Edition · December 3, 2020
The Daily Fuckup: December 3, 2020
Trump’s post-election reality denial kept colliding with courts, officials, and even his own party, and the mess was getting louder by the day.
On December 3, 2020, the Trump world’s main line of attack on the election kept taking hits from judges, state officials, and Republican reality-checkers. The day featured another legal dead end in Wisconsin, fresh humiliation for the Georgia fraud spectacle, and continued evidence that the White House was treating a lost election like a hostage negotiation. The throughline was simple: the claims stayed loud, but the proof stayed missing.
Closing take
By this point, the Trump team’s strategy was no longer about changing the outcome so much as flooding the zone with enough nonsense to keep loyalists confused and the calendar running out. On December 3, the walls kept closing in, one debunked claim and one court rebuke at a time.
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Legal dead end
Confidence 4/5
★★★☆☆Fuckup rating 3/5
Major mess
The Wisconsin Supreme Court refused to take up the Trump campaign’s election challenge in the first instance, sending it to lower court and undercutting the campaign’s effort to shortcut the usual process. It was another reminder that the campaign’s post-election litigation was built for headlines more than for winning. The ruling didn’t end the broader fight, but it made the road steeper and the legal theatrics harder to sell as serious governance.
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Fraud theater
Confidence 3/5
★★★☆☆Fuckup rating 3/5
Major mess
Trump allies pushed more fraud claims in Georgia on December 3, but the evidence trail remained thin and the backlash was getting louder. The state’s election officials were increasingly forced into the role of debunkers, explaining basic vote-counting mechanics to a political operation that seemed determined not to learn them. The day helped show how the Georgia effort was metastasizing from legal challenge into public embarrassment.
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No evidence
Confidence 3/5
★★☆☆☆Fuckup rating 2/5
Noticeable stumble
The intelligence picture on December 3 did not support the kind of sweeping election-fraud claims Trump had been pushing. That mattered because one of the campaign’s favorite arguments was that hidden foreign tampering or cyber weirdness might yet rescue the whole stolen-election narrative. The day reinforced that the fraud story was still mostly politics, not proof.
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