Bobbie Colello | JFairley
Bobbie Colello | JFairley
Bobbie Colello was determined to attend the Nov. 14 Trump for March in D.C. but she didn’t want to drive alone from Youngstown. So, she made fast friends on the Million MAGA March Facebook page with two strangers who took turns driving the five hours. They now call each other patriot friends.
“I’m here to support the president and I believe that he definitely won this election,” Colello told the Youngstown Times. “We believe the election results are fraudulent.”
Colello is among thousands who marched from Freedom Plaza to the U.S. Supreme Court building across from the Capitol to challenge the results of Election Day in support of President Trump.
“I thought the Democrats would do this in 2016 but they didn't try hard enough,” Colello said in an interview at the rally. "So, now they definitely got their stuff together and they did it this time.”
To date, bipartisan election officials across the country – including the president's recently terminated head of Homeland Security, Chris Krebs – have determined that no significant voter fraud occurred in the 2020 election.
The Associated Press reported incumbent President Donald Trump won the state of Ohio with 53.4% of votes compared to 45.2% for challenger Joe Biden. However, virtually every media outlet named Biden the president-elect because he won a projected 306 electoral votes compared to President Trump’s 232.
“We all know that fraud is the way that Biden supposedly won because there's no way,” Colello said. “You can just look around and see all of these people at the rally. There's no way Biden beat President Trump. Absolutely no way! So, we're here to support Trump. We're here to support each other and support America.”
The election has led to multiple lawsuits, including one in Pennsylvania by the Trump campaign that was rejected by the state's Supreme Court yesterday, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Another lawsuit, which the New York Post reports is still pending in Pennsylvania court, is trying to block the certification of results that include absentee and mail-in ballots, which were allegedly "improperly permitted to be cured."
President Trump tweeted on Nov. 15 that he would be filing a big lawsuit soon: “Many of the court cases being filed all over the Country are not ours, but rather those of people that have seen horrible abuses. Our big cases showing the unconstitutionality of the 2020 Election, & the outrage of things that were done to change the outcome, will soon be filed!”
Voter groups, represented by election lawyer James Bopp Jr., voluntarily dismissed without prejudice four lawsuits that had been filed in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Georgia, as previously reported by CBS News. The fact that they were voluntarily dismissed without prejudice means the complaints can be refiled.
March for Trump was part of a grassroots effort planned by various pro-Trump groups around the country to show a united front, to demand transparency in elections, and to protect election integrity. Trump supporters traveled from as far away as California, Texas, South Dakota and Oregon to participate.