CONGRESS
Hawley faces heat from Senate Republicans over
Electoral College plans
The Missouri senator missed a Thursday call where
Mitch McConnell asked him to explain his plans, emailing colleagues later
instead.
By ALEX
ISENSTADT
12/31/2020
06:18 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/31/hawley-senate-republicans-453204
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pressed Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley on a Thursday
morning conference call to explain his plans to object to the Electoral College
vote next week, which sets up an awkward vote for Hawley’s fellow Senate
Republicans while boosting the Missourian’s national profile.
But
McConnell was met with silence. Hawley — unbeknownst to some on the call, which
was attended by Senate Republicans — was not present. He later emailed GOP
colleagues to outline his decision to oppose final certification of
President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.
The
Missouri senator has rankled senior Republicans with his maneuver, and
McConnell has made the case that voting to object to the election results —
which is likely doomed to fail because of opposition from Democrats as well as
some Republicans — will force senators to choose between defying President
Donald Trump and taking the unprecedented step of overturning an election.
McConnell
has also expressed concern that the vote could hurt GOP senators facing tough
general election fights by alienating moderate voters. Opposing the GOP-led objection,
meanwhile, could jeopardize Republicans’ primary prospects by turning off
voters who are convinced the election was stolen from Trump.
The clash
illustrates the emerging tensions between Hawley and Republican leaders. While
the Missouri senator is trying burnish his anti-establishment credentials and
fill his fundraising coffers ahead of a potential 2024 presidential bid, the
GOP hierarchy is looking to protect incumbent senators. Regardless of the
outcome of next week’s Georgia runoff elections, neither party will have firm
control of the Senate heading into the 2022 midterm elections.
A Hawley
spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.
During the
call, McConnell described Wednesday’s vote as among the most monumental votes
the senators would ever cast. According to multiple people familiar with the
discussion, the Senate GOP leader also asked Hawley several times to walk
through how his objection would play out.
As they
awaited a response from the absent Hawley, National Republican Senatorial
Committee Chair Todd Young (Ind.) remarked, “Surely Josh Hawley is having
technological issues because he would want to speak on such an important
matter.”
Pennsylvania
Sen. Pat Toomey pushed back on Hawley during the conversation, delivering what
one person briefed on the remarks described as a forceful denunciation. The
Missouri senator has focused his objections on Pennsylvania, arguing that it
and other states failed to adhere to their own election laws.
A Toomey
spokesperson confirmed the account, saying: “Sen. Toomey made his views on
Senator Hawley’s planned objection clear. He strongly disagrees.”
Some
Republicans expressed annoyance that Hawley missed the call, noting that the
senator announced his plans a day earlier and should have anticipated questions
about it. Some say they have struggled in recent days to nail down Hawley’s
thinking.
Hawley
instead sent an email to Senate Republicans after the call wrapped.
“If you’ve
been speaking to folks at home, I’m sure you know how deeply angry and
disillusioned many, many people are – and how frustrated that Congress has
taken no action,” Hawley wrote in the email, which was first reported by Axios.
“I strongly
believe there should be a full-fledged congressional investigation and also a
slate of election integrity legislation,” Hawley added. “I intend to object
during the certification process on January 6 in order to force these issues to
the fore, and to point out the unprecedented failure of states like
Pennsylvania to follow their own election laws and the unprecedented efforts of
Big Tech corporations to interfere with the election.”
Hawley has
begun to use his high-profile maneuver to fill his fundraising account. On
Thursday afternoon, he sent out an appeal to donors asking for their support.
“As you can
imagine, I am being pressured from the Washington and Wall Street establishment
to ignore the will of the people and avoid raising this issue. But I do not
answer to any establishment, I answer to hardworking American people,” Hawley
wrote in the email.
The 41-year
old has made a splash since entering the Senate two years ago, casting himself
as an outsider determined to take on tech companies. He has also closely
aligned himself with Trump, whose support helped catapult Hawley to victory in
2018.
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