Editorial: What Happens on January 6 Will Be a Litmus Test for All Republicans

On Wednesday, January 6, a joint session of Congress will meet to formally certify Joe Biden as president-elect. During the joint session, Americans may also see an unprecedented threat to American democracy by many of their elected officials as Trump loyalist lawmakers seek to block Biden’s certification, subverting the vote that has already been certified by all 50 states. 

Led by Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas), at least 12 Republican senators and senators-elect have vowed that they will join Missouri GOP Senator Josh Hawley as he objects to certifying the election and moves to challenge the votes from states that voted for Biden/Harris. The coalition has called for a 10-day “emergency audit” to investigate Trump’s unfounded claims of voter fraud. As many as 140 House Republicans are also expected to challenge the election results. 

Donald Trump began his efforts to delegitimize the results of the 2020 presidential election before it even took place. Now, two months later, despite multiple audits and hand recounts, dozens of failed lawsuits by Trump’s lawyers, as well as confirmations by election officials (including Republican election officials), the Justice Department, and even the Department of Homeland Security that the election was secure, Trump and his supporters have doubled down on their insistence that the election was “stolen” from Donald Trump. 

Trump’s false claims and unsubstantiated tweets have grown in frequency and intensity, and amount more and more to the rantings of a madman desperate to retain a presidency that will no longer be his. Alarming as Trump’s rantings are, the mass hysteria of the GOP lawmakers as they echo and support Trump’s false claims should be even more horrifying. 

If they truly believe that Trump won the 2020 election, the mountains of evidence show that they are gravely deluded. If they are going along with Trump’s false claims because they think it would serve them or their careers, they are showing a lack of integrity that should evoke disgust in their constituents. Either way, these GOP lawmakers are demonstrating their unfitness for office, and pose a clear threat to the democratic process.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) has told Republican senators not to challenge the legitimacy of the 2020 election results so as to avoid public debate. He knows it’s unlikely that the election results will be overturned. He also knows that it virtually guarantees that GOP lawmakers will then be forced to vote to show  whether they will stand with Donald Trump, or whether they will honor the will of American voters; Republicans, both the Trump base and others, will be watching.

On Sunday, the Washington Post obtained an hour-long recording of Donald Trump pressuring Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, to “find” the votes needed to overturn Georgia’s election results in order to make Trump the winner. On the recording, Trump begs, demands, and tries to bully Raffensperger in attempts to make him tilt the election in Trump’s favor. During the call, Raffensperger repeatedly and calmly rejects Trump’s false claims, citing the data that supports Biden’s win. 

“The people of Georgia are angry, the people in the country are angry,” said Trump. “And there’s nothing wrong with saying, you know, um, that you’ve recalculated.”

“You have a big election coming up and because of what you’ve done to the president — you know, the people of Georgia know that this was a scam,” Trump said. “Because of what you’ve done to the president, a lot of people aren’t going out to vote, and a lot of Republicans are going to vote negative, because they hate what you did to the president. Okay? They hate it. And they’re going to vote. And you would be respected, really respected, if this can be straightened out before the election.”

“Well, Mr. President,” responded Raffensperger, “The challenge that you have is, the data you have is wrong.”

During their conversation, Trump issued a vague threat to both Raffensperger and Ryan Germany, the secretary of state’s general counsel. Trump suggested that if they don’t “find that thousands of ballots in Fulton County have been illegally destroyed to block investigators” (a baseless allegation),  Raffensperger and Germany could be held criminally liable.

“You know what they did, and you’re not reporting it,” Trump said. “That’s a criminal offense,” he said. “And you can’t let that happen. That’s a big risk to you and to Ryan, your lawyer.”

Americans have now heard, in Trump’s own voice and words, his gangster-like attempted shakedown as he desperately sought to subvert the election’s outcome. The call is reminiscent of Trump’s “perfect call” to Ukraine’s president Volodomyr Zelenskiy, in which he pressured Zelenskiy to announce a fake investigation of Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, in hopes of portraying his political opponent, Joe Biden, in a bad light. (“I want you to do me a favor, though,” said Trump to Zelenskiy on that call.) 

Unlike the famous “perfect call” to Ukraine, however, GOP lawmakers can’t lie about its contents, can’t deny what the president said, or what he was asking for, because every American can hear it for themselves. Wednesday’s joint session of Congress will put lawmakers on trial as they demonstrate just how far they’ll go to side with the president. The country, itself, will be put on trial, as we show the world whether our Congress stands with corruption, or with a democratic election—an institution America has long helped other countries defend.

Beyond those Republican lawmakers who have vowed to object to the certified results of a lawful election, how will the Republican Party as a whole respond to this? How will it impact the party going forward? If they do nothing, if they don’t stand up to what amounts to a coup, what’s to stop the next attempt at overturning a free and fair presidential election from succeeding? 

Audio: Trump berates Ga. secretary of state, urges him to ‘find’ votes |
Washington Post [2021-01-03]

At Least 140 House Republicans Expected To Challenge Electoral College |
Business News [2020-12-31]

Editorial: Millionaire Lawmakers Balk at $2000 One-Time Payment for Struggling Americans

Millions of jobless, struggling Americans have been waiting most of the year for Congress to pass a coronavirus emergency relief package. When lawmakers finally passed a bill that would, among other things, provide $600 one-time direct payments to qualifying Americans, Donald Trump declined to sign it, citing the “ridiculously low” amount of the direct payment. He was right; it is low, and if Trump were some other president, we might conclude that this move came from a place of caring about Americans. We’ve already learned, however, that “caring about Americans” is one of the last items on the minds of Trump and many GOP lawmakers.

For nearly nine months, Congress has been unable to agree on a second coronavirus relief bill to follow the March 2020 CARES Act, as Americans have slipped further into financial distress resulting from fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier, Democrats proposed a bill that included a $2000 one-time payment to qualifying Americans— the same amount Trump specified when he refused to sign the current bill. Republicans, however, some afraid that Americans would squander their stimulus checks, others citing “the deficit,” and others fearful that helping jobless Americans equals socialism, voted against the Democrats’ bill. 

Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) called the proposal for more funds part of the Democrats’ “socialist agenda” to universal basic income.

“Now, we know that what the Democrats are trying to do with this is to put us on a pathway to a guaranteed minimum income, which is one of their socialist agenda items,” she said.

Republicans like Texas Representative Kevin Brady think Americans will spend their stimulus money “inappropriately.” Brady speculated that the money would go toward paying off credit-card debt and “new purchases online at Walmart, Best Buy, or Amazon,” and argued that the money should instead go toward helping small and midsized businesses. 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez responded to Brady, tweeting, “’I don’t support $2k survival checks because it might help people get out of debt that our gov’t inaction helped put or keep them in in the first place.’ – GOP Congressman.”

Just days before Christmas, when the House and Senate agreed on the compromise bill that included a one-time payment of $600, Trump tweeted his criticism of it, leaving lawmakers uncertain as to whether he would sign it, veto it, or simply let time run out on it. “$2000 + $2000 plus other family members. Not $600. Remember, it was China’s fault!” 

Trump criticized his own party, namely Treasury Secretary Stephen Mnuchin, for having proposed the $600 amount, on which all parties were led to believe Trump would sign off. Trump did end up signing the bill, without changes, on December 27, but by not signing the bill by Christmas, he allowed millions of Americans’ jobless benefits to lapse.

On December 28, the House passed a standalone bill to increase the one-time direct payments to Americans from $600 to $2000. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has rejected it. 

“The Senate is not going to be bullied into rushing out more borrowed money into the hands of Democrats’ rich friends who don’t need the help,” said McConnell, whose net worth is estimated at $22.5 million.

McConnell has maneuvered to package the $2000 payment proposal in a bill that includes two other items Trump has called for: the establishment of a commission to study voter fraud; and the repeal of Section 230, which provides liability protections for technology companies and other firms.

Republicans who had previously opposed the $2000 direct payment are in a bind. On the one hand, they fear being out of alignment now with the president by voting against it. What’s more, how would it look to their constituents if they voted against it? On the other hand, they sure don’t want their constituents to get their hands on $2,000. 

Not to worry. McConnell is an old hand at tactical gambiteering. He’s pushing Americans deeper into financial desperation by holding up the bill, but that’s not what matters to McConnell.

Knowing that most Democrats are likely to vote against a package that includes a repeal of Section 230 and a provision for a voter fraud commission,  McConnell has set up the perfect scenario for Republicans. If the the bill doesn’t pass, or if the clock runs out on the proposed bill, GOP lawmakers would still be able to say that they supported the $2000 amount. They would also be able to point fingers at the Democrats for voting against relief for Americans. 

Chuck Schumer said out loud what Trump and McConnell already knew— that the additions to the bill would doom its passage. “Any move like this by Sen. McConnell would be a blatant attempt to deprive Americans of a $2,000 survival check.”

Meanwhile, many private citizens are not sleeping at night, worried about how they’re going to make ends meet for another month, week, day. Nearly 12 million American renters will owe an average of $5850 in back rent and utilities by January. Millions of Americans are thousands of dollars behind in monthly expenses as a result of losing their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic. Still, GOP lawmakers think a one-time payment of $600, let alone $2000, is too much for them. 

“It’s much better for Congress to err on the side of helping too much than too little,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “There’s nothing scarier than losing your home, especially in January with a pandemic out of control. That would be overwhelming.”

One thing is clear, though: Republicans have shown that they are willing to go to great lengths creating hoops to jump through, and cracks to fall through, in order to avoid helping “too much.”

On the other hand, the GOP isn’t worried at all about enriching themselves, or giving tax breaks to large corporations. And when it comes to seizing the opportunity to look like they care about their constituents without actually having to care, that’s a sweet spot.

Here, it should be noted that, according to OpenSecrets Center for Responsive Politics, most members of the current Congress are millionaires, with a median net worth of $1,008,767. 

What will happen when millions of people are evicted in the coming months? What will happen to their children? How will people eat? This is not the concern of the GOP lawmakers. Their concern is that Americans won’t appropriately use the crumbs they’re thrown, and they’re willing to let the country go down in flames in order to throw as few crumbs as possible.