Ossoff dismisses Trump's attacks, derides GOP 'circus' in Washington
Jon Ossoff, one of the Democratic candidates in Georgia's Senate runoffs Tuesday, appeared on ABC's "GMA3" and weighed in on President Trump's campaign speech in Georgia Monday night, as well as what he called the "distraction" in Washington from the nation's pressing problems related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Asked about Trump describing him as an "unhinged radical leftist who supports health care that will lead to death," and as someone who "doesn't like police" and will "destroy the economy," Ossoff said that the president is still trying to win the lost election and that the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic are more important than the "damaged ego of a narcissist who was defeated resoundingly."
Ossoff added that "Georgia's own Centers for Disease Control should take the lead" on COVID-19. "We've got to get free testing and vaccines, as I said, to everybody -- because otherwise ... it will be your wealth and connections that determine whether you are protected from this virus."
Ossoff also spoke about his relationship with the other Democratic candidate, Rev. Raphael Warnock, saying, "it speaks to just how far the state of Georgia has come and how far the American South has come that not only is Georgia the most competitive battleground in the country, not only will these two Senate runoffs determine Senate control, but the Democratic standard-bearers are the young Jewish journalist son of an immigrant mentored by John Lewis, and a Black pastor who holds Dr. King's pulpit at Ebenezer Baptist Church."
Asked about the expected GOP efforts to object to the Electoral College vote count in Congress on Wednesday, Ossoff dismissed it a "circus."
"The efforts to overturn the results of this election are an attack on Georgia voters. We need to be looking forward. You know, this is all a distraction in the midst of a dire national crisis. We are losing thousands of people per day to COVID-19. Hospital systems and nursing homes are buckling under the weight of this outbreak, millions of families face the possibility of eviction or foreclosure or having difficulty putting food on the table. The circus in Washington is irrelevant. What matters is addressing the suffering of the American people."