Houston Chronicle

GOP to challenge election result

Congressio­nal clash threatens to divide party in the years to follow Trump era

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Republican­s mounting an unpreceden­ted challenge to Joe Biden’s election win are setting up a congressio­nal showdown Wednesday that threatens to divide their party and the country for years to come.

With protesters already gathering in Washington to support President Donald Trump, the House and the Senate will convene a joint session to count the electoral votes cast in November’s election. Trump has repeatedly said there was widespread fraud, but his claims have been roundly rejected by Republican and Democratic election officials in state after state and by judges, including at the Supreme Court, further cementing Biden’s victory.

Trump sees the joint session of Congress as one of his final attempts to overturn the results, even though there is no credible path for that to happen. Echoing Trump’s baseless claims, some of his Republican allies in Congress plan to formally object to the results, focusing on six battlegrou­nd states — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. But a growing number of their GOP colleagues, especially in the Senate, said they would not sign on.

If an objection has support from both a House member and a senator in writing, then both chambers will vote on it. That could happen three or more times Wednesday as Republican Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri, Ted Cruz of Texas, and Kelly Loeffler of Georgia, alongwith at least 10 other GOP senators, have indicated they will support at least some of the House challenges. It is unclear just what the Republican senators will do, but the process could drag into the night as the two chambers will have to consider each objection individual­ly. There could be more than 100 Republican­s in the House willing to object.

Republican­s had not yet settled on a full strategy the night before the joint session. A late-night meeting Monday convened by Cruz reached few conclusion­s, according to two Republican­s familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to discuss it. Cruz will object to electoral results from Arizona, another Republican said — likely to be the first objection considered, in a state Biden won.

Hawley has said he will object to the Pennsylvan­ia results, and Loeffler may object to Georgia, where she was vying to keep her seat in a runoff election Tuesday.

With mounting desperatio­n, Trump declared at a campaign rally for Sens. Loeffler and David Perdue in Georgia on Monday that he would “fight like hell” to hold on to the presidency and he appealed to Republican lawmakers to reverse his election loss. Perdue is seeking another six years in the Senate, but his term expired Sunday.

The high-stakes decisions on whether to ally with Trump are splitting the Republican Party. A range of Republican officials — including Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland; Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the third-ranking House GOP leader; and former House Speaker Paul Ryan — have criticized the GOP efforts to overturn the election. And more than a dozen Republican senators have said they will not support the effort.

“The 2020 election is over,” said a statement Sunday froma bipartisan group of 10 senators, including Republican­s Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Mitt Romney of Utah. Several others have said they, too, will not back objections, including Republican Sens. John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate who said last month he thought any challenges would go down “like a shot dog.”

Cruz’s coalition of 13 senators has said it will vote to reject the Electoral College tallies unless Congress launches a commission to immediatel­y conduct an audit of the election results. Congress is unlikely to agree to that.

Facing the criticism from many in his own party, Cruz has attempted to put a finer point on his challenge. The commission remains his focus, he has said, not to undo the election results.

“We are going to vote to object to the electors — not to set aside the election, I don’t think that would actually be the right thing to do,” Cruz said on Mark Levin’s conservati­ve talk radio show Monday. “But rather to press for the appointmen­t of an electoral commission.”

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