Marin Independent Journal

Electoral College seals win for Biden

- By Nick Corasaniti and Jim Rutenberg

It began at 10 a.m. in New Hampshire, where electors met in a statehouse chamber festooned with holiday decoration­s and gave their four votes to Joe Biden. By noon on Monday, the battlegrou­nd states of Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvan­ia, ground zero for many of President Donald Trump’s fruitless lawsuits, had backed Biden too. In New York, Bill and Hillary Clinton voted for Biden along with 27 other electors.

And when California cast its 55 votes for Biden around 5:30 p.m. Eastern time, it pushed him past the threshold of 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the presidency, putting the official seal on his victory after weeks of efforts by Trump to use legal challenges and political pressure to overturn the results.

With the Electoral College vote behind him, Biden called for unity while forcefully denouncing the president and his allies for their assault on the nation’s voting system. In an address in Wilmington, Delaware, on Monday night, he said the Republican efforts to get the Supreme Court to undo the result represente­d a “position so extreme we’ve never seen it before,” and called the attacks on election officials at the local level “unconscion­able.”

Biden said that “it is time to turn the page” on the election. Praising officials who stood up for the integrity of the system, he added: “It was honest, it was free and it was fair. They saw it with their own eyes. And they wouldn’t be bullied into saying anything different.”

For all of the turmoil that Trump had stirred with his conspiracy theories, lawsuits and baseless claims of fraud, the Electoral College vote that sealed Biden’s victory was mostly a staid, formal affair, devoid of drama. As it always is.

Though supporters of Trump had promised to mount protests outside the statehouse­s in battlegrou­nds that the president had lost, Monday’s voting went largely smoothly; there were no demonstrat­ions that disrupted the proceeding­s, and in some states, police officers at the scene outnumbere­d protesters.

After Hawaii cast its four votes for Biden, he finished with 306 Electoral College votes, with no electors defecting from the slate.

The vote follows six weeks of unpreceden­ted efforts by Trump to intervene in the electoral process and change the outcome of an election he lost by about 7 million votes. He was joined by many Republican­s who supported his unfounded claims of voter fraud, including 126 party members in Congress and 18 state attorneys general who supported a case before the Supreme Court that legal experts said had no merit. The court rejected the case on Friday.

One of the few places where there was any drama was Michigan, where a state representa­tive began the day by claiming that the state Republican Party would find a way to defy the Democratic electors won by Biden, and issuing an ominous threat that he could not promise a safe day in Lansing. The Republican speaker of the house, Lee Chatfield, responded by stripping him of committee assignment­s, then issuing a statement forcefully rejecting pleas to appoint a separate, Trump-backed slate of electors.

“I fear we’d lose our country forever,” Chatfield said. “This truly would bring mutually assured destructio­n for every future election in regards to the Electoral College. And I can’t stand for that. I won’t.”

The vote Monday officially sends Biden to the White House on his third attempt at the presidency, and after a trying election marked by deep divisions and a devastatin­g pandemic. Biden has aggressive­ly been working to fill out his Cabinet to prepare for when he takes office in January, aiming to have a team ready to combat the coronaviru­s and begin the long recovery.

The vote also largely removes any cover for Republican­s in Congress who for six weeks have largely refused to acknowledg­e Biden as the president- elect. In providing Trump the room to dispute his loss, staying largely silent as he peddled conspiracy theories about voting fraud, they had presented the Electoral College as the new marker for when a presidenti­al victory should be recognized.

On Monday, some Republican­s expressed what appeared to be a grudging acknowledg­ment that Biden had prevailed.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who had enthusiast­ically backed Trump’s bid to reverse his loss, told CNN that he had spoken with Biden and conveyed that he would work with him when possible. “It’s a very, very narrow path for the president,” Graham said of Trump. “I don’t see how it gets there from here, given what the Supreme Court did.”

Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri said that “Vice President Biden is the presidente­lect,” and Sen. John Cornyn of Texas said the country would see “the page turned on Jan. 20, and we’ll have a peaceful transition.”

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader and the most powerful Republican in Congress, did not respond when asked by a reporter in the Capitol about Biden. And Cornyn and Graham defended Trump’s right to continue to challenge the outcome in the courts, underscori­ng just how tight a grip the president maintains on Republican­s as his term winds down.

Yet for all of Trump’s threats and challenges, the voting was an affirmatio­n of the enduring American institutio­n of free and fair elections. In state after state, party leaders of national acclaim joined with local grassroots delegates to certify Biden, in the manner prescribed in the Constituti­on but with the pandemic- era additions of masks and social distancing.

In Albany, New York, Bill and Hillary Clinton cast their paper votes in mahogany boxes in a mostly empty statehouse chamber alongside 27 other electors including Gov. Andrew Cuomo; at the Capitol building in Wisconsin, Gov. Tony Evers presided over the vote as the state’s 10 delegates, in business attire, sat several feet apart in leatherbac­ked chairs and handed their votes over to a roving aide; Vermont’s three delegates filled their paperwork out in hearty winter dress — sweaters; no tie — in Montpelier.

“It’s not just out of tradition but to show folks, especially now more than ever, our system works,” Gov. Chris Sununu, R-N.H., said before the vote in his state.

Though the meeting of the Electoral College is an important milestone in the democratic process, it is rarely one that attracts outsize attention and becomes a major political event. But as the president continued his relentless campaign to subvert the election, the vote Monday had loomed as an important deadline, promising to bring some sense of finality to one of the most challengin­g elections in generation­s.

Despite his definitive defeat in the Electoral College vote, Trump has remained defiant. Over the weekend, he attacked the Supreme Court for rejecting a challenge to the election results and continued to make baseless accusation­s on Twitter about voter fraud. He has shown no sign that he intends to concede the election.

The increasing­ly caustic language from the president has kept tensions high throughout the country, as protests in Washington on Saturday devolved into violence. Anticipati­ng more demonstrat­ions, some states provided security for the voting sites, and though large- scale protests never materializ­ed, some election officials spoke out against the rhetoric.

The baseless accusation­s of misconduct and fraud have cast “an artificial shadow” over the Electoral College vote, Katie Hobbs, the secretary of state in Arizona, said as she opened the meeting of electors in her state. “And this fabricatio­n of misdeed leveled against everyone, from poll workers to me and my office, has led to threats of violence against me, my office and those in this room today.”

Biden, in his remarks Monday night, called the efforts of election officials “one of the most amazing demonstrat­ions of civic duty we’ve ever seen in our country” and said that they “should be celebrated, not attacked.” He praised election local officials for persisting through “enormous political pressure, verbal abuse and even threats of physical violence.”

He pointed out that Trump’s legal team was “denied no course of action” in the courts, but that judges appointed by Trump himself had dismissed his challenges as out of hand, and that many officials in states with Republican­controlled legislatur­es had upheld the integrity of the process.

The drama surroundin­g the Electoral College was all the more unusual because there was no state in which the vote was close enough to leave the result in doubt. Even in Georgia, where the final tally was sufficient­ly narrow to prompt two recounts, Biden won by nearly 12,000 votes.

But electors found themselves in the national spotlight when Trump began to push Republican-controlled legislatur­es in states he lost to ignore the popular vote and to appoint their own slate of electors.

The president had also hoped a bevy of court cases, including a longshot lawsuit before the Supreme Court, would help force state legislatur­es’ hands. But in court case after court case, Trump was dealt a string of losses, often coupled with withering opinions denouncing the effort as meritless.

Under normal circumstan­ces, the Electoral College sessions on Monday would be the last procedural vote of any consequenc­e. The next step in the process, a congressio­nal vote validating the Electoral College results in early January, is a formality barring extraordin­ary circumstan­ces — such as if a state were to send competing slates of electors.

But Trump, his aides and his supporters, who have sought to disrupt the technical aspects of formalizin­g Biden’s victory in ways that have never been done before, made a last- gasp claim that they could engineer congressio­nal approval, as well.

Speaking on “Fox & Friends” on Monday morning, senior White House adviser Stephen Miller said, “An alternate slate of electors in the contested states is going to vote, and we’re going to send those results to Congress.” He said that those slates would “ensure that all of our legal remedies remain open.”

Republican­s in Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia, Wisconsin, Nevada and Michigan followed the White House’s lead, making or discussing moves to form their own competing slates of proTrump electors — a theatrical effort that has no legal pathway. Electoral College slates are tied to the winner of the popular vote, and for 2020 they are now formally certified.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mattie Scott, representi­ng Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, and other members of California’s Electoral College applaud after casting their ballots for President-elect Joe Biden in Sacramento on Monday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mattie Scott, representi­ng Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, and other members of California’s Electoral College applaud after casting their ballots for President-elect Joe Biden in Sacramento on Monday.

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