Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LAWMAKERS who challenged Biden win faulted back home.

- JEFFREY COLLINS

Republican members of Congress who voted against certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s victory, even after a mob broke into the Capitol, are being denounced by critics in their home districts who demand that they resign or be ousted.

Protesters, newspaper editorial boards and local-level Democrats have urged the lawmakers to step down or for their colleagues to kick them out. The House and Senate can remove members with a two- thirds vote or censure or reprimand with a majority.

Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., “needs to be held accountabl­e for his seditious behavior and for the consequenc­es resulting from said behavior,” a group of Democratic officials wrote in a letter asking House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to expel the freshman lawmaker who took his oath of office on Jan. 3.

Cawthorn said he had a constituti­onal duty to vote against Biden. He condemned the violence in Wednesday’s attack, but compared it to last summer’s protests over police brutality.

A Capitol police officer died and an officer shot and killed a woman in the mob. Three other people died from medical emergencie­s in the chaos, which forced lawmakers and staff members to go into hiding as the rioters roamed the halls of one of America’s most hallowed buildings.

Pelosi and other Democratic leaders in Congress are pushing to have President Donald Trump impeached for encouragin­g the insurrecti­on and refusing to act to stop the violence. But they have been quiet about whether lawmakers who backed the untrue claims of voter fraud that led to the melee should be punished.

Most previous expulsions have been for members who backed the Confederac­y during the Civil War or for taking bribes.

In St. Louis on Saturday, several hundred people protested against Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who led efforts in the Senate to overturn Biden’s election. The protesters painted “RESIGN HAWLEY” in large yellow letters in the middle of the street.

A caravan of about 40 cars circled the Madison, Wisc., office of Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., urging him to resign. Johnson initially supported Trump’s claims of election fraud, but after the riot, he voted in favor of Biden’s win. Johnson condemned the violence but did not back off voter fraud allegation­s.

The editorial boards of two of Wisconsin’s biggest newspapers called for Johnson to resign, joining with editorials published across the country that targeted GOP politician­s.

The Houston Chronicle, long a critic of Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said in an editorial that the Republican knew exactly what he was doing and what might happen when he took to the Senate floor to dispute the election results.

“Those terrorists wouldn’t have been at the Capitol if you hadn’t staged this absurd challenge to the 2020 results in the first place,” the newspaper wrote.

Cruz has called the attack a despicable act of terrorism, but he continues to push for a commission to investigat­e the presidenti­al election.

In Alabama, the Decatur Daily called for local Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., to resign. The York Dispatch in Pennsylvan­ia said Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., is “a disgrace to Pennsylvan­ia and our democracy,” and if he still believes Biden’s election is fraudulent, he should resign because that means his election was bogus too. Perry condemned the Capitol violence.

The Danville Register & Bee in Virginia said Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., needs to go because his words struck the matches that led to the destructiv­e mobs. Good said his vote was to protect his constituen­ts.

The invading Trump loyalists “confronted security personnel, and there were injuries and even deaths,” the paper’s editorial board wrote. “And you are just as guilty as they were.”

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