The war within the GOP
Republicans are clashing fiercely with each other over
the challenge to Biden’s Electoral College win.
By BURGESS
EVERETT and MARIANNE LEVINE
01/03/2021
04:56 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/03/republicans-challenge-biden-electoral-college-454147
Senate
Republicans are in open war against each other as Donald Trump’s presidency
comes to a close, with his baseless claims of widespread election fraud
animating what will be the defining schism of the Trump era.
As the new
Congress was sworn in Sunday, the Republican Party splintered badly as at least
12 senators planned to join about 140 House members to contest Joe Biden’s
election win. The tensions are so high that individual GOP senators are now
directly battling, with Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) accusing some Republicans of
undermining the right to participate in direct elections and Sen. Josh Hawley
(R-Mo.) decrying Toomey’s arguments and “shameless personal attacks.”
That
exchange encapsulated the larger internal battle over just how close
Republicans will align themselves with a president who is doing little to hide
his efforts to overturn the election and who intends to remain a force after he
leaves the White House. And it’s all happening just days before two run-offs in
Georgia conclude on Jan. 5, races that will determine who holds the Senate
majority.
“I’m
concerned about the division in America, that’s the biggest issue, but obviously
this is not healthy for the Republican Party,” lamented Sen. Ben Sasse
(R-Neb.). “This is bad for the country and bad for the party.”
The clash
over the basic pillars of American democracy will play out on the floor
Wednesday when the Senate will hold two-hour debates on any state’s electoral
votes that receive objections. Biden’s victory is not in doubt of being
overturned, but lawmakers in both parties warn the push will be damaging.
The
majority of the GOP conference is expected to oppose the effort, senators said,
and Democrats said they believed the debate on Jan. 6 would include Republicans
rebutting their own colleagues.
“You'll
have a number of Republicans speaking on the same side as us,” said Sen. Amy
Klobuchar (D-Minn.).
The episode
echoes the failed 2013 drive by some Republicans to defund Obamacare, though
with more urgent implications for future elections and trust in democracy. At
the time, a small group of conservatives urged the party to do all it could to
stop funding the health care law. The effort soon snowballed and led to a
government shutdown and Republican backbiting — and helped bring Sen. Ted Cruz
(R-Texas) to prominence. Similarly, support is fast rising among Trump
loyalists this time around for objecting to Biden’s win.
Still, the
objectors will be unable to prevent Biden’s win given that just a bare majority
in the Senate is required to defeat challenges to the election. But Cruz and
Hawley are unbowed and have both sought to fundraise off the push in recent
days as they position themselves firmly in the party’s pro-Trump wing, even as
the president mulls whether to run again in 2024.
“I intend
to vote on January 6 to REJECT THE ELECTORS FROM DISPUTED STATES unless an
emergency 10-day audit is completed. Our election integrity must not be
compromised!” Cruz said this weekend.
Though
senators like Toomey, Sasse, Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and
Susan Collins of Maine had all criticized their colleagues’ election
challenges, many in the GOP were wary of stoking the intra-party rift any more
publicly than has already occurred. Some insisted the party would reunify after
the feud.
Sen. Roy
Blunt (R-Mo.), who is up for reelection in 2022, panned Hawley and Cruz’s plans
as having no path to success: “Neither of the two proposals that have been
advanced will produce a result. I don’t believe it has much long-term impact in
our conference.”
“This is an
ill-fated journey,” said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va) of the electoral
objections. Meanwhile, Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) said that he was “very
dubious” of the effort.
But
privately Republicans said many in the GOP are trying to paper over the
conflict ahead of the Jan. 5 Georgia run-offs, when Republicans need huge voter
turnout margins to counter what appears to be strong Democratic early voting.
Within the party, the bitterness is very real.
“It’s
infighting we don’t need before a very significant run-off election. All of
this should have waited until after the run-off, polls close,” said one
Republican senator who is keeping their objections private for now. “There’s a
lot of pressure to support the president in some manner or fashion. But … all
of us are sworn to uphold the Constitution, not the presidency.”
The
president took his pressure campaign to new heights Saturday when he called
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and urged him to "find"
the votes to overturn the state's election results.
As senators
were sworn into their new six-year terms, some defended their decision to
challenge Biden’s win. Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) insisted that the effort
was about “getting the facts” and not about loyalty to Trump; Lankford is up
for reelection in 2022.
“None of us
want to vote against the electors but we all want to get the facts out there,”
Lankford said. “If we can get to some kind of commission which we understand is
highly unlikely then we don’t have to vote against electors.”
“The people
of Kansas feel disenfranchised, they want us to follow-up on the irregularities
they saw in this election, and this is an avenue to do that,” added Sen. Roger
Marshall (R-Kan.). “I feel like our Constitution has been violated.”
Sasse and
Romney have accused the objecting senators of making a short-term political
calculation to align themselves with Trump’s voters. Collins said simply: “It’s
important that we all start acknowledging reality.”
The
long-shot effort has also created some notable divides in the House GOP, though
Republicans there are more receptive to Trump’s push to remain in power. House
GOP Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney circulated a memo to her colleagues
arguing that challenging the election results would be unconstitutional and
could set an “exceptionally dangerous precedent.”
And former
Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said, “It is difficult to conceive of a more
anti-democratic and anti-conservative act.” But House Minority Leader Kevin
McCarthy, a top Trump ally, has not made any attempt to swat down the floor
gambit, according to multiple Republican lawmakers and aides.
Meanwhile,
a group of seven House Republicans — including conservative Freedom Caucus
members such as Ken Buck (Colo.) and Chip Roy (Texas) as well as Rep.-elect
Nancy Mace (S.C.) and libertarian Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) — put out a
lengthy statement Sunday afternoon opposing the objection effort, concluding:
“We must respect the states’ authority here."
Opponents
of the effort to block Biden’s certification said they believed only a handful
of additional Senate Republicans were likely to join the 12 who are now on the
record. But they also acknowledged there’s still a couple days for pressure
from pro-Trump voters to build.
Sen. Kevin
Cramer (R-N.D.) said considering Trump’s popularity in his state, “the easiest
vote for me politically would be to object to everything and vote for every
objection.”
“It would
be easy to do. But this is a big decision,” said Cramer, who is undecided. “The
people back home largely feel like this election was robbed. And there’s
nothing we’re going to do that's going to change the outcome of that.”
Melanie
Zanona contributed to this report.
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