Derby Telegraph

Republican­s join Trump efforts to overturn election

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A GROWING number of Republican politician­s have joined President Donald Trump’s extraordin­ary effort to overturn the election, pledging to reject the results when Congress meets this week to count the Electoral College votes and certify presidente­lect Joe Biden’s win.

On Saturday, Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas announced a coalition of 11 senators who will vote against certain state electors unless Congress appoints an electoral commission to immediatel­y conduct an audit of the election results.

This follows the declaratio­n from Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, who was the first to buck Senate leadership by saying he would join with House Republican­s in objecting to the state tallies during Wednesday’s joint session of Congress.

Mr Trump’s refusal to accept his defeat is tearing the party apart as Republican­s are forced to make consequent­ial choices that will set the contours of the post-Trump era. Mr Hawley and Mr Cruz are both among potential 2024 presidenti­al contenders.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had urged his party not to try to overturn what nonpartisa­n election officials have

concluded was a free and fair vote.

The 11 senators largely acknowledg­ed Saturday they will not succeed in preventing Mr Biden from being inaugurate­d on January 20 after he won the Electoral College 306-232. But their challenges, and those from House Republican­s, represent the most sweeping effort to undo a presidenti­al election outcome since the Civil War.

“We do not take this action lightly,” Mr Cruz and the other senators said in a joint statement.

They vowed to vote against certain state electors on Wednesday unless Congress appoints an electoral commission to immediatel­y conduct an audit of the election results. They are zeroing in on the states where Mr Trump has raised unfounded claims of voter fraud. Congress is unlikely to agree to their demand.

The group, which presented no new evidence of election problems, includes senators Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, James Lankford of Oklahoma, Steve Daines of Montana, John Kennedy of Louisiana, Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Mike Braun of Indiana, and senators-elect Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Roger Marshall of Kansas, Bill Hagerty of Tennessee and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama.

Mr Trump, the first president to lose a reelection bid in almost 30 years, has attributed his defeat to widespread voter fraud, despite the consensus of nonpartisa­n election officials and even the attorney general that there was none.

Of the roughly 50 lawsuits the president and his allies have filed challengin­g election results, nearly all have been dismissed or dropped.

 ??  ?? US president Donald Trump maintains that widespread fraud caused him to lose in November’s election
US president Donald Trump maintains that widespread fraud caused him to lose in November’s election

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