George Conway likens Trump minions to a ‘bunch of drunks trying to take down a skyscraper with a blowtorch’

Constitutional lawyer and Lincoln Project co-founder George Conway doesn’t think his wife’s ex-boss has much of a shot at staying in the White House after being voted out last week.

That isn’t to say he doesn’t take the president’s efforts to challenge the 2020 election results somewhat seriously.

“The way I look at Trump and his minions' nonsense is that they’re like a bunch of drunks trying to take down a skyscraper with a blowtorch,” he tweeted Tuesday. “I don’t think they have the remotest chance of succeeding, but I also don’t think we should allow them to start a fire while they try.”

Three men sexually assaulted nine horses, a cow, a goat and dogs

Voters selected former vice president Joe Biden as the nation’s 46th president last week, though nearly four days passed between Election Day and enough ballots being counted to seal the deal. Biden now leads Trump by almost five-million votes with nearly all the ballots counted. That is larger than the population of most states.

Foreign leaders including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have called to congratulate the Democratic statesman, Biden’s team said.

However, the lame duck U.S. president and his loyalists continue their refusal to concede the loss, alleging various unsubstantiated acts of malfeasance. Those claims have led to Trump supporters demanding ballot counts stop in places where the president held an early lead, while continuing in states where he was trailing.

“I WON THIS ELECTION, BY A LOT!” Trump tweeted over the weekend.

Twitter flagged that statement from the president because it had not been substantiated by "official sources.”

Biden, who has claimed victory, called Trump’s continuing state of denial “an embarrassment” Tuesday and added it would not positively impact the one-term president’s legacy.

AOC asks Twitter to help pick a ‘dream cabinet' for President-elect Joe Biden. Here’s what she got.

The White House isn’t the only home where Trump’s unconventional presidency has kept things interesting.

The Conways' teenager daughter tweeted in August that her mother’s work with the Trump administration was causing her such grief that she was exploring the possibility of emancipation from her parents. Kellyanne soon after stepped away from her government gig to provide her family “less drama, more momma.”

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