The Mercury News

Duty or party?

For Republican­s, a choice on whether to enable Trump

- By Jim Rutenberg and Kathleen Gray

For the next three weeks, the integrity of American democracy is in the hands of people like Norman D. Shinkle, a proud Michigande­r who has, until recently, served in relative obscurity on the state board that certifies vote results.

But now Shinkle faces a choice born from the national election turmoil created by President Donald Trump, his preferred candidate, for whom he sang the national anthem at a campaign rally in Lansing, Michigan, last month.

Shinkle’s duty, as one of two Republican­s on the four-member board, is to validate the will of Michigan voters and certify President- elect Joe Biden’s victory before the Electoral College vote Dec. 14. Yet Shinkle is weighing whether to block certificat­ion at a board meeting scheduled for Monday because of minor glitches that Trump and his allies have baselessly cast as evidence of widespread, election-invalidati­ng fraud.

He said he had received hundreds of phone calls, emails and text messages from people for or against certifying. “You can’t make up your mind before you get all the facts,” he said.

That Shinkle is equivocati­ng over a once-routine step in the process — despite all 83 state counties submitting certified results and Biden leading by 154,000 votes — shows the damage inflicted by Trump on the American voting process and the faith that people in both parties have historical­ly shared in the outcome of elections.

But this is also a moment of truth for the Republican Party: The country is on a knife’s edge, with GOP officials from state capitols to Congress choosing between the will of voters and the will of one man. In pushing his false claims to the limits, cowing Republican­s into acquiescen­ce or silence and driving officials like Shinkle to nervous indecision, Trump has revealed the fragility of the electoral system — and shaken it. At this point, the president’s impact is not so much about overturnin­g the election — both parties agree he has no real chance of doing that — but infusing the democratic process with so much mistrust and confusion that it ceases to function as it should.

Under an unending barrage of fraud charges, voters might begin to question the legitimacy of elected officials from the rival party as a matter of course. And the GOP risks being seen as standing for disenfranc­hisement and the undemocrat­ic position that a high level of voting is somehow detrimenta­l.

“What Trump is doing is creating a road map to destabiliz­ation and chaos in future years,” said Trevor Potter, a Republican who served as chair of the Federal Election Commission

in the 1990s. “What he’s saying, explicitly, is if a party doesn’t like the election result they have the right to change it by gaming the system.”

Trump’s gambit, never realistic to begin with, appears to be growing more futile by the day: Georgia became the first contested state Friday to certify its vote for Biden, and the president continues to draw losing rulings from judges who bluntly note his failure to present any evidence of significan­t fraud or irregulari­ties. Some fellow Republican­s have started breaking with him, including Sen. Mitt Romney, a Trump critic, who said the president was seeking to “subvert the will of the people,” and Sen. Marco Rubio, who has acknowledg­ed Biden is the president-elect.

On Fr iday, Republican lawmakers in Michigan also made clear, after meeting with Trump at the White House, that they would allow the normal certificat­ion process to play out without interferin­g, a potentiall­y important signal ahead of the certificat­ion decision by the state elections board Monday.

But Saturday, the national and Michigan state party chairs issued a statement calling on the canvassing board to delay certificat­ion beyond its Monday deadline, to conduct an audit. If Shinkle and his fellow Republican on the state board, Aaron Van Langevelde, were to oppose certifying the results, the board would deadlock.

Democrats and election lawyers say the courts almost certainly would force the board to complete the certificat­ion process, well in time for the Electoral College deadline next month. And Gov. Gretchen Whitmer could replace the board members if they defy a court order. But they also agree a deadlocked vote would give Trump a new opportunit­y to cast doubt upon the legitimacy of the election system and Biden’s win, while also prolonging his own legally dubious and, so far, failing attempt to persuade Republican­s who control the Statehouse to send proTrump delegates to the Electoral College.

Biden’s adv isers say they are confident he will be awarded Michigan’s 16 Electoral College votes. But they acknowledg­e that the resulting national spectacle of court fights and new charges of fraud could prove “very harmful to the democratic process,” as Biden’s senior adviser, Bob Bauer, put it Friday.

If Trump has shown nothing else, it is that he has made the Republican Party — which initially sought to resist him — his own. Though a handful of prominent Republican­s have rebuked his refusal to cede power, far more, across all levels of government, have either tacitly or explicitly embraced a new standard in presidenti­al elections: No winner can be declared until the full Electoral College certificat­ion process is complete, no matter how clear the results after Election Day.

Sen. John Cornyn of Texas has acknowledg­ed that he hadn’t “seen anything that would change the outcome” but told reporters Thursday that Biden “is not president-elect until the votes are certified.” Cornyn congratula­ted Trump as president- elect on the day the major news organizati­ons projected him as the winner in 2016.

The president’s clout with his party is reinforced by the widespread support he has from millions of Americans; almost 74 million people voted for him this year.

Former Sen. Jeff Flake, a staunch opponent of Trump, has urged Republican­s to recognize Biden as president- elect. But he noted that Republican­s worry about alienating Trump when they need his help for the upcoming Georgia runoffs, which will decide control of the Senate.

“If the Republican­s abandon him, he may just abandon them,” he said.

Trump’s baseless argument that this is still an election up for grabs was prevalent in interviews with Republican­s across the country Friday.

Ginger Howard, a Republican national committeew­oman from Georgia, said she still believed there were other avenues for Trump to pursue, despite the state’s certificat­ion of Biden as the winner there.

“There’s still recourse for sure; we’ve got some other options,” she said Friday without elaboratin­g.

Jason Thompson, who represents Georgia to the Republican National Committee, also echoed Trump’s unfounded skepticism.

“It’s not like I’m saying there’s no way he won,” he said. “All I’m saying is we’ll never know for sure.”

In Pennsylvan­ia, Trump has less opportunit­y to try to block certificat­ion than he does in Michigan and Wisconsin, where he has requested recounts in two counties. After the state’s 67 counties certify their votes — the deadline is Monday — they go to Secretary of the Commonweal­th Kathy Boockvar, a Democrat, who has sole power to certify state results. In Michigan, the president’s opportunit­y is limited if not nonexisten­t. On Friday, the state Bureau of Elections submitted its formal report recommendi­ng that the canvassing board affirm Biden’s win. Errors in some vote tabulation­s, which Trump has seized upon, were “attributab­le to human error’’ and “did not affect the actual tabulation of votes,” the elections bureau said.

That, said Christophe­r Thomas, an election adviser to the city of Detroit, means the canvassing board is obligated to affirm the vote. “The law doesn’t say you can decide or not — the law says if you get certified returns you go ahead and do what you’re supposed to do,” he said.

As Monday’s vote approaches, Shinkle, the Republican board member, finds himself in a tight spot. In contrast to past cases, he said, “I’ve got many more so-called conservati­ves saying bad things about me.” He said he had some unresolved concerns about the vote totals in Detroit, where there were discrepanc­ies with roughly 350 votes out of more than 250,000 cast.

Shinkle said his primary goal is to be able to look in the mirror and feel good about his decisions. “I can’t let any other individual be involved in that decision,” he said. “I just have to do the best that I can based on what’s ethical and legal.”

“What Trump is doing is creating a road map to destabiliz­ation and chaos in future years. What he’s saying, explicitly, is if a party doesn’t like the election result they have the right to change it by gaming the system.” — Trevor Potter, Republican who served as chair of the Federal Election Commission on the 1990s

 ?? DOUG MILLS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump continues to fight to overturn the election result even though it appears his efforts are becoming more futile with each day.
DOUG MILLS — THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump continues to fight to overturn the election result even though it appears his efforts are becoming more futile with each day.

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