Armed pro-Trump protesters gather outside Michigan elections chief's home
 
 
Michigan secretary of state Jocelyn Benson said
dozens of armed protesters gathered in a threatening manner outside her home on
Saturday evening chanting “bogus” claims about electoral fraud.
Michigan officials last month certified the state’s
election results showing President-elect Joe Biden had won Michigan, one of a
handful of key battleground states, in the course of his 3 November election
victory.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed,
contrary to evidence, that the outcome was marred by widespread fraud in
multiple states. State and federal officials have repeatedly stated that there
is no evidence of fraud on any significant scale, and Biden is to sworn into
office on 20 January.
The protesters who rallied outside Benson’s home
held up placards saying “Stop the Steal” and chanted the same message,
according to various clips uploaded on social media.
In a Twitter statement on Sunday, Benson said the
protesters were trying to spread false information about the security and
accuracy of the US election system. “The demands made outside my home were
unambiguous, loud and threatening.”
Michigan attorney general Dana Nessel, in a separate
Twitter post, accused the pro-Trump demonstrators of “mob-like behavior (that)
is an affront to basic morality and decency”.
“Anyone can air legitimate grievances to Secretary
Benson’s office through civil and democratic means, but terrorizing children
and families in their own homes is not activism.”
Benson added: “They targeted me in my role as
Michigan’s chief election officer. But the threats of those gathered weren’t
actually aimed at me – or any other elected officials in this state. They were
aimed at the voters.”
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, who has clashed
publicly with Trump over state coronavirus restrictions, was the target of a
kidnapping plot by a far-right militia group during the election campaign,
prosecutors said in October.
Michigan, one of a handful of key swing state in the
2020 presidential race, was a target of agitation by Trump and right-wing
supporters against stay-at-home orders Whitmer imposed earlier this year to
curb coronavirus transmissions.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


