Vice President-elect Kamala Harris offered strong criticism of President Donald Trump's attempt to overturn the election results by pushing Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to find votes. During her campaign in Savannah, Georgia, over the weekend, the Vice President-elect described the president's attempt as a "bold abuse of power."

Campaigning for Democratic Senate runoff candidates, Democrats Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock, the vice president-elect, took the stage at a drive-thru rally, addressing the crowd on the call. Trump slammed Raffensperger for refusing to falsely announce him as the winner of the election in the Peach State.

Hariss asked the audience if they heard about the recorded conversation, which she described as "the voice of desperation." With cars honking in the audience, she went on to say that Trump's attempt to pressure Raffensperger to overturn the election is nothing short of a bold abuse of power by Trump.

Her remarks were the first on-camera reaction from President-elect Joe Biden's administration to the bombshell call, first obtained by CNN and originally reported by the Washington Post. Biden's senior adviser Bob Bauer released a statement, taking a jab at the president's action, which he called a disgraceful story about the president's assault on the country's democracy.

Referencing to Trump and other Republican's failed attempts to change the outcome of the election, Harris told the audience that after they turned Georgia blue by electing Biden President of the United States and electing the first Black woman in the country's history to be the Vice President of the U.S., Trump and his aides are suggesting that the Georgia voters didn't know what they were doing, and must have adopted illegitimate way for voting.

Aside from that, she slammed Trump for calling the Jan. 5 Senate runoff elections illegal and invalid. Harris said the president was trying to suggest that the people of Georgia were committing a crime. Born in Savannah, Warnock spoke about his history, noting that he is familiar with the region.

Ossoff, on the other hand, opted for a standard speech, wherein he repeatedly criticized David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, in addition to addressing Trump's phone call. He said Trump calling Georgia officials in a bid to intimidate them into changing the election results is a direct attack on America's democracy.

Taking jabs at Loeffler and Perdue, Ossoff said if they had even a bit of integrity, they'd be defending voters of the state from the president's assault. According to averaging of polls from FiveThirtyEight, Ossoff is leading with 1.8 percentage points, and Warnock is leading with 2.2 percentage points.