we don’t comment as a UK government on the democratic processes of our friends and allies.”