The Morning Call

Pa. GOP congressme­n still will not acknowledg­e Biden’s win

7 supported suit to toss out state’s votes, have little to say

- By Jonathan Tamari

The seven Republican congressme­n from Pennsylvan­ia who supported a lawsuit that wouldhave thrown out their own state’s votes in the presidenti­al race had little to say about the final outcome after the U.S. Supreme Court flatly rejected their effort and the Electoral College certified President-elect Joe Biden as the winner Monday.

Three of the seven — Reps. Fred Keller, Dan Meuser and Scott Perry — issued statements saying the amicus brief they signed, which supported a Texas lawsuit targeting Pennsylvan­ia’s votes, was only trying to ensure the proper procedures were followed. Aides to the four others — Reps. John Joyce, Mike Kelly, Guy Reschentha­ler, and Glenn Thompson — did not respond to emails and phone calls Monday and Tuesday requesting comment.

None formally acknowledg­ed what the Electoral College confirmed and has been clear for weeks: that Biden won. Perry has previously said he will mount a long-shot effort to block Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al electors when Congress formally receives them Jan. 6. It’s unclear if others from the state will join him.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, congratula­ted Biden as the president-elect on the Senate floor Tuesday morning.

The Texas lawsuit sought to dismiss the 6.9 million presidenti­al votes cast in Pennsylvan­ia and allow the GOP-controlled state legislatur­e to instead award the state’s 20 Electoral College votes. The suit, supported by 126 House Republican­s and 18 state attorneys general, sought similar remedies in Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin, also key battlegrou­nds Biden won.

Several of the Pennsylvan­ia congressme­n who joined the brief are seen as potential candidates for Senate or governor in 2022.

The legal filing they supported, seeking a drastic remedy that would disenfranc­hise their own constituen­ts, repeated misreprese­ntations about the vote in Pennsylvan­ia. For example, it falsely claimed that Philadelph­ia and Allegheny counties disobeyed state law regarding observers at their vote counts, and that guidance from Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar for how counties could help voters fix flawed mail ballots was applied unevenly. It was issued statewide.

Two of the state’s nine GOP congressme­n, Reps. Brian Fitzpatric­k and Lloyd Smucker, declined to support the Texas lawsuit, which the Supreme Court rejected late Friday, saying Texas “has not demonstrat­ed a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts its elections.”

In response to questions about the suit, Keller issued a statement Monday, and aides to Meuser and Perry pointed to previous statements defending their amicus brief, saying they were hoping to ensure the integrity of the election rules.

In each, the congressme­n argued that Boockvar and the state Supreme Court, which has a Democratic majority, oversteppe­d their bounds by taking steps to make it easier to vote by mail. Boockvar issued guidance that counties could allow eligi

ble voters to “cure” mail ballots with technical flaws such as missing signatures and the state Supreme Court extended the deadline for receiving mail ballots to three days after Election Day.

Those rules should have been set by the state Legislatur­e, the Republican­s argued, making the entire election in Pennsylvan­ia unconstitu­tional. They said the Legislatur­e set the rules to ensure against potential voter fraud.

“I signed on to the amicus brief supporting Texas’ lawsuit because it encouraged the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the clear authority of state legislatur­es to set the rules for how states choose their electors,” Keller said in a statement Monday. “The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision not to take up Texas’ case sets a dangerous precedent that governors can change election law without the consent of state legislatur­es, leaving open the possibilit­y that future elections will be as controvers­ial and chaotic as this one.”

There is no evidence of wide-

spread election fraud in Pennsylvan­ia or elsewhere, and Republican­s in the case focused on procedure and did not present evidence of any fraud. There was also no evidence presented that the outcome was altered by those procedural changes. For example, in Pennsylvan­ia, the order extending the ballot deadline affected about 10,000 votes in a state Biden won by 81,000.

The solution proposed by the Texas attorney general would have thrown out not just those votes, but all of Pennsylvan­ia’s. The congressio­nal GOP brief supporting the suit did not explicitly endorse that solution but also did not reject it.

“It is actually unbelievab­le that attorneys general and members of Congress, who swore an oath to the U.S., would act like they swore an oath to Trump. I don’t know if they need a surgeon to fix their spines or repair their heads, but something is wrong,” Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a Democrat who opposed the

Texas lawsuit on the state’s behalf, said in a statement. Shapiro is seen as a likely candidate for governor in 2022.

The arguments around election procedures had already been repeatedly rejected by courts in Pennsylvan­ia and the three other states where Republican­s sought to undermine the vote.

In one such case, decided in federal District Court in Pennsylvan­ia, Judge Matthew W. Brann, the former GOP chairman in Bradford County, ruled in November that Boockvar’s guidance was lawful and that the Trump campaign’s allegation­s werebased on speculatio­n “unsupporte­d by the evidence.”

“This cannot justify the disenfranc­hisement of a single voter, let alone all the voters in the sixth most populated state,” Brann wrote in a withering opinion.

Boockvar’s guidance applied to counties across the state, though some Republican county officials declined to allow voters to “cure” flawed mail ballots. Even those instances in which “curing” wasn’t allowed would have disproport­ionately affected Democratic voters, since they voted by mail morethan Republican­s, even in conservati­ve counties.

“We can’t have arbitrary and irregular actions taken and then think we have integrity in our election process they don’t mix,” Meuser said in a statement released Friday, and to which his aides pointed in response to questions this week. “We must have consistent rules, laws andrequire­ments for what constitute­s a legal vote.”

He hinted at the reality that Biden had won, but did not directly say it: “The amicus brief merely states our belief that the broad scope of the various allegation­s and irregulari­ties in the subject states merits careful, timely review by the Supreme Court. There will be a smooth transition of power to the next administra­tion, whatever the outcome of the court’s decision.”

Elections officials in both parties have said the election proceeded smoothly, especially considerin­g the pandemic. The controvers­y has been stirred almost entirely by unfounded claims of fraud, which have been rejected by courts across the country and Attorney General William Barr, a staunch Trump supporter.

A Perry spokespers­on pointed to a statement from the congressma­n last week in which he derided the guidance from state officials and the state Supreme Court ruling as an “unconstitu­tional process by which it bypassed a statewide ballot to change the election laws.”

Al Schmidt, a Philadelph­ia city commission­er and a Republican, tweeted Tuesday, “I hope all the public officials who worked so hard to undermine confidence in the outcome of this election are prepared to help clean up the mess they created now that everyone is finally accepting the truth.”

Though legal scholars almost universall­y saw the Texas challenge as a stunt certain to fail, Shapiro said the impacts could be long-lasting.

“This is a cancer that will require all of us to repair when the President leaves office on Jan. 20, this damage will still exist,” he said. “It’s sad, and scary, and should be a wake-up call to this country that there’s work to do.”

 ?? MANDELNGAN/AFP/GETTYIMAGE­S ?? President Donald Trump, right, greets Rep. Mike Kelly and his wife, Victoria, upon arrival at Erie Internatio­nal Airport in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, on October 10, 2018.
MANDELNGAN/AFP/GETTYIMAGE­S President Donald Trump, right, greets Rep. Mike Kelly and his wife, Victoria, upon arrival at Erie Internatio­nal Airport in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, on October 10, 2018.

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