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Meetings will be held in all 50 states to formalize election
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Sixty-two electors have asked for briefing on Russian hacking
The Electoral College’s 538 members gather Monday at 50 state capitols to cast the ballots that matter the most when it comes to electing a U.S. president.
Normally sedate affairs that pass with little notice, this year’s proceedings have been injected with a bit of drama and a dash of uncertainty with an unprecedented campaign by a small group of electors to overturn the results of Election Day.
The attempt to deny Donald Trump the presidency by trying to convince Democratic and Republican peers to back someone else is almost sure to fail. But it injects still more rancor in what already has been a divisive political season and serves as a capstone for a 2016 presidential election that will go down as one of the oddest in U.S. history.
Behind the drive is a group calling itself Hamilton Electors, led by two Democratic electors from western states. The name is a nod to Alexander Hamilton and his explanation of the need for the Electoral College, an entity the first U.S. Treasury secretary said existed to make sure that “the office of the president will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.”
Chiafalo and others who have joined the effort want the Electoral College returned to what they say is its original concept: a deliberative body that uses the popular vote as a guide.
Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard University law professor working with the stop-Trump effort, told reporters on a conference call Thursday afternoon that there are likely “at least” 20 Republican electors who are “seriously considering” defections.
He provided no documentation. Lessig said that the nature of the situation prevents him from providing evidence because electors are speaking to organizers on the “condition of absolute anonymity.” Whether the movement reaches its goal, he said, depends on how viable that goal appears to be.
The Associated Press reported Thursday that it has interviewed more than 330 electors and that “Republican electors appear to be in no mood for an insurrection in the presidential campaign’s last voting ritual.”
The turmoil among electors was stirred last week after President Barack Obama directed U.S. intelligence agencies to deliver a report on Russian hacking of Democratic Party e-mails, and the Washington Post reported that the CIA concluded the meddling was intended to benefit Trump.
Those developments have prompted 62 electors -- all but one of them Democrats in states Democrat Hillary Clinton won -- to sign onto a letter requesting a briefing about the hacking. Some Democrats have also called for the Electoral College voting to be pushed back until more is known, something that would take an act of Congress.
That doesn’t have to be Clinton. Members of the Hamilton Electors have mentioned former Secretary of State Colin Powell, former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman and Ohio Governor John Kasich as potential alternatives.
Yet another effort to persuade electors is playing out in full-page newspaper ads this week in states that voted for Trump. Paid for by an online fundraising drive started by a California man opposed to Trump, the ads call for electors to reject Trump because he would “present a grave and continual threat to the Constitution, to the domestic tranquility, and to international stability."
There’s no constitutional requirement that binds electors to the candidates who won their state, but most are required to do so under state laws. That’s never mattered or been seriously tested because there have been few cases of so-called “faithless electors” -- the last occurrence was in 2004.
Edwards said he stressed “live candidate” because in 1872 Democratic candidate Horace Greeley died after a landslide election loss to incumbent Ulysses S. Grant, before the Electoral College met. Three electors who still voted for Greeley had their ballots invalidated because their candidate, obviously, could not serve in office.
If the effort to flip 37 Republican electors were to succeed, it could send the final decision to the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
Trump supporters and Republican establishment figures say it’s all an academic conversation because there’s zero chance of success and is being pushed by Democrats as a way to undermine the billionaire businessman’s legitimacy for the office.
The goal of trying to block Trump at the Electoral College has some similarities to a failed bid to persuade enough delegates to the Republican National Convention in July to block his nomination as the party’s standard-bearer. Unlike at the convention, the electors are spread across the country.
“I know people are getting a plethora of calls,” said Steve House, chairman of the Colorado Republican Party. “I also suspect many people are going to be pushing as much bad news as possible about Trump this week.”
While calling the lobbying effort “massive,” House also predicts total failure. “There may be a few defectors, maybe six or seven, who are bound to Donald Trump who may not vote for him, but I don’t think it will alter the outcome,” he said.
The quirky institution was created by the nation’s founders as a compromise between those who favored a direct popular vote and those who wanted lawmakers to pick the president. This year, Trump won the popular vote in 30 states that have 306 electoral votes, 36 more than the 270 needed to win. Clinton carried 20 states and the District of Columbia with 232 electors.
Normally sedate affairs that pass with little notice, this year’s proceedings have been injected with a bit of drama and a dash of uncertainty with an unprecedented campaign by a small group of electors to overturn the results of Election Day.
The attempt to deny Donald Trump the presidency by trying to convince Democratic and Republican peers to back someone else is almost sure to fail. But it injects still more rancor in what already has been a divisive political season and serves as a capstone for a 2016 presidential election that will go down as one of the oddest in U.S. history.
Behind the drive is a group calling itself Hamilton Electors, led by two Democratic electors from western states. The name is a nod to Alexander Hamilton and his explanation of the need for the Electoral College, an entity the first U.S. Treasury secretary said existed to make sure that “the office of the president will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.”
37 Electors
Bret Chiafalo, an Electoral College member from Washington state who is a Hamilton Electors organizer, calls the institution the nation’s “emergency brake” in a video that outlines the group’s goals. “If only 37 Republican electors change their vote, Donald Trump will not have the 270 electoral votes he needs to be president,” he says. “Thirty-seven patriots can save this country.”Chiafalo and others who have joined the effort want the Electoral College returned to what they say is its original concept: a deliberative body that uses the popular vote as a guide.
Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard University law professor working with the stop-Trump effort, told reporters on a conference call Thursday afternoon that there are likely “at least” 20 Republican electors who are “seriously considering” defections.
He provided no documentation. Lessig said that the nature of the situation prevents him from providing evidence because electors are speaking to organizers on the “condition of absolute anonymity.” Whether the movement reaches its goal, he said, depends on how viable that goal appears to be.
Seeking Surge
“If it’s clear that it doesn’t make any sense to come out and vote against Donald Trump, I’m sure many of those people won’t,” he said. “If it’s close to 37, or people believe that it is 37, then I think that will give people the courage they need to step up.”The Associated Press reported Thursday that it has interviewed more than 330 electors and that “Republican electors appear to be in no mood for an insurrection in the presidential campaign’s last voting ritual.”
The turmoil among electors was stirred last week after President Barack Obama directed U.S. intelligence agencies to deliver a report on Russian hacking of Democratic Party e-mails, and the Washington Post reported that the CIA concluded the meddling was intended to benefit Trump.
Those developments have prompted 62 electors -- all but one of them Democrats in states Democrat Hillary Clinton won -- to sign onto a letter requesting a briefing about the hacking. Some Democrats have also called for the Electoral College voting to be pushed back until more is known, something that would take an act of Congress.
Alternative Names
None of the 62 -- more than a quarter of the Democrats forming this year’s Electoral College -- have necessarily joined in the call for Republican electors to back a consensus candidate that Republican and Democratic electors might support.That doesn’t have to be Clinton. Members of the Hamilton Electors have mentioned former Secretary of State Colin Powell, former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman and Ohio Governor John Kasich as potential alternatives.
Yet another effort to persuade electors is playing out in full-page newspaper ads this week in states that voted for Trump. Paid for by an online fundraising drive started by a California man opposed to Trump, the ads call for electors to reject Trump because he would “present a grave and continual threat to the Constitution, to the domestic tranquility, and to international stability."
There’s no constitutional requirement that binds electors to the candidates who won their state, but most are required to do so under state laws. That’s never mattered or been seriously tested because there have been few cases of so-called “faithless electors” -- the last occurrence was in 2004.
Never Happened
“That’s never happened for a live candidate ever before,” said George Edwards III, a Texas A&M University political science professor who has studied the Electoral College. “It’s very much a long shot.”Edwards said he stressed “live candidate” because in 1872 Democratic candidate Horace Greeley died after a landslide election loss to incumbent Ulysses S. Grant, before the Electoral College met. Three electors who still voted for Greeley had their ballots invalidated because their candidate, obviously, could not serve in office.
If the effort to flip 37 Republican electors were to succeed, it could send the final decision to the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
Trump supporters and Republican establishment figures say it’s all an academic conversation because there’s zero chance of success and is being pushed by Democrats as a way to undermine the billionaire businessman’s legitimacy for the office.
‘Fruitless Effort’
“There are some people who will just not let go,” said John Hammond, a Republican National Committee member from Indiana. “It will be a fruitless effort.”The goal of trying to block Trump at the Electoral College has some similarities to a failed bid to persuade enough delegates to the Republican National Convention in July to block his nomination as the party’s standard-bearer. Unlike at the convention, the electors are spread across the country.
“I know people are getting a plethora of calls,” said Steve House, chairman of the Colorado Republican Party. “I also suspect many people are going to be pushing as much bad news as possible about Trump this week.”
While calling the lobbying effort “massive,” House also predicts total failure. “There may be a few defectors, maybe six or seven, who are bound to Donald Trump who may not vote for him, but I don’t think it will alter the outcome,” he said.
Courtroom Loss
House was one of those in a Denver courtroom Monday where two Colorado electors lost their bid to be free from a state requirement that they cast their ballots for presidential and vice-presidential candidates based on the results of the general election. The two Democratic electors, in a state Clinton won, have said they think Trump is unfit for office and have sought to encourage his electors in other states to vote their conscience.The quirky institution was created by the nation’s founders as a compromise between those who favored a direct popular vote and those who wanted lawmakers to pick the president. This year, Trump won the popular vote in 30 states that have 306 electoral votes, 36 more than the 270 needed to win. Clinton carried 20 states and the District of Columbia with 232 electors.