Is there a method or mechanism in the Constitution for Congress to overturn electoral votes after they have been cast by the states and a majority determined?https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.politico.com/amp/news/2020/12/31/hawley-senate-republicans-453204
“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.”
I understand elections are localized and how they work. My question was, is objecting to the certification unconstitutional? He lays out his reasons why here.
Again, I feel I have to say this on every post but I don’t agree that this is the place to air his issues. He should do it during regular order. But is it unconstitutional to do so?
Yes. If there's a written objection signed by at least one member of each chamber, then the House and Senate stop counting and separately deliberate the objection. If majorities in the Senate and House agree, the electoral votes can be rejected. If enough are rejected, then a different outcome is possible.Is there a method or mechanism in the Constitution for Congress to overturn electoral vote after they have been cast by the states and a majority determined?
Those are procedural rules passed by Congress and not amendments to the Consititution. I'd argue that there is no constitutional way to object or reject state's certified votes from electors. Congress's job is only to count the votes, and only to determine the president when a majority isn't reached from those votes.Yes. If there's a written objection signed by at least one member of each chamber, then the House and Senate stop counting and separately deliberate the objection. If majorities in the Senate and House agree, the electoral votes can be rejected. If enough are rejected, then a different outcome is possible.
At the end of the day Congress counts the electoral votes and decides the President. There would be political costs to pay for any and all acts, but it's possible Congress can do something different than the electoral votes. However, it's extremely difficult to get majorities in both chambers to overturn the EC results.
Congress can object to any vote for any reason. 3 USC Section 15: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/3/15Those are procedural rules passed by Congress and not amendments to the Consititution. I'd argue that there is no constitutional way to object or reject state's certified votes from electors. Congress's job is only to count the votes, and only to determine the president when a majority isn't reached from those votes.
So Romney and McCain acted likes a$$’s and deserved the horrid media treatment during their presidential runs compared to what their opponent got?BlitzFirst said:The media has always done its job and continues to do it's job. You act like an a$$, you get called out.
While I agree with much of what you said, and I have already stated my opinion on what I thought about yesterday’s events, do you really think a bunch of unarmed rioters were actually going to overthrow our government, destroy the constitution and implement a new government?Yesterday's attacks threated the constitution of the United States of America directly.
Man, and here I thought we were making so much progress today...While I agree with much of what you said, and I have already stated my opinion on what I thought about yesterday’s events, do you really think a bunch of unarmed rioters were actually going to overthrow our government, destroy the constitution and implement a new government?
Our system of government has survived a struggling beginning, a civil war, 2 world wars. It has gotten though this terrible period just fine too. The system works
I’m not blind by the way. I actually have 20/20 best corrected vision.
Especially when it’s promoted by the president himself.Man, and here I thought we were making so much progress today...
Minimizing a coordinated attack on our democratic process, system of government, and the nation that so many generations have sacrificed to protect is pretty unbelievable