US Congress certifies Joe Biden win
Congress formally certified Joe Biden as the next US president yesterday, dealing a hammer blow to Donald Trump whose supporters stormed the Capitol hours earlier, triggering unprecedented scenes of mayhem in the seat of American democracy.
Lawmakers in the Senate and House of Representatives successfully beat back Republican efforts to deny Biden the electoral votes needed to win, prompting loud cheers when the certification was announced.
The affirmation of Biden’s 306-232 victory over Trump in November essentially closes the door on the unparalleled and deeply controversial effort by Trump and his loyalists to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
The president immediately released a statement pledging an ‘orderly transition’ but suggesting he would remain in frontline politics, amid speculation that he may run again in 2024.
“Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th,” he said.
“I have always said we would continue our fight to ensure that only legal votes were counted. While this represents the end of the greatest first term in presidential history, it’s only the beginning of our fight to Make America Great Again!”
The certification came hours a er a mob breached the US Capitol and sent lawmakers scrambling for safety. They were able to return hours later, shaken but determined to complete the task.
Egged on in an extraordinary rally across town by an aggrieved Trump, a flag-waving mob had broken down barricades outside the Capitol and swarmed inside, rampaging through offices and onto the usually solemn legislative floors.
Security forces fired tear gas in a four-hour operation to clear the Capitol. Police said that one woman, reportedly a female Trump partisan from southern California, was shot and killed and that three other people died in the area in circumstances that were unclear.
Biden called the violence an ‘insurrection’ and demanded that Trump immediately go on national television to tell the rioters to stand down.
“Our democracy’s under unprecedented assault,” Biden said in his home state of Delaware.
“This is not dissent. It’s disorder. It’s chaos. It borders on sedition. And it must end now.”
Trump soon a erward released a video in which he called on the mob to leave but repeated his unfounded claims of election fraud.
“We have to have peace. So go home. We love you — you’re very special,” he said.
The chaos at the Capitol came a day a er Biden enjoyed a new triumph, with his Democrats projected to win two Senate seats in runoffs in Georgia — handing the party full control of Congress and dramatically increasing Biden’s ability to pass legislation, starting with new Covid-19 relief.
Historians said it was the first time that the Capitol had been taken over since 1814 when the British burned it during the War of 1812.
With Democrats already in control of the House of Representatives, there was never any chance that Congress would overturn Biden’s victory.
Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, who is set to become majority leader a er Tuesday’s election victories, described the violence as an a empted coup and said it would be remembered in US history much like the Japanese a ack on Pearl Harbor.
“This mob was in good part President Trump’s doing, incited by his words, his lies,” Schumer said, adding that Trump would bear ‘everlasting shame’.
Former president Barack Obama called the violence ‘a moment of great dishonour and shame for our nation’.
“But we’d be kidding ourselves if we treated it as a total surprise,” Obama said, adding that it was ‘incited’ by Trump, ‘ who has continued to baselessly lie about the outcome of a lawful election’.
Former president George W Bush also did not mince words, saying: “This is how election results are disputed in a banana republic — not our democratic republic.”
Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th. Donald Trump statement