GREG KELLY (HOST): You see, it's not that open and shut. Good people had very valid concerns about the election. I'm talking about coast to coast. Lots of people did. It just didn't add up. Let's get away from the riot for a moment. People coast to coast -- I think we have a pole from Politico, especially Republicans, they did not see this as a fair election. There were serious concerns. And by the way, you can't put this on Donald Trump that he was stirring everybody up. We were noticing this on our own. If you'll remember after election day, he actually went kind of quiet, by Donald Trump's standards. He wasn't tweeting as much. He wasn't out in public as much. No, we were connecting the dots and checking this out and drawing our own conclusions that, you know what? This is -- I don't know. We just don't know about this one.
...
KELLY: That was November 15. The whole country, at least those who weren't afraid of the truth, were talking about what really happened on November 3 and the run up to November 3, all right? Reasonable people were asking these questions. And you know what? I was one of them. When I look back to Barack Obama and his achievements.
...
Hey, whether you like him or not, gifted politician. No doubt about it. Look at that -- those are some serious numbers. How about our President Trump?
...
Americans can tell a winner. They can feel it. They can feel it in their bones. I mean, we saw it, it made sense. For a lot of us, it's OK to have questions about Joe Biden actually winning this race.
...
So, again, good people had real concerns about the fairness of this election. And if everything was on the up and up, the media had absolutely no interest in pursuing anything. Any questions raised, they tried to delegitimize them right away. Stigmatized anybody who was asking these questions. And these questions, by the way, remain.