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The vast majority agree that Joe Biden has won the US election.
The exception is outgoing President Donald Trump and his closest and most loyal supporters.
Trump’s team has announced that it will go to court to change what he describes as a “corrupt” and “false” election result. There is no evidence that anything irregular has happened, the head of the federal electoral commission said early Saturday.
Knockouten
But what can Donald Trump do in the months before Biden moves into the White House?
– It will go straight
– A normal and rational president will call the new president and admit defeat. But I’m not sure we can expect this from Trump.
This is what the American researcher at the Norce research institute, Hilmar Mjelde, writes in an SMS to Dagbladet.
– Nothing has been decided
– By the way, there are standardized processes for energy transfer and I think everything will be fine, writes Mjelde.
General settlement
Anders Romarheim, a researcher at the Department of Defense Studies (IFS), believes that the coming months will be marked by as much unpredictability as the rest of the presidential term has been.
– But my main advice is that there will be a general agreement directed to your own party. This is because Trump rarely admits defeat and almost always blames others, Romarheim writes in an SMS to Dagbladet on Saturday night.
– His party colleagues helped him little in the electoral campaign and now they turn their backs on him in increasing numbers with each passing day, he writes and adds.
– To punish this betrayal, I think Trump will spend time and energy in the time he has left.
Many tweets
Mjelde doesn’t think the next few months will be too dramatic.
– I need you
“Beyond tweeting, some layoffs, and maybe a bit of opposition from the new president, I don’t think this should be dramatic,” Mjelde writes.
Biden’s inauguration ceremony is on January 20.
– Biden himself has gone through this process as incoming vice president in 2008 and outgoing in 2016. Therefore, he does not need the advice of the incumbent president, Mjelde concludes.