The Daily Escape:
Pipestone River and Lake Louise Village, Banff NP, Alberta, CN â 2020 photo by Frank King Photos
Trump will lose in the Electoral College today. But that wonât mean Trumpâs attempted coup is over. A group of his most loyal GOP backers in Congress are plotting a final-stage challenge on the floor of the House of Representatives on January 6 to try to reverse Bidenâs victory.
The way our election system works is that after the Electoral College meets today, Congress still has to certify the votes that were cast by it. At that time, Congress can in fact, refuse to accept the votes of either individual electors or entire state delegations.
If Congress were to refuse Electoral College votes, then those refused votes arenât counted, and the candidate who has the majority of the remaining electoral votes becomes president. It isnât necessary for the winning presidential candidate to get 270 electoral votes to win. That candidate only needs a majority of the electoral votes actually certified by Congress. The process is based on the Twelfth Amendment, but that is ambiguous:
âThe President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted.â
It does not say what to do if there is a dispute over a stateâs electoral voters. In 1887, Congress enacted a statute to address the ambiguity of the Twelfth Amendment; it says that for Congress to refuse to certify any electoral vote, at least one member of the House and one member of the Senate have to lodge a specific objection to the counting of the specific vote(s) in question. If this happens, then the joint session of Congress would be adjourned for two hours, during which time, each legislative body would separately debate the objection(s), and then vote them in or out.
This happened in 2005, after the 2004 election. At that time, it was the Democrats who messed around with what used to be thought of a purely âMinisterial Processâ, that is, those formalities that nobody pays much attention to, because no one thought that our representatives would try to game the system.
Back in 2005, Rep Stephanie Tubbs Jones, (D-OH), got Sen Barbara Boxer (D-CA) to agree to join in her objection to the Ohio Electoral College vote. Bush had won Ohio by 118,000 votes over Kerry. While they didnât want to actually toss Ohioâs EC votes out (since doing so would have flipped the outcome of the election), both Houses adjourned to vote on the objection.
Although the House has 435 seats, ultimately only 31 House members voted to exclude Ohioâs electoral votes, so Tubbs lost. Only Boxer voted to challenge Ohioâs electoral votes in the 100-seat Senate. The final Senate vote was 74-1 (many Democrats abstained), so Bush won.
Youâre going to be hearing a lot more about this âMinisterial Processâ that will take place on January 6, since many House Republicans are going to object to the certification of a ton of 2020 electoral votes. Luckily, Democratic control of the House should prevent this particular flaw in our electoral system from keeping Trump in office.
The key question is how many Senators will also jump on the Trump Train. If they do, then that requires all the Senate and House Republicans to go on record regarding whether they support Trumpâs coup attempt.
So, itâs not over today, and it wonât be over even after the GOP dead-enders in the House and Senate lose their effort to obstruct the election results.
Itâs time to wake up America! You no longer have any political norms.
Our political system is devolving. Itâs certain that at least a few Republicans will refuse to certify Bidenâs win in the Electoral College on January 6.
Imagine if in the not-to-distant future, we have Republicans controlling both Houses. Imagine if they then refuse to certify the election of a Democratic president.
The GOP is no longer a responsible political Party. Theyâve become an extremist organization bent on keeping power at all costs. We are witnessing an attempted coup. Just because it wonât succeed doesnât diminish the importance or the severity of what’s happening. Trump and the GOP are laying the groundwork for authoritarianism in the US.
To help you wake up, listen to this rendition of Leonard Cohenâs âHallelujahâ, performed in 2016 by a 1,500 person chorus in Canada. The song is led by Rufus Wainwright. Imagine a world where strangers can come together to make something beautiful:
John, Just when I think it is over you mess with my head!