Weekly Opinion Editorial
A FRUIT MEDLEY
by Steve Fair
On Friday,
the United States Supreme Court voted unanimously to not hear the Texas vs. Georgia/Pennsylvania/Michigan/Wisconsin
lawsuit. Seventeen states, including
Oklahoma, joined Texas in the lawsuit. All
nine SCOTUS justices voted to not hear the suit, that aimed to prevent the Electors
in those four states from casting their vote on December 14th.
If the suit would
have been successful, it would have dropped Joe Biden’s Electoral count to 244,
below the 270 needed for election. The
race would then have been thrown into the U.S. House of Representatives where
each state’s delegation would vote en bloc, with each state having a single
vote. The District of Columbia would not
have a vote. Republicans are the majority
in 30 of the 50 House delegations, so it would be very likely President Trump
would be re-elected. Two observations:
First, the counting
of the Electoral vote is set for Wednesday January 6th at 1pm before
a joint session of Congress. Vice
President Mike Pence will preside over the proceedings. Normally, the process is a formality, but not
in 2021. With so much controversy over
claims of cheating, the opening of the Electoral votes will be a lesson in
government every American should pay attention to. Expect C-Span to set a record for viewership. Here is how it will work:
The President of
the Senate(the Vice President) will open and present the certificates of the
electoral votes of the states and the District of Columbia in alphabetical
order. Four Members of Congress(2 from each chamber) called
tellers, will read the Electoral votes from each state and report them. At
that point, Vice President Pence will call for objections, if any. An objection must be presented in writing and
signed by at least one Senator and one Representative. If there is an objection, the joint session
would adjourn and each chamber would then meet and after debate(no more than 2
hours) vote on whether to allow the challenged state’s Electoral votes to be
counted or not. The two chambers then
reconvene and report their vote to the President of the Senate. It is certain the Electoral votes from the four
states sued by Texas will be challenged.
This normally routine proceeding
will be far from routine.
Second, how each
state and DC conduct their election of Electors does impact other states. The SCOTUS said the Texas lawsuit did not
show Texas citizens had suffered harm by how the four states handled their election, but that is not
true. When one state cheats in the
presidential race, it impacts every state.
Texas was impacted. Every state
was impacted. Clearly the U.S.
Constitution grants authority to each individual state on how Electors are
elected, but when some states are still counting ballots two weeks after the
election, it is past time to standardize the process for electing the president
and vice president.
Recent polls show
75% of Republicans believe cheating occurred in the 2020 election. The same poll found that 20% of Democrats
believe there was defrauding. That is a
significant number of Americans that have lost confidence in the integrity of the
ballot box. And there is reason to be
concerned. When you consider twenty-one
states have same day registration, and five states will automatically send you
a ballot in the mail each election, is there no wonder there is cheating? Some states have election day
registration. Some have extended early
voting- others have no early voting.
Some require identification to get a ballot, others do not. The variance in how elections are held across
the United States is like a fruit medley.
That needs to change. Contact
your Congressman and U.S. Senators and ask them to support election reform that
includes standardization of election procedures and timelines for the presidential
election.
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