Trump reveals exactly what he’ll do if he loses the 2024 presidential election

Donald Trump has revealed what he will do in November if he loses the 2024 presidential election and concerns about the integrity of the election persist.

The former president spoke with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on issues surrounding election authenticity during a recent interview.

His comments came after a rally in Waukesha, Wisconsin. The Midwestern state will be key to the presidential election and will be home to the 2024 Republican National Convention, where Trump is expected to be formally nominated as the party’s nominee to take on Democrat Joe Biden.

‘If everything is fair, I will happily accept the result. I won’t change that,” Trump said. “If not, you have to fight for the right of the land.”

The comments carried echoes of him Elections 2020 denial claims, which were central to his attempt to dethrone Biden. Allegations of election fraud were a catalyst that prompted a mob to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6 to protest the certification of the election.

Donald Trump has revealed what he will do in November if he loses the 2024 presidential election

His comments came after a rally in Waukesha, Wisconsin.  The Midwestern state will be key to the presidential election and will be home to the 2024 Republican National Convention

His comments came after a rally in Waukesha, Wisconsin. The Midwestern state will be key to the presidential election and will be home to the 2024 Republican National Convention

Trump told the crowd on January 6: 'If you don't fight hard, you won't have a country anymore'

Trump told the crowd on January 6: ‘If you don’t fight hard, you won’t have a country anymore’

Trump told the crowd on January 6: “If you don’t fight hard, you won’t have a country anymore.”

In Wednesday’s interview, Trump repeated the lie that he actually won Wisconsin in 2020.

“If you go back and look at all the things that were discovered, it turns out that I won the election in Wisconsin,” Trump said. “It also showed that I won elections in other locations.”

His claims were refuted after a recount and Republican-backed reviews that found no evidence of voter fraud, as Trump claimed.

President Biden swept Wisconsin in 2020 by just over 20,000 votes, gaining 1,630,866 votes compared to Trump’s 1,610,184. Trump previously won the state in 2016.

Trump’s latest interview and claims come as he faces a slew of criminal cases. Trump has been charged with obstruction in special counsel Jack Smith’s criminal case against him for election interference.

However, the Supreme Court appears to be criticizing whether federal prosecutors went too far in filing obstruction charges against hundreds of participants in the January 6 riot.

'If everything is fair, I will happily accept the result.  I'm not changing that,

‘If everything is fair, I will happily accept the result. I’m not changing that,” Trump said in his most recent interview. “If not, you have to fight for the right of the land.”

The former president is facing federal charges in connection with the events of January 6

The former president is facing federal charges in connection with the events of January 6

If the court rules that prosecutors went too far, it could have far-reaching consequences for Trump, who faces the same charges for his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.

The Supreme Court’s conservative justices appear skeptical about an obstruction charge against a former police officer who entered the Capitol on January 6.

Joseph Fischer was charged with assault on a police officer, disorderly conduct in the Capitol and obstruction of congressional proceedings on January 6, 2021.

Fischer asked the court to dismiss the felony obstruction charge, arguing that the law he is accused of only applied to tampering with evidence and not to events like Jan. 6.

Conservative judges pressure Attorney General Elizabeth Prelogar over the use of the law.

Judge Clarence Thomas asked whether the provision had ever been used in other protests in the past.

Prelogar said it has been used in several prosecutions that do not focus on tampering with evidence.

“Now I can’t give you an example of its enforcement in a situation where people have forcibly stormed a building to prevent an official proceeding,” she admitted.

The Supreme Court appears to be criticizing whether federal prosecutors went too far in filing obstruction charges against hundreds of participants in the January 6 riot.

The Supreme Court appears to be criticizing whether federal prosecutors went too far in filing obstruction charges against hundreds of participants in the January 6 riot.

Supporters react as Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump, speaks during a campaign rally in Freeland, Michigan, on May 1

Supporters react as Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump, speaks during a campaign rally in Freeland, Michigan, on May 1

“But that’s only because I’m not aware of this circumstance ever occurring before January 6.”

Trump was sensationally reinstated by the Supreme Court after efforts to remove him in several states over his alleged role in inciting the January 6 mob.

The justices ruled a day before the Super Tuesday primaries that states cannot invoke a post-Civil War constitutional provision to prevent presidential candidates from appearing on ballots.

That power rests with Congress, the court wrote in an unsigned opinion.

The former president was back on the campaign trail Wednesday as he took a break from court. Trump used the rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan to build criminal and civil cases against him and railed against the presiding justices and President Biden.

The events were the first campaign rallies Trump has held since the hush-money trial against him began in New York nearly three weeks ago.

Trump is charged with 34 counts of falsifying corporate records for covering up hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels.