Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Johnson changed tune on objections

- Haley BeMiller

It’s a new year, and the turmoil surroundin­g the 2020 presidenti­al election still isn’t over.

Congress convened Wednesday to count the Electoral College votes that show President-elect Joe Biden defeating President Donald Trump 306 to 232. Until rioters breached the Capitol Wednesday, Vice President Mike Pence, acting as Senate president, was to open the sealed certificates from each state, hand them to tellers to read aloud and call for any objections to the results.

That’s where Wisconsin U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson planned to come in.

Johnson and 10 other Republican senators and senators-elect issued a statement Saturday saying they would object to the votes in “disputed states” unless an election audit is completed.

The move came as Trump and his allies have continued to try to cast doubt on the Nov. 3 election despite no evidence of widespread fraud and nearly 60 failed legal attempts to overturn the results.

Weeks before that, Johnson was singing a different tune about the Jan. 6 session. So we decided to break out our Flip-O-Meter.

Reminder: We’re not measuring whether any change in position is good policy or good politics. We’re just examining whether a public official has been consistent in his or her stated views.

Let’s take a look.

Then

A Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter asked Johnson on Dec. 15 whether he planned to object to the Electoral College votes.

“No, I don’t have any plans,” Johnson said. “Something would have to surface that would call into question the legitimacy of the election. Again, so far nothing has … again, plenty of irregulari­ties, things that need to be investigat­ed.”

He went on to say he regarded the election as legitimate and accepted Biden as president-elect. The next day, however, he held a Senate hearing to discuss election “irregulari­ties” and argued that legitimate questions had been raised about how it was administer­ed in Wisconsin and other states.

PolitiFact on WTMJ-TV

You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the 4 p.m. newscast on WTMJ-TV Milwaukee.

Still, Johnson said he didn’t anticipate a level of fraud that would change the election’s outcome.

“Today we will hear testimony on … how fraudulent voting did occur, as it always does,” he said during the hearing. “The question that follows is whether the level of fraud would alter the outcome of the election. This year, through dozens of court cases, through the certification process in each state, and by the Electoral College vote, the conclusion has collective­ly been reached that it would not.”

Now

Johnson’s more recent comments, however, paint an entirely different picture.

In their statement, Johnson and his Republican colleagues claimed that the 2020 election “featured unpreceden­ted allegation­s of voter fraud, violations and lax enforcemen­t of election law, and other voting irregulari­ties.”

Johnson added to that in a talk radio appearance Monday, saying 50 million to 70 million Americans “have real legitimate suspicions that this election was stolen” — but offered nothing more than suspicions, which Trump and others helped stoke.

That same day, he said on Fox News that affirming the results would turn a blind eye to alleged problems in certain states. Again, he did not offer specifics on new evidence, but rather past allegation­s that have been litigated in lawsuits and other forums.

He also appeared on the conservati­ve Newsmax network and argued for an investigat­ion, saying fraud allegation­s need to be taken seriously.

“There’s so many irregulari­ties here,” Johnson said in the interview.

Spokesmen for Johnson did not respond to PolitiFact Wisconsin’s inquiry about what changed the senator’s mind.

But here’s what hasn’t changed: Courts across the country, including the nation’s highest, continue to throw out lawsuits brought by Trump allies alleging the election was rigged. And as of Dec. 23, only a handful of fraud cases had emerged in battlegrou­nd states — including one woman charged in suburban Milwaukee.

That’s hardly unpreceden­ted.

Our ruling

Johnson said in mid-December that he had no plans to object to the Electoral College results that Congress was to tally on Jan. 6. He spoke of potential “irregulari­ties” in certain states but overall considered the election to be legitimate.

Weeks later, he joined other Republican­s in pledging to object despite no evidence of rampant fraud emerging.

We give Johnson a Full Flop.

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