CONGRESS
‘Exercise in futility’: Republicans lambaste
Hawley’s push to challenge election
“I think it’s awful. I am going to support my oath to
the Constitution,” said one GOP senator.
By BURGESS
EVERETT
01/01/2021
04:07 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/01/republicans-hawley-election-challenge-453362
Multiple
Senate Republicans unloaded on an effort led by Sen. Josh Hawley to challenge
Joe Biden’s election victory as the party hurtles toward its most consequential
confrontation with Donald Trump of his entire presidency.
Hawley
(R-Mo.) denied that he was trying to overturn the election by challenging the
certification of at least one state and forcing the Senate into an up-or-down
vote on Biden’s wins. He said he was merely trying to voice his frustration
with the election results, arguing this is his one chance “to stand and be
heard.”
But some of
his colleagues are thoroughly unimpressed.
“I think
it’s awful. I am going to support my oath to the Constitution. That’s the
loyalty test here,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).
Sen. Mitt
Romney (R-Utah) called Hawley’s move “disappointing and destructive. And
borrowing from Ben Sasse it’s ambition pointing a gun at the head of
democracy.” Sasse (R-Neb.) said this week that "adults don’t point a
loaded gun at the heart of legitimate self-government."
“I’m going
to vote to certify the election,” said Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) of Hawley’s
effort. “I don’t think it’s a good idea and I don’t understand his reasoning.”
Already
it’s become clear the effort will fail given the public opposition from those
senators and others like Sens. Shelly Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Susan Collins
(R-Maine) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.), who flatly said “no” Friday when asked if
he would join Hawley. A simple majority is enough to certify Biden’s win, and
there are 48 Senate Democrats.
But the
vote on Jan. 6 to certify Biden’s win is viewed within the GOP as a painful
litmus test. Republicans either risk blowback or a primary challenge by
approving Biden’s win amid Trump’s baseless claims of widespread fraud, or they
can align themselves with Trump’s attempt to subvert the election results.
Trump has
already shown little regard for those who are criticizing the efforts in the
House and Senate to block Biden’s win. The president attacked Senate Majority
Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) for the second time this week after Thune said Trump’s
efforts to overturn Biden’s win will go down like a “shot dog” in the upper
chamber.
The
president urged Gov. Kristi Noem (R-S.D.) to run against Thune, though Noem has
already said she will not run against Thune. Trump in a tweet called Thune a
“RINO” on Friday — a Republican In Name Only.
“Finally,
an attack tweet. What took him so long?” Thune, the No. 2 Senate Republican,
said of Trump. He said there's been no effort to patch things over: “I’m not
sure what I did to be deserving of all that. It’s fine. I’m not sure anything
changes his mind once he makes it up.”
Hawley is
unlikely to stand alone as Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) did in 2005 when she
was overruled in a 74-1 by members of both parties after objecting to George W.
Bush’s Ohio electoral votes. Privately Senate Republicans estimate a handful of
Republican senators could vote against certification of at least one state
alongside Hawley, a smaller percentage than the more than 100 House Republicans
that are expected to try and stop Biden’s win.
“I won't
tell other folks what to do,” said Hawley, who said he’s had contact with other
senators after making his announcement. “I don't have the power to overturn
anything. My objective in this is, as I've said repeatedly, is this is my one
opportunity in this process to stand and be heard.”
Hawley said
he hasn’t decided whether he will only challenge a single state or enough
states to change the electoral college result. He specifically mentioned
Pennsylvania earlier this week as an example of a state that “failed to follow
their own state election laws.”
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has warned against challenging the
election privately and pressed Hawley for an explanation in a conference call
on Thursday, though Hawley was not on the call. Hawley responded by asking
senators with questions to reach out to him. Capito said Hawley's move is
"certainly not what the leader would want, because he's been very explicit
about that."
But
Republicans aren’t whipping against Trump. Thune said the GOP leadership is
letting members “vote their conscience.” He indicated he will oppose the effort
absent some unforeseen evidence because Congress has no legal authority to
change election results approved by the states and certified by the electoral
coverage.
“It seems
to me this is an exercise in futility,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who
said he would offer a longer explanation next week when Trump's efforts are
stopped by Congress. “There are probably 70 million people who would rather see
Trump elected. So I think it may not be very popular [in the GOP]. But
sometimes you’ve got to do unpopular things because it’s the right thing to
do.”
Still, not
everyone is dismissing the challenge to Biden’s certification. Sen. Ron Johnson
(R-Wis.) said earlier this week he supports Hawley’s effort.
And Sens.
Mike Braun (R-Ind.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) both said they were still
weighing their options. Blackburn argued that “people are quite concerned about
voter fraud and transparency” and Braun said he’s “still thinking about what to
do.”
“It’s a
protest vote only. Because in my opinion there’s zero chance that anything will
come from it. The House is not going to overturn and I don’t think you’ll even
get close in the Senate,” Braun argued.
And several
other senators on Friday said they didn’t want to talk about it. Sen. Pat
Toomey (R-Pa.), who opposes challenging the election, said he would address the
issue “pretty thoroughly next week.” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said he won’t
discuss the issue until Jan. 6 and Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) declined to
comment.
“Ask me
that on Jan. 6. There’s a lot to think about,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa), the most senior GOP senator.
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