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Trump falsely says Electoral Count Act talks prove he was right on Pence’s power
If Your Time is short
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Trump’s plan to have Vice President Mike Pence reject votes from seven states and subvert the election hinged on the existence of legitimate competing slates of electors sent to Congress. There were no such competing slates.
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Constitutional scholars say that the Electoral Count Act, which governs the certification process, is poorly written but that under no circumstances would it give the vice president the power to throw certified state results into question.
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There is no contradiction between saying Pence lacked that power, and seeking to tighten the law.
On Jan. 6, 2021, former President Donald Trump thought his last hope to reverse his election defeat hinged on Vice President Mike Pence, and a creative reading of a 100-year-old law, the Electoral Count Act.
Trump argued that Pence could set aside the electoral votes from enough states — including Arizona, Pennsylvania and Michigan — to erase Joe Biden’s winning margin.
Pence pushed back, saying he lacked the power to do that, and proceeded with the certification of Biden’s victory.
Today, as a bipartisan group of senators led by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, discuss revising the Electoral Count Act, Trump said the fact that they are even trying shows he was right.
"What they are saying, is that Mike Pence did have the right to change the outcome, and they now want to take that right away," Trump said in a Jan. 30 statement. "Unfortunately, he didn’t exercise that power, he could have overturned the Election!"
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That is not what these senators are saying. What they do say is that the Electoral Count Act is poorly written, and that the limits on Congress and the vice president need to be spelled out more clearly to prevent the law from being abused.
Many of Trump’s critics took his words about overturning the election to be a rare admission that he lost, and that he had sought to undo a legitimate result. But here, we focus solely on what he said about the vice president’s power under the Electoral Count Act, and what lawmakers are trying to do to update the law.
The Electoral Count Act of 1887 grew out of a string of disputed and close presidential elections from 1876 to 1884. It governs the final certification process after an election, the process that was interrupted on Jan. 6 by rioters.
The law lays out the steps for each state to finalize their results, certify a slate of electors representing those results, and send that list to Washington. It says that on Jan. 6, the results from each state are opened, and the president of the Senate (typically the vice president) "shall thereupon announce the state of the vote."
The law’s more complicated parts deal with what Congress should do if there is more than one slate of electors coming from official bodies in a given state, an issue that caused commotion during elections in the late 1800s.
In that situation, the Senate and House would each vote on who the lawful electors are. If the Senate and House disagreed, then the slate certified by the state’s executive would be counted. But Trump’s team asserted that the text gives the option for none of the votes to be counted in that circumstance.
That provision was the opening Trump hoped to use to derail the certification of Biden’s win and usurp the presidency.
In a memo authored by Trump lawyer John Eastman, the plan was that when the tallies from Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Nevada and New Mexico were opened, Pence would announce "he has multiple slates of electors." Pence would set aside the votes and declare that there were no results from those states. (A set of faked electoral certificates from those states were part of this plan.)
But on Jan. 6, 2021, there were no competing slates of electors from any state. As each state’s certificate was opened, Pence acknowledged that it was "the only certificate of vote from that State that purports to be a return from the State."
In a March 2021 paper about the Electoral Count Act, Boston University law professors Jack Beerman and Gary Lawson pointed out the legal implications of that.
"If there is no controversy coming from a particular state’s legislature about the validity of that state’s certification, there is probably nothing for the Vice President, or the federal courts, to decide," they wrote.
As a separate matter, senators and representatives could raise objections about whether some states had followed their own voting rules, and they did on Jan. 6. Both chambers voted down those challenges. Regardless, that section of the law granted no authority to the vice president to unilaterally set votes aside.
"He has no power to ‘change the outcome’ or to ‘overturn the election,’" said Michael McConnell, a former Republican-appointed federal judge and director of the Constitutional Law Center at Stanford Law School. "Once the electors chosen by the states met and voted on Dec. 14, 2020, the election was over."
To Benjamin Ginsberg, a legal scholar and former Republican Party lawyer, Trump’s effort to seize the presidency by pressuring Pence was evidence that the Electoral Count Act is too poorly written to help the country weather a constitutional crisis.
"The former president made a hollow argument that tried to exploit what he tried to say was ambiguity in the law," Ginsberg said. "He didn’t succeed because his argument was wrong. But since it has been raised and the language could be modernized, it makes good sense to restate the current law in even more clear, contemporary terms."
That is what Collins and a group of Republican and Democratic senators are working on. (One motivator for the bipartisan push: The current vice president is a Democrat.)
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"We need to make very clear that the vice president’s role is just ministerial, that he has no power, she has no power, to overturn the votes that are submitted by the states," Collins said in a Jan. 26 television interview.
Collins added that the current law makes it too easy for lawmakers to interrupt the counting process. All it takes to trigger a two-hour debate is one senator and one representative to challenge the results from a given state.
There are other issues with the law.
Ginsberg and other scholars say that the law fails to say who at the state level — the governor or the secretary of state — has final say over the slate of electors. It is vague about the grounds for challenging slates sent from any given state. Above all, it fails to set clear limits on Congress’ power to reject the results certified by each state.
There is broad support for clarifying the Electoral Count Act, in Congress and beyond. The American Enterprise Institute, a market-oriented think tank, the libertarian Cato Institute and The Wall Street Journal editorial board have all expressed interest in rewriting the law.
One final point: Trump’s statement assumed that any effort to change the law could only mean that people thought he was right about Pence’s powers. Logically, there could be more than one reason to change the law. As Ohio State University constitutional legal scholar Edward Foley tweeted, "It's entirely consistent to think BOTH that Pence had no such authority, and ALSO that the Electoral Count Act should be clarified on this crucial point."
We reached out to Trump’s office and did not hear back.
Trump said that discussions about changes to the Electoral Count Act show Pence had the power to overturn the 2020 election results.
Legal scholars say that the law is poorly worded, and is vague on key points. But there’s broad legal agreement that the law never gave Pence the power to overturn the election.
Lawmakers seeking to modify the law say they want to reduce the ambiguities and raise the bar for senators and representatives to challenge results from any given state.
We rate this claim False.
RELATED: What you need to know about the fake Trump electors
Our Sources
Donald Trump, statement, Jan; 30, 2022
ABC News, This Week: Interview with Sen. Susan Collins, Jan. 30, 2022
WMTW, Sen. Susan Collins leading new bipartisan voting reform effort, Jan. 26, 2022
Boston University School of Law, The Electoral Count Mess: The Electoral Count Act of 1887 Is Unconstitutional, and Other Fun Facts (Plus a Few Random Academic Speculations) about Counting Electoral Votes, March 2021
CNN, Trump lawyer's memo on six-step plan for Pence to overturn the election, Sept. 21, 2021
Legal Information Institute, Electoral Count Act, accessed Jan. 31, 2022
Rep. Mike Gallagher, press release, Jan. 3, 2021
Edward Foley, tweet, Jan. 30, 2022
Washington Post, Why Pence can’t help save Trump, Jan. 5, 2021
Washington Post, Congress must fix this election law — before it’s too late, Dec. 1, 2020
Politico, Schumer gives Senate's newest bipartisan gang breathing room on post-Jan. 6 reform, Jan. 27, 2022
Cato Institute, Bipartisan Momentum Builds for Fixing the Electoral Count Act, Jan. 5, 2022
American Enterprise Institute, Why the Electoral Count Act needs reform: A Q&A with Matthew Seligman, July 20, 2021
Wall Street Journal, Overturning the Next Election, Jan. 4, 2022
Politico, McConnell cracks door to Electoral Count Act reform, Jan. 5, 2022
Washington Post, How Congress can fix the Electoral Count Act, Jan. 4, 2022
PolitiFact, No, key swing states did not cast electoral votes for both Trump and Biden, Dec. 16, 2020
PolitiFact, Congress’s task is simply to count electoral votes Jan. 6, Jan. 4, 2021
PolitiFact, What you need to know about the fake Trump electors, jan. 28, 2022
PolitiFact, How Democrats aim to define the lessons of Jan. 6, Jan. 5, 2022
Email exchange, Benjamin Ginsberg, visiting fellow, Hoover Institute, Jan. 31, 2022
Email exchange, Michael W. McConnell, professor and director of the Constitutional Law Center, Stanford Law School, Jan. 31, 2022
Email exchange, Edward Foley, professor of constitutional law, Ohio State University, Jan. 31, 2022
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Trump falsely says Electoral Count Act talks prove he was right on Pence’s power
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