The Arizona Republic

Sen. Lee worked to overturn election

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SALT LAKE CITY – Utah Sen. Mike Lee worked on early efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, helping push legally dubious schemes to keep then-President Donald Trump in power, before he shifted course and quickly backed away.

His efforts, revealed in text messages obtained by the House panel investigat­ing the deadly insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, drew quick condemnati­on Friday from his reelection challenger­s.

Text messages between the Republican senator and then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows detail how Lee encouraged top Trump advisers to embrace Sidney Powell, a Republican lawyer who later spread wild and baseless claims of a rigged election.

The messages from Lee to Meadows – and messages from Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy to Meadows – were reported on and published Friday by CNN.

They show Lee’s efforts to assist Trump began Nov. 7 and included early support for Powell. Later, Lee explored a plan to encourage state legislatur­es to alter the outcome of the 2020 election by appointing alternate electors.

At one point, Lee said he was working “14 hour days” assisting Trump. At another he asked Meadows, “Please tell me what I should be saying.”

By mid-November, however, the messages show Lee beginning to lose confidence in Powell and, eventually, the alternate electors plan. He also questioned efforts to object to the vote certificat­ion after no evidence of widespread fraud emerged.

“I only know that this will end badly for the President unless we have the Constituti­on on our side,” Lee wrote to Meadows. He and Roy did not join congressio­nal Republican­s who objected to the results when they were certified in January.

Still, Lee’s Republican primary opponent Becky Edwards, a former state lawmaker, said the messages show Lee “researched overturnin­g a lawful, democratic election for partisan and political gain ... he allowed the situation to continue and enabled those seeking to keep themselves in power, no matter the consequenc­es.”

Ally Isom, a former gubernator­ial deputy chief of staff who is also challengin­g Lee, said the messages show he is “more concerned with playing DC games” than with representi­ng people in Utah. “I am a classic conservati­ve,” she said in a statement.

Independen­t Evan McMullin, a former presidenti­al candidate, also criticized Lee on Twitter.

Lee’s spokesman, for his part, said the senator did follow the Constituti­on and the messages “tell the same story Sen. Lee told from the floor of the Senate the day he voted to certify the election results.”

Lee’s messages are the latest example of high-profile Republican­s pushing Meadows to challenge the election results.

Last month, The Washington Post and CBS reported that Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, also texted Meadows repeatedly imploring him to act to overturn the 2020 election. Her involvemen­t in the efforts have raised concerns about her husband’s potential involvemen­t in any cases involving the election or the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

 ?? AP ?? Text messages reveal how Utah Sen. Mike Lee worked on early efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
AP Text messages reveal how Utah Sen. Mike Lee worked on early efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

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