Huge
Problem with Scheme to steal Presidency, Last-ditch effort to keep Trump out of White
House hits 1 massive snag, by Garth Kant, 12/16/16, WND
WASHINGTON – A last-ditch attempt
and all-out blitz by Democrats to keep Donald Trump from becoming president
does not seem to be working, judging by the results of an informal survey of
voters in the Electoral College.
As WND
has reported in detail, the plan has
been to persuade electors from both major parties to vote for a compromise
third candidate, one other than Republican Donald Trump or Democrat Hillary
Clinton.
Democrats have been pushing hard,
pleading, begging and sometimes even threatening Electoral College voters not
to confirm Trump’s victory in the general election, deluging them with a
barrage of newspaper ads, a celebrity video, phone calls, letters, emails,
tweets and Facebook posts. But a survey of electors taken by
the Associated
Press seems to strongly indicate the
plan is not working, because, “Most of it is falling on deaf ears.”
The wire service reported, “Whether
they like Trump or not, and some surely don’t, scores of the Republicans chosen
to cast votes in the state-capital meetings told AP they feel bound by history,
duty, party loyalty or the law to rubber-stamp their state’s results and make
him president.”
The AP said it tried to contact all
538 electors and actually interviewed more than 330 of them. It found little
appetite among electors of either party to go rogue. The AP reported most
Republican electors have been swamped with ineffective pleas and tirades, and
although many Democrats have been aggravated with the system, they, too, have
been unpersuaded to join a revolt.
Brian Westrate, a small-business
owner and GOP district chairman in Fall Creek, Wisconsin, said he has received
48,324 emails and has engaged in a “Twitter debate with a former porn star from
California asking me to change my vote. It’s been fascinating.”
Nashville attorney Tom Lawless
supported Marco Rubio in the primaries, but told AP, “Hell will freeze and we
will be skating on the lava before I change,” adding, “He (Trump) won the state
and I’ve pledged and gave my word that that’s what I would do. And I won’t
break it.”
Republican elector Edward Robson of
Phoenix bluntly told AP, “We got a stack of letters from idiots.” Also in Phoenix,
elector Carole Joyce remarked, “I average anywhere from a thousand to 3,000
emails a day. And I’m getting inundated in my regular mailbox out front –
anywhere from 17 to 35 letters a day coming from Washington State, Oregon, all
around the country. Hand-written, some of them five or six pages long, quoting
me the Federalist Papers, the Constitution, asking me again out of desperation
not to vote for Donald Trump.” “And that’s their right,” she added. “I’ve had
nothing threatening, I’m happy to say. The election is over, they need to move
on.”
Democrats were similarly reluctant. “We
lost the election,” said Democratic ward chairman John Padilla of Albuquerque,
New Mexico. “That’s how elections are and you shake hands with your opponent
and you get on with what you have to do and support your candidate.” The
all-out assault on electors comports with what WND and other media outlets
reported on Thursday.
The New York Post reported, “Electors around the country are being harassed with a barrage of emails, phone calls and letters – and even death threats – in an effort to block Donald Trump from being voted in as president by the Electoral College on Monday.”
Harassment of electors was reported in
many states, including Georgia, Idaho, Tennessee, Arizona, Utah and Michigan.
One elector in Arizona said she has
received more than 50,000 emails, including 1,500 just Wednesday morning,
demanding she not vote for Trump. An elector in Tennessee said she’s received
2,000 emails, 120 letters and five phone calls urging her not to vote for
Trump. An elector in Michigan said he’s
received death threats through the mail, email, Twitter and Facebook.
A number of Hollywood celebrities
appeared in a video, begging GOP electors not to vote
for Trump. Anchored by actor Martin Sheen, who
played the president on television’s “West Wing,” the celebrities pleaded for
37 “conscientious Republican electors” to deny Trump the presidency by not
voting for him. The actors say they would “respect” those electors as “heroes.”
Sheen warned, “As you know, our
Founding Fathers built the Electoral College to safeguard the American people
from the dangers of a demagogue and to ensure that the presidency only goes to
someone who is to an eminent degree and down with the requisite
qualifications.”
The actors repeatedly insist they
are not asking electors to vote for Clinton, just not to vote for Trump. Their
message claims, “What is evident is that Donald Trump lacks more than the
qualifications to be president. He lacks the necessary stability and clearly
the respect for the Constitution of our great nation.”
The video, released on YouTube by a
group called Unite for America, does not have any superstar Democrats such as
George Clooney or Barbara Streisand, but it does include such recognizable
actors as Debra Messing, Noah Wyle, Mike Farrell and Loretta Swit.
Additionally, Democratic Party
activist Daniel Brezenoff ran full-page newspaper ads across the country on
Wednesday urging Electoral College members to “vote their conscience” as part
of what Politico
called “a pressure campaign intended
to block the election of Donald Trump.”
The ads ran in the Washington Post,
Philadelphia Inquirer, Austin American-Statesman, Salt Lake City Tribune and
Tampa Bay Times and were set to appear in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and
the Wisconsin State Journal on Thursday. The ads said Trump’s “inauguration
would present a grave and continual threat to the Constitution, to domestic
tranquility and to international stability.” Brezenoff recently gained
notoriety by launching a Change.org petition asking the Electoral College to
pick Clinton instead of Trump.
According to Politico, “The petition
went viral and is approaching 5 million signatures, the largest in Change.org’s
history. He leveraged that list to raise about $250,000 through a GoFundMe page
to support the ads. He said the newspaper campaign has exhausted virtually all
of the funds raised.”
Brezenoff told Politico he still
wants electors to vote for Clinton, but he also implied the real goal is to
stop Trump. The website reported, “Brezenoff
said the ad campaign is designed to reach electors but also raise public
pressure on them in states with large Democratic populations or widespread
anti-Trump sentiment.”
But even stopping Trump in the
Electoral College probably would not stop him from becoming president. That’s
because if no one candidate receives enough votes in the Electoral College to
become president, the election would move to the House of Representatives,
where Trump would almost certainly win. That’s because there most likely would
be only two candidates on the House ballot, Trump and Clinton, and that chamber
is dominated by a large GOP majority.
Here’s how it works.
To become president, 270 votes in
the Electoral College are needed. Trump earned 306 electoral votes in the
general election, and Clinton won 232. The plan to keep Trump from officially
receiving those 270 votes in Monday’s gathering of the Electoral College is the
brainchild of Democrats who call themselves “The Hamilton Electors.”
They say they want the Electoral
College to elect a third candidate, and have Republican and Democratic electors
reach a consensus on who that might be. But, most of all, they want to stop
Trump from reaching 270 votes. If no candidate were to receive 270 votes on
Monday in the Electoral College, the election would go to the House of
Representatives. The House would then hold what is called a “contingent
election.”
Just 37 Republican electors would
need to defect to deny Trump victory, which is what has fueled Democrats’
hopes. And, according
to Fox News, “The Hamilton Electors hope that
House Republicans would then pick the alternative Republican over Trump.” But
that would not seem to be possible. That’s because the rules for a contingent
election of the president in the House, outlined in the 12th Amendment,
stipulate that only the three candidates who received the most electoral votes
are eligible, when no one candidate reaches 270. And the only candidates who
received any Electoral College votes were Trump and Clinton.
Runners-up Gary Johnson of the
Libertarian Party and the Green Party’s Jill Stein won no Electoral College
votes. And no viable third candidate has
emerged. Of the names mentioned as possibilities, former Secretary of State
Colin Powell has stayed mum, and Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio tweeted,
“The election is over.”
Unless a consensus third candidate
suddenly does emerge to receive 270 electoral votes on Monday, the only two
candidates eligible for a contingent election in the House would be Trump (who
won 306 electoral votes) and Clinton (who won 232). And the GOP still has a
commanding majority in the House, retaining control of the chamber in the 2016
election, winning 241 seats to the Democrats’ 194.
So, even if Trump does not get 270
votes from the Electoral College on Monday, given a choice of between either
him or Clinton, with no other option, it would appear certain the
GOP-dominated House would select the Republican in a contingent election.
But the lack of a third candidate
hasn’t stopped Democrats from trying everything possible to stop Trump in the
Electoral College on Monday. Their hopes were raised Wednesday when Fox
reported that Harvard constitutional law professor Larry Lessig claimed there
were at least 20 GOP electors seriously considering not voting for Trump. With
only 37 GOP defectors needed, Lessig has been actively trying to stop Trump
from by setting up “a legal group, ‘The Electors Trust,’ to offer legal counsel
to anti-Trump electors.” Lessig told Fox he believed GOP electors will vote
against Trump only if they are sure they have at least 37 defectors. “There are
some who will do it as a matter of principle; one has already said he will. But
most will be in the situation where they won’t make that sacrifice unless there
a reason to sacrifice,” said the Harvard professor. Although Fox downplayed the
likelihood of enough electors defecting, a Republican heavyweight cautioned
that Lessig should not be underestimated.
Gary Bauer, the former under
secretary of education and chief domestic policy adviser to President Reagan,
said “Professor Lessig is not just any Harvard leftist professor” and warned of
the potential for “a political earthquake” when electors gather to vote for
president on Monday. Bauer described Lessig as both “far left” and “well
connected,” and he warned he “has been providing free legal help to electors
from states Trump won.” “At the same time as he is providing ‘counsel,’
Republican electors are reportedly being harassed 24 hours a day by left wing
fanatics,” continued Bauer.
“The harassment includes death
threats that has left some of them fearful for themselves and their families.
Sounds like hate crimes to me. Where is the Justice Department?”
Despite the assault on electors,
Bauer said he is somewhat reassured that the Republican National Committee is
monitoring the situation and regularly talking to them.
Additionally, Lessig faces a
significant legal hurdle. Twenty-nine states and the District
of Columbia have laws requiring their electors to cast ballots for the winner
of the popular vote.
To get around that, the Hamilton
Electors have been trying to use the courts to free up enough anti-Trump
electoral votes, filing a lawsuit to overturn Colorado’s law requiring the
state’s nine electors to vote for the winner in that state.
Even though Clinton won in their
state, Democratic electors Polly Baca and Robert Nemanich, who are part of the
Hamilton Electors movement, filed the suit in the hope it would set a
precedent, freeing electors in states that Trump won to vote against the
president-elect.
But a federal
judge in Denver ruled on Tuesday that
Colorado’s nine electors must vote for Clinton, the winner of the state’s
popular vote. On
Wednesday, the same federal judge ruled that
if the Democratic electors refuse to vote for Clinton, Colorado Secretary of
State Wayne Williams may replace them with electors who will follow the law, if
he so chooses.
Additionally, Williams, a
Republican, has told Politico that any Colorado elector who does not vote for
Clinton could face a perjury charge, because he intends to make them take an
oath to uphold the law. Baca and Nemanich have filed an emergency appeal to the
10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Lawsuits similar to the one filed in
Colorado seeking to overturn laws requiring electors to vote for the winner in
their states have been filed in California and Washington state.
http://www.wnd.com/2016/12/huge-problem-with-scheme-to-steal-presidency/
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