Los Angeles Times

Electors are expected to back Trump

Protests, petitions and other efforts to stop the billionair­e in the electoral college appear doomed.

- By Cathleen Decker

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump is expected to move a consequent­ial step closer to his inaugurati­on as president Monday when the members of the electoral college hold 51 separate meetings nationwide to cast the ballots that will formally determine the winner of the November election.

In keeping with the chaotic campaign, the run-up to the electors’ balloting has been filled with protests and disputes over the constituti­onally mandated gatherings.

Millions of Americans have signed petitions, deluged electors with letters and emails and indulged in elaborate hypothetic­als about how those votes might be swayed. The passion behind those efforts has been intensifie­d by postelecti­on drama over U.S. intelligen­ce that indicates Russia attempted to assist Trump before the election by stealing and distributi­ng private emails from Democratic institutio­ns and activists.

Going into the Monday meetings in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia, Trump held a comfortabl­e lead of 306 votes to 232 for Hillary Clinton, based on the popular vote tallied on and after Nov. 8.

And by all indication­s, despite the unusual level of scrutiny, those votes largely will be cast according to expectatio­ns.

The 538 electoral votes are allocated by state. In nearly all states, the candidate who wins a majority of the popular vote in the state wins all of its electoral votes.

Trump’s margin means 37 electors would have to turn from him to Clinton or some other candidate to deny him the majority, but unless another candidate spontaneou­sly emerged to win a majority of electors’ votes, defections would serve only to send the election to the Republican-controlled House, which would presumably side with the party’s nominee.

More electors would have to flip their votes in order to give the White House to the Democratic nominee. Any significan­t number of defections is highly unlikely, because most electors are party loyalists.

Rump efforts to deny Trump the presidency by turning his electors against him appear not to have gained much ground. To date, only one Republican elector, in Texas, has said publicly that he would not vote for Trump. A separate Democratic attempt to turn Clinton balloters away from her so they could join with Republican­s to back a new

candidate has similarly gotten little traction, not least because no alternativ­e candidate has stepped forward.

A group of electors led by Christine Pelosi, the daughter of House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and like her mother a San Francisco Democrat, has sought a meeting with intelligen­ce officials to discuss their views on the election hacking.

The office of the director of national intelligen­ce, James R. Clapper, said in a statement Friday that agencies continued to believe that hacking was meant to interfere with the election and that “only Russia’s senior-most officials could have authorized these activities.” But it declined to release more informatio­n pending the conclusion of an investigat­ion that President Obama has directed.

Although Democrats — and many Republican­s — have denounced the Russian interferen­ce and called for investigat­ions, Clinton’s aides have not suggested that it caused her defeat. The release of Democratic emails created a “head wind” that impeded Clinton’s campaign, her campaign manager, Robby Mook, has said, but other factors loomed larger.

The last time the electoral college received anything like the attention showered on it this year was in 2000, when the extremely close presidenti­al contest was decided in a December Supreme Court judgment. Democrat Al Gore won the popular vote that year, but Republican George W. Bush won more electoral votes. The electors themselves did not attract as much scrutiny that time around as they have this year, perhaps because of the large role played in 2000 by the high court.

The distance between the popular and electoral votes is even more pronounced this year; although Trump leads in the electoral college, Clinton beat him by almost 3 million individual votes out of the 137 million cast — more than five times Gore’s margin in the popular vote. Clinton ran up huge margins in heavily populated, largely Democratic states, including California, while Trump eked out narrow victories in key swing states.

That and Trump’s relative unpopulari­ty for an incoming president are driving consternat­ion about the formal vote, according to electoral college scholar George C. Edwards III.

“Usually 99% of electors are faithful — they vote the way their state votes,” said Edwards, a political science professor at Texas A&M University. “This year there’s a more organized effort than normal to overturn the presumed majority.”

Yet apart from the possibilit­y of a few rogue votes, he said, “I think nothing is going to happen in the end.”

The process of formally naming a president was laid out in the Constituti­on and its 12th Amendment, adopted in 1804.

After Monday’s voting, which is scheduled to begin in midmorning in the East and then cascade across the country, ending in Hawaii late in the day, the ballots are sent to Washington. There, on Jan. 6, they will be tallied in a joint session of the House and Senate. Vice President Joe Biden, as president of the Senate, will formally declare the results. Barring a shocking reversal, Trump will be inaugurate­d on Jan. 20.

California’s 55 electors, pledged to Clinton under the winner-take-all rules in effect, are scheduled to meet at the state Capitol in Sacramento at 2 p.m. to cast their ballots.

Trump opponents, working until the last minute to try to overturn the expected result, plan to hold protests outside the state Capitol. Others are scheduled across the country.

President Obama, in his Friday news conference, declined to call on electors to change their votes, saying that “it’s the American people’s job, and now the electors’ job, to decide my successor.”

He called the electoral college “a vestige” from an earlier era but advised Democrats to spend their time building a message that would win both the popular vote and the electoral college.

“There are some structures in our political system, as envisioned by the founders, that sometimes are going to disadvanta­ge Democrats,” he said. “But the truth of the matter is … if we have a strong message, if we’re speaking to what the American people care about, typically the popular vote and the electoral college vote will align.”

“If we look for one explanatio­n or one silver bullet or one easy fix for our politics, then we’re probably going to be disappoint­ed,” he added.

Outgoing Sen. Barbara Boxer of California was among Democrats who have made a postelecti­on push for changes in the electoral system, citing the divergence between the electoral and the popular votes.

But given the nation’s current polarizati­on, the odds of substantiv­e change seem a stretch.

To alter the Constituti­on would require agreement of two-thirds of both houses of Congress and the approval of three-quarters of the states. Because the highpopula­tion — and thus highpopula­r-vote — areas of the nation are strongly Democratic, the Republican areas have no incentive to change the rules that have favored them. A majority of states sided with Trump.

A new CBS News poll found views about the electoral college to be sharply polarized.

Overall, Americans favored deciding presidents by popular vote, 54% to 41%. Among Democrats, the popular vote was favored by a 60-point margin. Among Republican­s, the electoral college was favored by a 43point margin.

Still, Americans were more comfortabl­e abiding this year by the rules now in place. Asked how they would feel about electors who sided with someone other than their state’s winner, 57% said they disapprove­d of that action, and only 37% said they’d back the move.

 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? DESPITE APPEALS to electors to withhold their votes for Donald Trump, “nothing is going to happen in the end,” one electoral college scholar said.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press DESPITE APPEALS to electors to withhold their votes for Donald Trump, “nothing is going to happen in the end,” one electoral college scholar said.

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