The Denver Post

Senate Republican­s, stop Trump’s vote antics now

- By Jonathan Bernstein Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the election get more dangerous by the day, even as they remain doomed to failure. The latest developmen­t was well- summarized by this tweet:

President Trump took the extraordin­ary step of inviting Michigan state lawmakers to the White House as part of his bid to subvert the election.

— Mark S. Getzfred (@ marknyt) November 19, 2020 It’s time to put an end to it. There are three baskets of Republican elected officials right now. One group, most likely a fairly small minority, is gung- ho to use whatever power they can summon to subvert democracy. A second group, the majority, isn’t really thrilled with undemocrat­ic, illegal and unconstitu­tional actions, but is also terrified of Trump and perhaps willing to enjoy the benefits in the unlikely event that he succeeds. But there’s also a third group that has stepped up before to support democracy, elections and the rule of law.

So far, it’s been sufficient for responsibl­e Republican­s to simply accept the election of Presidente­lect Joe Biden.

But Trump continues to press increasing­ly far- fetched schemes like asking judges to invalidate legal votes and pressuring local officials to try to nominate Trump- friendly electors ( that is, the members of the electoral college who actually cast the final votes for president) in states where Biden won. Republican Senators Susan Collins, John Cornyn, Lisa Murkowski, Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio and Ben Sasse have all acknowledg­ed that Biden won the election. Eleven House Republican­s have joined them. They could end any suspense — there isn’t any really, but they could bring more finality to it — by releasing a statement making the following points:

States must follow their own laws, which specify that voters, not state legislatur­es, choose electors. There is no lawful way for state legislatur­es to override the voters after the election. Therefore, if any state legislatur­e attempts to send rogue electors contrary to the vote in their state, they intend to vote to accept the legitimate slate that was chosen by the voters. They could add that while Trump has the right to contest the results in the courts, he has a responsibi­lity as president to stop short of pressing frivolous cases and of amplifying false rumors and conspiracy theories. Well over two weeks after the election, Trump and his team have produced nothing even close to the kind of evidence that would bring any of the results into question, let alone flip the outcome in three or four states that would be needed to change the final result.

Look: The most likely outcome is still that Trump’s efforts will fizzle out, and that the appointmen­t of electors and the counting of their votes will become the purely ceremonial event that it always has been. But Trump has now gone from legitimate­ly contesting the election to illegitima­tely attempting to steal it, and in the process he’s underminin­g confidence in democracy. People are threatenin­g election officials trying to do their jobs, and Trump is putting pressure on Republican elected officials to join his unconstitu­tional scheming.

A few Republican senators issuing a clear statement now could make it clear that all of it is even more pointless than it currently appears. That would be good for the Republican Party, and good for the nation.

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