President Donald Trump tweeted that theGeorgia Senate runoff elections are "both illegal and invalid."- He cited a bipartisan legal agreement as being proof of unconstitutionality — a claim that courts have rejected.
- Hours later, Trump urged his Twitter followers to "get ready to vote on Tuesday."
- Trump will attend a rally in Georgia on Monday for Sens.
Kelly Loeffler andDavid Perdue .
On Friday evening, President Donald Trump tweeted that the upcoming Georgia Senate runoffs are "both illegal and invalid."
Just hours later, Trump vowed to "rally" for both Republican candidates - Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue - and told Georgians to "get ready to vote on Tuesday."
In the initial three-part Twitter thread alleging fraud, Trump claimed that Tuesday's vote would be illegitimate because of one of the state's legal settlements.
"The Georgia Consent Decree is Unconstitutional & the State 2020 Presidential Election is therefore both illegal and invalid, and that would include the two current Senatorial Elections," the president wrote.
—Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 1, 2021
—Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 1, 2021
The consent decree, a bipartisan agreement signed in March, established standards for verifying signatures on absentee ballots. Legal attempts to prove that this decree is unconstitutional have all failed.
Other legal challenges to overturn the election results, such as L. Lin Wood and Sidney Powell's attempt to decertify Georgia's results, have also been thrown out.
Despite Trump inaccurately dismissing Tuesday's two Senate runoffs as illegitimate, he still urged his followers to vote.
—Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 2, 2021
The elections will directly affect the beginning of Joe Biden's presidency. If
Trump will speak at a rally in Dalton on Monday. Vice President Mike Pence will speak in Milner later that afternoon.
The race is close and has seen both parties spending extraordinary amounts to help secure a Senate majority.
Since Election Day, Georgia Senate candidates and outside groups have spent $480 million on advertising, according to AdImpact. It is now the most expensive Senate race ever.
According to a recent poll, the Democrats have a slight but widening lead.
More than 3 million people have already voted in the January 5 Senate runoffs, according to ABC News.