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Donald Trump rips Fani Willis, Brian Kemp, other Georgia politicians at Atlanta rally

Trump made his opinions clear on several key Georgia politicians during an 11-minute rant.

ATLANTA — Donald Trump did not mince words on Saturday as he spoke candidly about numerous Georgia politicians as he slammed them during an over 11-minute rant.

His targets on Saturday were Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, Georgia Sec. of State Brad Raffensperger and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

Trump targeted Kemp for being "disloyal," Raffensperger for not making sure the vote was "honest" in the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, and Willis for her relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, who was hired to prosecute Trump and his allies in the election interference case in Fulton County.

What Trump said about Brian Kemp

During his rally in Atlanta, Trump blasted Kemp by calling him "disloyal" and explaining Kemp was only in his current position as governor due to his own endorsement while he was president.

Trump said that he would "never have beaten Stacy Abrams" without his endorsement and criticized Kemp and Georgia First Lady Marty Kemp while speaking at his rally.

"(After he won), his wife looked at me, and she said, 'Thank you, sir. We'll never, ever be able to repay you for what you did. You got my husband the nomination, and then we beat somebody (Abrams) who was unbeatable,'" Trump said.

RELATED: Brian Kemp responds to Donald Trump after personal attack

"He is the most disloyal guy I think I've ever seen," Trump said of Kemp. "But think of the wife ... and now she said two weeks ago that I will not endorse him because he has not earned my endorsement ... but I don't want her endorsement, I don't want his endorsement. I just want them to do their job for Georgia and you know what, he's the governor, he oughta support his Republican party because if he's not, if he doesn't have his Republican party, I can tell you where he came from and it wasn't good."

Trump continued to slam Kemp when it came to what Trump believed was the governor's fault for not stepping in to remove Willis when it was learned she was in a relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade.

"This guy. The governor. The governor. You know what? She (Fani Willis) is an embarrassment to the state of Georgia. He's the governor of Georgia. He oughta do something (about her)."

"This governor, I assume, I don't know, he could straighten it out because his state has become a laughing stock over it," Trump said.

Trump continued later: "But Kemp doesn't want to end it because he's a bad guy, he's a disloyal guy and he's a very average governor."

Kemp clapped back on the comments made by Trump, saying his focus is on winning the presidential election come November and "not engaging in petty personal insults, attacking fellow Republicans, or dwelling on the past."

The Georgia governor wrapped it up simply: "You should do the same, Mr. President, and leave my family out of it."

What Trump said about Fani Willis

Trump began talking about Willis after explaining that he believes Kemp and Raffensperger want him to lose the upcoming presidential election, which springboarded right into Willis.

"They are the ones, don't forget, who got Fani Willis and her lover boy boyfriend all jazzed up. This guy. The governor. The governor. You know what? She (Fani Willis) is an embarrassment to the state of Georgia. He's the governor of Georgia. He oughta do something (about her)."

Trump then made fun of Willis' first name and the pronunciation of it before going back to talking about Wade.

"Her and her lover, lover boy Wade. She hired him because of experience, paid him almost a million dollars a year for his experience," Trump said before talking about phone call records between the two.

What Trump said about Brad Raffensperger

Trump said that "Raffensperger oughta make sure that the vote is honest and they don't want the vote to be honest. In my opinion, they want us to lose. That is actually my opinion."

The secretary of state said in a social media post that Georgia's elections are secure.

"The winner here in November will reflect the will of the people," Raffensperger said.

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