How safe are Americaâs elections? Andy Craig on the push to reform the U.S. Electoral Count Act and prevent another January 6. Law and Order How safe are Americaâs elections? Andy Craig on the push to reform the U.S. Electoral Count Act and prevent another January 6. [Manny Becerra]( Manny Becerra It now looks likely that the U.S. Congress will see a meaningful breakthrough after the Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced last week that he supports a bill to reform Americaâs Electoral Count Actâthe 1887 law governing the counting of electoral votes in the countryâs presidential elections. The reform legislation, co-sponsored in the Senate by 11 Democrats and 11 Republicans, is an effort to update the law and clarify its dictatesâwith the aim of preventing a repeat of the political chaos that accompanied the Capitol Hill riots of January 6, 2021, as the former president Donald Trump and his allies variously pressured Vice-President Mike Pence and Congressional lawmakers somehow to overturn Joe Bidenâs election victory. Pence and the majority of lawmakers ultimately abided by their duty to certify the election, but 147 Republicans voted to overturn it. So what do the proposed reforms to the Electoral Count Act mean for U.S. elections? Andy Craig is a staff writer at the Cato Institute in Washington, where he covers election laws, electoral reform, polarization, and political incentives in the U.S. In Craigâs view, Americaâs system of casting and counting votes isnât fundamentally brokenâit survived January 6 and remains strong to this dayâbut the reforms to the Electoral Count Act now on the table would nevertheless be significant for American political life. By raising the threshold for objecting to vote certification, emphasizing that the vice-president only has a ceremonial job in the process, and adopting other changes related to the role of state governments, these reforms would eliminate the legal ambiguity and reduce the kind of confusion Trump was able to exploit to mobilize supporters, some ultimately to deadly violence. âââ Graham Vyse: Whatâs driving this reform effort in the U.S.? Andy Craig: A lot of scholars and analysts believed the Electoral Count Act should be reformed even before January 6, but that day brought the issue to the center of American life. It galvanized a widespread desire for congressional action and ultimately brought together a broad, bipartisan coalition in favor of reform. As the law exists now, itâs vague, confusing, and poorly drafted in many ways. Over time, these problems enabled a series of wrong but not always totally implausible arguments that state officials, or Congress, or even the vice-president acting on his own could somehow change the result of the 2020 presidential electionâwhich drove a mob to sack the Capitol. Vyse: Given what a polarized political environment persists in the U.S., what explains bipartisan support for updating the law now? Craig: Democrats very clearly want to repudiate Trumpâs attempt to overturn the election and guard against a repeat of thatâespecially as Trump looks likely to be a candidate in the next presidential race. Reforming the Electoral Count Act would also strengthen the legal position of Republicans who would want to resist any pressure to overturn an election they might face. Itâs worth nothing that a majority of Republicans in the Senate and many Republicans in the House did vote against last yearâs effort to throw out electoral votes from Arizona and Pennsylvania. Republican opposition to Electoral Count Act reformâwhich there hasnât been very much ofâhas largely come, as you might expect, from the most dedicated Trump supporters. In the upper chamber of Congress, Senator Ted Cruz is a vocal opponent, but he lost the vote on whether to advance this reform in committee 14-1. In the lower chamber, in the House of Representatives, some Republicans who voted against it sound open to supporting the Senate legislation. In the U.S. Congress as a whole, thereâs not too much energy devoted to opposition right now, even as Trump has been blasting the reform effort. Vyse: How exactly would the proposed reform change the Electoral Count Act? [Advertisement]( Advertisement Craig: It would clarify the role of state governments. The U.S. Constitution says that each state appoints members of the Electoral College. These âelectorsâ cast the official votes for president and vice-president after the general election, with each elector typically voting as their state voted. The Electoral Count Act reforms would repudiate the idea that you can convene a state legislature after Election Day to change how a state appoints its electors. The reforms would also create an expedited judicial process for dealing with the ârogue governor scenarioââin which a governor refuses to certify the correct electorsâand update congressional procedures for counting and certifying Electoral College votes. The role of Congress is a little ambiguous in the text of the Electoral Count Act. The reform would raise the threshold for objecting to a stateâs Electoral College votes: You currently need just one representative and one senator to do that. Then you have to go through a whole debate and a vote, and the House and Senate have to convene separately, and this takes hours. The Senate version of Electoral Count Act reform would make it so youâd need at least 20 senators and a fifth of the House to object. The House version would require a third of each chamber. And the objections raised after the 2020 election wouldnât meet either of these thresholds. The reforms would also narrow the legitimate reasons that objections could be raised on, such as an elector voting for an ineligible presidential candidate, and it would clarify that the vice-presidentâs role is purely ceremonial. Vyse: Ever since January 6, thereâs been pervasive debate in America about whether an âattempted coupâ took place on that day and how close the U.S. came to a real constitutional crisisâor even to the end of its liberal democracy. How do you understand that debate, and where do you come down in it? Craig: Well, the system did hold. The states got it right. The courts got it right. Congress ultimately voted down the objections to state Electoral College votes, and the vice-president rejected the idea that he could decide the outcome of the 2020 election himself. When it came down to it, the people who needed to preserve the rule of law acted to preserve the rule of law. On the other hand, it was very seriousâand unprecedentedâto have an incumbent president of the United States trying to steal an election. Itâs not an exaggeration to say that, if Trump had succeeded, the U.S. would have an unelected autocrat illegitimately holding the presidency. No other president in the history of the republic has ever attempted to interfere with or reject the results of an election. [Colin Lloyd]( Colin Lloyd More from Andy Craig at The Signal: âThere was certainly a lot of farce to January 6âTrump was being Trump, and the cast of characters around him was hard to take seriously in some senseâbut it fits the definition of an attempted coup. Elements of the existing government, including the president, attempted to use extralegal means to seize power. His cabinet departments stood against it. The military wasnât anywhere close to supporting it. Still, Trump betrayed his oath of office; it was very seriousâeven if he and his allies didnât come close to succeedingâand managed to incite violence, with a mob chasing Congress out of the Capitol.â âElectoral Count Act reform is about shoring up the guardrails of American democracy. Itâs not necessarily going to convince peopleânor is it intended to convince themâto give up believing in âStop the Stealâ conspiracy theories about 2020. Itâs not itself a direct rebuttal to the notion of rigged vote counts and fake ballots. To the degree that Americans believe in that nonsenseâwhich, yes, the former president is still promotingâitâs a real problem; but this reform would clarify that the law isnât on their side. Going forward, itâll be important for anyone getting pressure to overturn an election result to be able to point to this law and say, No, I canât do that.â âThere are issues related to discounting or overturning election results, which represent serious attacks on the rule of law and democracy. Then there are issues related to voting procedures and election administration, which can be debated within the normal bounds of partisan politics, where each party fights for changes that would give it a marginal advantage. Take voter-identification laws: Iâm skeptical of increasing voter-ID requirements, but itâs not fundamentally illegitimate or undemocratic to debate the issue.â [The Signal]( explores urgent questions in current events around the worldâto support it and for full access: This email address is unmonitored; please send questions or comments [here](mailto:mail@thesgnl.com) To advertise with The Signal: advertise@thesgnl.com Add us to your [address book](mailto:newsletter@thesgnl.com) © 2022 The Signal The Signal | 1717 N St. NW, Washington, DC 20011 [Unsubscribe {EMAIL}](
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