Trump advisers must tell him when it's time to go: OSCE election observer
Trump, 74, has been defiant as his chances fade for securing a second four-year term. He has made repeated and unfounded claims of electoral fraud, while his campaign pursues lawsuits that legal experts say are unlikely to alter the election outcome.

German politician Michael Link told the Funke newspaper group that Trump's allegations of fraud and cheating in the vote-counting process were unfounded and risked undermining confidence in the U.S. democratic system.
Trump, 74, has been defiant as his chances fade for securing a second four-year term. He has made repeated and unfounded claims of electoral fraud, while his campaign pursues lawsuits that legal experts say are unlikely to alter the election outcome.
"The American President has a great responsibility for preserving calm in the U.S.," Link was quoted as saying. "I'm not sure this is clear to him."
He added: "I can only hope that Trump has well-intentioned advisers who will tell him if he has lost. All indications are that that is the result which we will soon see."
Link leads the mission of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), of which the U.S. is a founder member, which has for decades sent delegations to monitor the probity of elections around the world.
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