Georgia’s two Democratic senators didn’t wait for President Trump to try to undermine their legitimacy with false claims about their crucial election victories in 2020 that propelled Democrats to the Senate majority.
In interviews and social media posts, Senators Raphael Warnock and John Ossoff have aggressively countered a potential presidential claim that they did not win their seats fairly.
They acted after reports that the president would use a speech scheduled for Thursday evening to take aim at them, alleging widespread fraud in Georgia voting six years ago despite multiple inquiries that produced no evidence of wrongdoing.
The two senators and their Democratic allies have ridiculed the president’s fixation on his loss in 2020 and the accompanying Democratic victories as driven by the president’s fragile ego, his efforts to sow distrust about the coming election results and to pressure congressional Republicans to pass new voting restrictions.
“The world’s most famous sore loser will deliver a prime-time address to pursue his six-year-old grievances about the 2020 election while his war in the Middle East spirals out of control and the cost of living continues to rise for Americans,” Mr. Ossoff, who is up for re-election this year, said in advance of the speech. He said that any claim about the Georgia election would be an attack on the state’s voters and elected officials.
“If the president declares Georgia’s elections illegitimate, or if the president declares Georgia’s sitting United States senators illegitimate, he is declaring Georgia voters illegitimate,” Mr. Ossoff said.
Mr. Warnock also brushed off the president’s continued anger over the long-decided and certified election.
“The president can spend every day relitigating 2020 if he wants,” Mr. Warnock wrote on X in one of multiple posts challenging Mr. Trump, including one calling him a “liar, a cheater and a fraud.”
“I’ll spend every day doing the job the people of Georgia elected me to do,” Mr. Warnock wrote.
The 2020 Georgia race has long figured into the president’s claim that he won the election and was defrauded. He was indicted on charges that he illegally tried to overturn the results, though they were dropped after he was re-elected.
His efforts in Georgia were believed to have discouraged some Republican voters from turning out in runoff elections, as members of both parties said at the time, contributing to both Democrats’ winning on Jan. 5, 2021.
Senate Republicans learned that the two men had triumphed and given Democrats the majority while lawmakers were held in a secure area of the Capitol during the Jan. 6 rampage by Trump supporters.
Despite Mr. Trump wanting to revisit 2020, Senate Republicans made clear this week that they wanted little to do with his challenge to the Georgia senators and saw the exercise as a distraction from their efforts to build a legislative record to run on in November.
“The only thing I can tell you is we are focused on the 2026 election — at least I am, and I think most of my colleagues are,” said Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and the majority leader. He dismissed questions about the legitimacy of the two Georgia Democrats.
“That election was a closed issue back in 2020,” he said. “The election in 2026 gives us an opportunity to take a run at and to win one of those seats in Georgia, and we’re going to do everything we can to do that.”
Members of both parties also said that they viewed the president’s speech as part of a campaign to force Republicans to change Senate rules and push through new voter identification requirements, even though Mr. Thune has said repeatedly that the votes do not exist in the Senate to move ahead.
Senate Democrats said they intended to aggressively counter the president’s claims. Senator Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat and minority leader, said those claims were aimed at laying the groundwork for a presidential challenge to the results in the midterm elections.
“It’s about the election he’s afraid to lose this November,” Mr. Schumer said. “It’s about undermining the 2026 election before a single vote has been cast.”
Mr. Ossoff said Thursday that the president’s continuing focus on Georgia would only generate a backlash and boost Democrats.
“These attacks on voting rights are galvanizing a defiant determination to show up at the polls like never before,” he said. “Remember that Georgia is the seat and the spiritual and civic home of the civil rights movement and the movement that secured the Voting Rights Act.”
Mr. Ossoff added that “when Donald Trump and his allies come down to Georgia and attack voting rights, they’re just motivating people to participate in our democracy.”
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