San Diego Union-Tribune

GOP SPLINTERS OVER BID TO OVERTURN ELECTION

Lawmakers weigh fear of president against forcing vote

- BY CATIE EDMONDSON & EMILY COCHRANE Edmondson and Cochrane write for The New York Times.

Republican divisions deepened Monday over an insurgency in the party’s ranks seeking to overturn President-elect Joe Biden’s victory, as lawmakers weighed their fear of alienating President Donald Trump and his supporters against the consequenc­es of a precedent-setting vote to reject a democratic election.

With a Wednesday vote looming on whether to certify the election results, the last-ditch bid to deny Biden the presidency has unleashed open warfare among Republican­s, leaving them scrambling to stake out a defensible stance on a test that carried heavy repercussi­ons for their careers and their party.

On Monday, as Trump ratcheted up his demands for Republican­s to try to block Biden’s election, elder statesmen of the party and some rank-and-file lawmakers rushed to provide political cover for those disincline­d to go along.

In the House, seven Republican­s, some of whom are part of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus that normally aligns with Trump, released a statement arguing at length against the effort.

“The text of the Constituti­on is clear,” the lawmakers, led by Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, wrote. “States select electors. Congress does not. Accordingl­y, our path forward is also clear. We must respect the states’ authority here.”

Chief executives and other leaders from many of America’s largest businesses also weighed in, urging Congress to certify the electoral vote.

And John Danforth, a former Republican senator and paragon of the party establishm­ent, denounced the electoral challenge, calling it part of a “populist strategy to drive America even farther apart by promoting conspiracy theories and stoking grievances.”

“Lending credence to Trump’s false claim that the election was stolen is a highly destructiv­e attack on our constituti­onal government,” Danforth, a mentor to Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, the instigator of the effort in the Senate, said in a statement. “It is the opposite of conservati­ve; it is radical.”

Yet the effort won a highprofil­e convert Monday, when Sen. Kelly Loeff ler of Georgia announced just hours before Trump was to appear at a rally on her behalf that she, too, would vote against certifying the election results.

Complicati­ng the calculatio­n for fretful Republican­s were fresh revelation­s about Trump’s own efforts to subvert the election results by pressuring Georgia’s Republican secretary of state to “find” him enough votes to overturn Biden’s win. Proponents of the electoral challenge, who have sought to portray their position as principled and apolitical, conceded Monday that leaked audio of the call has made their task more difficult.

The gambit is all but guaranteed to prolong what is typically a brief and routine recap of each state’s electoral votes, set to begin at 1 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, prompting a bitter, hourslong debate that will culminate in a vote — or perhaps several — on whether to certify Biden’s election. Democratic leaders, on a private caucus call Monday, counseled lawmakers to avoid focusing on Trump during the discussion and instead highlight the lack of evidence of fraud.

“I don’t think we need to go all night,” said Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the House majority leader. “We have members from each state who are ready to discuss, you know, the status of their state, what happened and what the courts said.”

Still, more Republican­s announced Monday that they would back the objections to certifying the results.

Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, a rising star in the party who led Republican efforts to recruit women to Congress over the past two years, said she owed it to voters who believe the election was rigged to support the challenge.

“To the tens of thousands of constituen­ts and patriots across the country who have reached out to me in the past few weeks — please know that I hear you,” Stefanik said in a statement.

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate majority leader, and his deputies have made clear to colleagues that they strongly oppose the effort to reverse the election results, but Hawley has said he will force a vote and at least 12 other Republican senators plan to back him.

 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN AP ?? Sen. Kelly Loeff ler, R-Ga., campaigns in Augusta, Ga., on Monday. She said she will vote against certifying the presidenti­al election results.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN AP Sen. Kelly Loeff ler, R-Ga., campaigns in Augusta, Ga., on Monday. She said she will vote against certifying the presidenti­al election results.

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