El Dorado News-Times

Panel looks at redo for 1887 election law

Statute on electoral-vote count represents threat to democracy, critics say

- LUKE BROADWATER AND NICK CORASANITI

WASHINGTON — Members of the select congressio­nal committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol are pressing to overhaul the complex and little-known law that former President Donald Trump and his allies tried to use to overturn the 2020 election, with the members arguing that the ambiguity of the statute puts democracy at risk.

The push to rewrite the Electoral Count Act of 1887 — enacted in the wake of another bitterly disputed presidenti­al election — has taken on new urgency in recent weeks as more details have emerged about the extent of Trump’s plot to exploit its provisions to stay in power.

Trump and his allies, using a warped interpreta­tion of the law, sought to persuade Vice President Mike Pence to throw out legitimate results when Congress met in a joint session Jan. 6 to conduct its official count of electoral votes.

Pence and members of Congress ultimately returned and completed the count, rejecting challenges made by loyalists to Trump and formalizin­g President Joe Biden’s victory.

Had Pence done as Trump wanted — or had enough members of Congress voted to sustain the challenges lodged by his supporters — the outcome could have been different.

Republican­s in Congress have repeatedly blocked efforts by Democrats to alter election laws in the wake of the 2020 election, and it is not clear whether a bid to revamp the Electoral Count Act would fare any better. But experts have described the law as “almost unintellig­ible,” and an overhaul has the support of several leading conservati­ve groups.

“There are a few of us on the committee who are working to identify proposed reforms that could earn support across the spectrum of liberal to conservati­ve constituti­onal scholars,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a member of the Jan. 6 committee. “We could very well have a problem in a future election that comes down to an interpreta­tion of a very poorly written, ambiguous and confusing statute.”

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., vice chair of the committee, said Thursday that “the 1887 Electoral Count Act is directly at issue” and that the panel would recommend changes to it.

The Constituti­on leaves it up to Congress to finalize the results of presidenti­al elections shortly before Inaugurati­on Day.

Article II, Section 1 says, “The 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.”

The process is further detailed in the Electoral Count Act, which says that as lawmakers read through the electoral results of each state during a joint session of Congress, members of the House and Senate may submit objections in writing, which can be sustained if a majority in both chambers approves. Should a state submit multiple slates to Congress, then the governor’s certified electors would hold, the law says, unless a majority in both chambers voted to reject them.

The statute, written in the aftermath of the disputed election of 1876 between Republican Rutherford B. Hayes and Democrat Samuel Tilden, has dictated how Congress formalizes elections, mostly without incident, ever since.

But what unfolded Jan. 6 tested its limits.

Both of the objections by Trump’s allies — who sought to invalidate the electoral votes of Pennsylvan­ia and Arizona — failed in the House, although the vast majority of Republican­s supported them.

In the months since, it has become clear that those challenges were part of a broader strategy. John Eastman, a lawyer advising Trump, drafted a plan that included sending to Pence, who presided over the joint session in his role as president of the Senate, a slate of Trump electors from seven states won by Biden.

Eastman and other allies of Trump suggested pressuring the vice president to accept the alternate slate of Trump electors, throwing out legitimate votes for Biden.

Under such a scenario, Eastman argued, a vote of those states’ delegation­s in the House, favoring Republican­s, could keep Trump in power. Eastman has informed the committee that he plans to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion to avoid answering the group’s questions.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, has indicated an openness to revising the statute, and a small group of senators, including Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, has been working on potential solutions.

A bipartisan coalition of state and local lawmakers is also on board, as are some organizati­ons that study election issues, including Issue One and the National Task Force on Election Crises.

In documents circulated on Capitol Hill, the task force — which calls the Electoral Count Act “severely flawed” — proposes several broad changes.

The suggestion­s include limiting the grounds for a lawmaker to object to counting a state’s votes and clarifying that the vice president’s role in the process is merely ministeria­l, and thus lacking the authority to unilateral­ly throw out a state’s votes. It has also recommende­d setting clearer time limits for states to choose electors.

Trey Grayson, a former Republican secretary of state of Kentucky, said in an interview that he was concerned that, without changes to the law, there would be future attempts to exploit it by both parties.

“I worry that this is going to become routine because the incentive structure is there,” he said. “It’s really easy for somebody to play to the base, object, know they’re going to lose, but reap the rewards of appealing to the base. Those actions hurt our democracy.”

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