Dayton Daily News

Why Kemp won’t call a special session to overturn election

- ByGregBlue­stein

Gov. Brian ATLANTA —

Kemp has already defied President Donald Trump’s calls to illegally overturn Georgia’s election results. Nowhe and other Republican leaders are shooting down an effort by pro-Trump legislator­s to demand a special session to brazenly award Georgia’s 16 electoral votes to the GOP.

The governor and other Republican leaders first ruled out a special session to help Trump undo Joe Biden’s victory on Nov. 10, and he rejected the president’s extraordin­ary personal plea to intervene in the election results on Saturday.

But Kemp elaborated on his stance late Sunday after four Republican state senators -- Brandon Beach, Greg Dolezal, William Ligon and Burt Jones -- drafted a petition seeking an emergency special session because of “systemic failures” in the election system.

State elections officials have said there is no widespread evidence of fraud and Georgia courts have thrown out several complaints seeking to block the certificat­ion of the vote. But Trump’s false narrative of a “stolen” election has seeped deeply into the Georgia GOP and sparked a bitter internal feud.

The petition circulatin­g over theweekend seeks to allowthe Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to “take back the power to appoint electors.” Jones, one of the organizers, said “untrustwor­thy” election results compelled the demand.

“It is time for our legislativ­e body to do its job,” he said.

Kempand Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who acknowledg­ed Joe Biden’s victory on CNN on Sunday, issued a lengthy statement detailing that a special session is “not an option that is allowed under state or federal law” -- a lengthier way of saying it was illegal.

In the 1960s, the General Assembly decided that Georgia’s presidenti­al electors would be determined by the winner of the state’s popular vote. Under Georgia law, the Legislatur­e can only outline a new method of choosing electors if the timing of the vote was shifted from the date set in federal law.

 ?? ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON
ALYSSA POINTER / ?? Vice President Mike Pence is greeted by GeorgiaGov. Brian Kempas he arrives at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Marietta, Ga., Friday, Nov. 20, 2020.
ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ALYSSA POINTER / Vice President Mike Pence is greeted by GeorgiaGov. Brian Kempas he arrives at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Marietta, Ga., Friday, Nov. 20, 2020.

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