It’s now three weeks to the day since the seemingly endless presidential election that granted our 45th Presidency to Donald J. Trump, and somehow it’s still not over.

Neither our President-Elect nor Hillary Clinton are quite ready to let go and accept the results of the election, at least as it relates to the popular vote, which, by the most recent count, has Hillary besting Donald by around 2.2 million votes. Of course, it’s the electoral college, not the popular vote, that determines the winner of the election, but losing the popular vote is not sitting well with Trump, and he seems set on undermining Hillary’s rhetorical victory in the most retweetable of ways.

Donald had this to say:

Trump’s claim of “millions of people who voted illegally” amounts to a claim of voter fraud—a serious charge undermining the integrity of the very process that elected him president, and one he’s made without any evidence. (Politifact has rated his claim with the rare “Pants On Fire.”)

This unprecedented behavior from a President-Elect has alarmed both sides, even getting Trump ally and transition team Vice Chairman Newt Gingrich to characterize it as the single worst misstep he’s made since winning the election, saying, “The President of the United States can’t randomly tweet without having somebody check it out.”

Gingrich added, “It makes you wonder about whatever else he’s doing. It undermines much more than a single tweet.”

The irony of Trump claiming popular vote fraud is that it helps make the case for those on the left who are similarly calling the results into question and asking for a recount in key battleground states.

Green Party candidate Jill Stein has raised over $5 million to file lawsuits and audit voting results in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan — the very states which swung narrowly for Trump and were essential in his electoral victory. Stein’s mission here is to ensure the results weren’t hacked by Russians or any other such shady scenarios; others speculate she may be trying to relieve herself of the guilt she may feel for pulling enough votes from Clinton to give Trump the edge in these states.

While Stein has acknowledged that she has no evidence of actual voter fraud or hacking in these states, she said to Anderson Cooper: “Unless we look, we’ll never know.” Trump has replied skeptically by saying Stein is using this as an opportunity to enrich herself and raise her profile.

As for the Clinton camp’s response? Well, their lawyers are actually joining the recount efforts. They’ve claimed it’s simply to ensure their side is properly represented during the proceedings, but critics see it as the Clinton campaign using Stein as a front to draw out the election and undermine some aspects of Trump’s victory. While the Clinton camp has stated they do not expect the recount to change the result of the election, it does add yet another round of fireworks to what has been the single most dramatic, and endless, election of our lifetimes.