Edition · December 6, 2020
Trump’s election lies keep boomeranging
On December 6, 2020, the post-election pressure campaign was hitting a wall in public, in court, and inside the Republican Party.
Trump-world spent this day trying to turn a lost election into a do-over and mostly got back something closer to a public spanking. Georgia Republicans were openly rejecting the demand for a special legislative session, election officials were warning about the danger created by Trump’s rhetoric, and the broader effort to erase Biden’s win was looking more desperate than strategic.
Closing take
The common thread is simple: when the evidence keeps saying no, Trump and his allies keep trying the same trick louder. On December 6, 2020, that produced more backlash than leverage, which is exactly the kind of self-inflicted mess that turns a bad strategy into a political liability.
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Threats escalate
Confidence 4/5
★★★★☆Fuckup rating 4/5
Serious fuckup
As Trump kept pushing stolen-election claims, election officials were openly warning that his rhetoric was helping create threats and intimidation. The pressure was no longer abstract: local leaders were dealing with security fears, public harassment, and the unmistakable sense that the president’s lies had a civilian cost. That makes this more than just another bogus talking point—it is the kind of messaging failure that starts to poison real-world safety.
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Georgia pushback
Confidence 4/5
★★★★☆Fuckup rating 4/5
Serious fuckup
Trump’s demand that Georgia lawmakers convene a special session to meddle with the state’s presidential results ran straight into a wall of Republican resistance. The governor and other state leaders were publicly brushing off the idea, making clear they had no interest in helping Trump overturn Joe Biden’s win. For a president who wanted party discipline, this was a very public example of the local GOP refusing to get drafted into his reality show.
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Dead-end drive
Confidence 4/5
★★★☆☆Fuckup rating 3/5
Major mess
By December 6, Trump’s broader effort to undo the election was looking increasingly unserious, even by the standards of the post-loss clown car. The key states were moving ahead with certification, the available challenges were failing to gain traction, and the public case for a reversal was collapsing under its own weight. What remained was mostly noise, pressure, and a lot of legal and political theater.
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