The Maui News

Trump VP contender Tim Scott doesn’t want to talk about VP role in certifying election

- By AAMER MADHANI

REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. — Sen. Tim Scott, a potential running mate if Donald Trump becomes the Republican presidenti­al nominee, is treading carefully on questions about whether he would have certified the 2020 election had he been vice president at that time.

On Jan. 6, 2021, about two months after Trump lost the White House, thenVice President Mike Pence defied his boss and refused to use his largely ceremonial role in overseeing the election certificat­ion process to block Democrat Joe Biden’s victory. Pence went forward with ratificati­on of the Electoral College even after a violent mob of Trump supporters, some of whom chanted “Hang Mike Pence,” swarmed the U.S. Capitol, interrupti­ng the congressio­nal proceeding­s and forcing Pence, his family and staff into hiding in the complex.

Scott, a Trump rival in the 2024 race who dropped out and later endorsed the former president, declined to say in two Sunday news show interviews whether he would have acted differentl­y as vice president.

“I’m not going to answer hypothetic­al questions, No. 1,” said Scott, R-S.C. He added: “You’re asking a hypothetic­al question that you know can never happen again.”

Scott voted in favor of certifying the 2020 results when the Senate got back to work after the siege. He also said during a presidenti­al debate last year that Pence did the right thing when he certified the election.

The issue of certificat­ion is beginning to emerge again among Republican­s. Two other potential Trump vice president contenders, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio and Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, said this month they would not have allowed 2020 election results to be certified on Jan. 6 had they been in Pence’s position.

Scott sidesteppe­d questions Sunday about how he saw the vice president’s role in the certificat­ion process.

“The one thing we know about the future is that the former president, fortunatel­y, he’ll be successful in 2024, he won’t be facing that situation again,” Scott said. “So what we should focus on is what will cause the former president, President Trump, to be the next president of the United States.”

Congress passed legislatio­n in 2022 changing the law that governs the certificat­ion of a presidenti­al contest, with the aim of avoiding a repeat of Trump’s effort to reverse his 2020 loss. The legislatio­n, in part, makes clear that the vice president’s responsibi­lities in the certificat­ion process are merely ceremonial and that the vice president has no say in determinin­g who actually won the election.

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