US President Trump's call has been made public in an attempt to overturn the election results until the last minute by pressing the state secretary.



The Washington Post (WP) reported on Tuesday (local time) that President Trump spent an hour on the phone with Georgia's secretary of state and pressured the votes to be recalculated to overturn the election results.



Georgia, a traditional Republican garden, is where Joe Biden won the presidential election with a difference of 11,779 votes.



Since the presidential election, President Trump has been asking Republican Governor of Georgia and the Secretary of State to overturn election results by claiming election fraud.



The WP unveiled a transcript of President Trump's call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Rappensperger, saying, "We hope to get 1,1,780 votes back."



The call took place on the 2nd.



President Trump also commented on the call on Twitter, stating that "Rappensperger was reluctant or unable to answer questions about covert ballot fraud, ballot disposal, out-of-state and deceased voters. He has no idea." There is.



Reportedly, President Trump said in the call, "The Georgians are angry. It's not wrong to say you're going to recalculate (votes)."



Over and over again, he said, "I couldn't have lost in Georgia," and repeated the old argument that "we won by hundreds of thousands of votes."



In response, Secretary of State Rappensperger refuted, "President, your objection, your data is wrong."



President Trump also threatened to be ``a subject of criminal responsibility'' if he did not accept his claim, the WP reported.



President Trump insisted, "It's a criminal offense. You shouldn't leave it alone. It's a great danger to you."



He also said that if Rafensperger does not act by the 5th of the Georgia Senate runoff, the political fate of Republican Senate candidates David Purdue and Kelly Loeffler is at stake.



President Trump said, "Many people will not go to the polls for what you did to the president, and many Republican supporters will vote negatively because they hate what you did to the president."



Still, he said, "If you can correct it before the (Georgia) election, you will be really respected."



The'Pressure Call' came shortly after some Republican lawmakers said they would appeal at the Senate-Household joint meeting on the 6th, which finally confirmed the results of the presidential election, and it is the most recent case in which Trump personally contacted a defeated Republican official to change the results. WP said.



WP reported, "Sometimes rebuking, sometimes exalting, and begging for Rappensperger, threatening to lead to criminal consequences if he did not accept his claim, but Rappensperger refused to do so throughout the call."



"The lengthy and sometimes mismatched conversation gives us a remarkable cross-section of whether Trump still believes the results can be reversed."



President Trump also spoke of conspiracy theories, including a vote of thousands of deaths, three scans of 18,000 Biden votes, and thousands of illegal immigration to vote.



Secretary of State Rappensperger replied, "President, no. We thanked him and proved it was not scanned three times."



When President Trump said he had more than 5,000 votes in the name of the deceased, Rappensperger countered that "there are only two real cases."



The WP reported that President Trump was upset on the phone and called Secretary of State Rappensperger'a child' or'unhonest and incompetent'.



"Do you think Fulton County could destroy ballots? There are rumors. Dominion is carrying a ballot. We are moving really fast to get rid of the ballots," Trump said to Mr. Ryan Germanie, who was on the phone with Secretary Rappensperger. . It's illegal."



"Dominion did not move any votes out of the county," the German adviser countered.



Regarding the currency, Ohio State University law professor Edward Foley said the legal matters are ambiguous and will be decided at the discretion of the prosecutors. He said the currency would be inappropriate, sparking moral anger against Trump.



(Photo = Getty Image Korea)