Twenty Days

The old year won’t be behind us for awhile, alas. I won’t feel that 2020 is really over until Joe Biden is inaugurated. We’ve got a dicey twenty days ahead. But let’s start on a happy note — Josh Hawley is not feeling the love today.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pressed Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley on a Thursday morning conference call to explain his plans to object to the Electoral College vote next week, which sets up an awkward vote for Hawley’s fellow Senate Republicans while boosting the Missourian’s national profile.

But McConnell was met with silence. Hawley — unbeknownst to some on the call, which was attended by Senate Republicans — was not present. He later emailed GOP colleagues to outline his decision to oppose final certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

Oops.

It’s been clear McConnell did not want to force Senate Republicans to go on record voting for or against Trump, and now a freshman Senator has gone rogue and didn’t even bother to get on the conference call.

The backlash to Hawley’s announcement that he would challenge the EC vote has been swift and hard. Former CIA Director John Brennan called Hawley the “Most Craven, Unprincipled, & Corrupt Senator” in a video here. Former Republican columnist Jennifer Rubin wrote that Josh Hawley reminds us that the GOP is the sedition party.

What is particularly reprehensible about Hawley’s move is that, unlike some of the deluded House members who signed onto the lawsuit, he knows his complaint is groundless. He is a graduate of Yale Law School, the former attorney general of Missouri and a law professor at the University of Missouri School of Law. He clerked for Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and subsequently wrote Supreme Court briefs. He knows that what he is doing is antithetical to the Constitution, his oath of office and his obligations as a lawyer. Yale should ask for its diploma back; the Missouri bar should move to take away his license. Georgia voters should send Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock to the U.S. Senate to deprive Hawley of the gavel on any committee and his party of the majority.

Republican Senator Ben Sasse lumped Hawley together with “ambitious politicians who think there’s a quick way to tap into the president’s populist base without doing any real, long-term damage.”

The senator, who has emerged as one of the more vocal critics of Trump in a party that is staunchly loyal to the president, warned that the effort amounts to pointing a “loaded gun at the heart of legitimate self-government.”

“We ought to be better than that. If we normalize this, we’re going to turn American politics into a Hatfields and McCoys endless blood feud – a house hopelessly divided,” he said.

Former Republican speech writer Michael Gerson weirdly tries to portray Hawley as an innocent victim of corruption.

As a former clerk to Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., Hawley surely possesses a serious understanding of the constitutional order. He is, on personal acquaintance, a talented, knowledgeable, ambitious young man.

The problem with political decadence is not what it does to those who are already disordered. The primary problem is what it does to talented, knowledgeable, ambitious young leaders who can be warped toward a destructive influence.

As I wrote yesterday, Hawley has been nothing but an ambitious grandstander since he won his first election. He was a waste of space as a state attorney general, more interested in promoting his political career and getting his name in the news than in doing his job. In the Senate his votes have been reliably right wing. So, basically, nobody needs this guy. Although I understand he’s a big hit on Parler.

I’m making no predictions about the Georgia runoff elections on January 5. January 6 is the Electoral College certification, and that could be a mess. Hard-right factions are planning multiple protests in Washington DC that day.

Threats of violence, ploys to smuggle guns into the District and calls to set up an “armed encampment” on the Mall have proliferated in online chats about the Jan. 6 day of protest. The Proud Boys, members of armed right-wing groups, conspiracy theorists and white supremacists have pledged to attend.

Charming. We should also expect some fake “alternate” electors to show up with their fake Electoral College ballots and demand they be counted.

On New Year’s Eve, the DOJ asked a federal judge to deny emergency injunctive relief sought by fake pro-Trump electors and Rep. Gohmert. The plaintiffs sued VP Pence in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas earlier this week. They argued that Pence has the power to select “competing slates of Presidential Electors” (there aren’t any) and argued that the Electoral Count Act of 1887 (ECA) is unconstitutional.

The DOJ’s answer to the extreme proposition that VP Pence has the power to ignore electoral votes and hand President Donald Trump a second term was straightforward: You are suing the “wrong defendant.”

The DOJ thinks the suit should have been against the Senate and the House, not the Vice President, who has no power to decide who the winner of the election might be.

Rep. Gohmert and a cast of purported competing GOP electors in Arizona—a state Trump lost to Biden—responded to that on Friday by claiming the argument is “easily disposed” of because they are right and DOJ is wrong.

Oh, well that settles it, then. At least Pence has signaled he wants nothing to do with this and has asked a judge to dismiss the suit. As many have noted, he also plans to leave the country as soon as the Electoral College business is dispatched.

Assuming the nation survives January 6 intact, Trump will still be president for two more weeks. When that’s over, I might feel like celebrating.

6 thoughts on “Twenty Days

  1. I'll be 63 in early March, and today, I thought about how much the Republican Party has changed in my lifetime.

    When I was born, Ike was POTUS.  A WWII hero!  A conservative, but one who kept FDR'S New Deal programs intact.  Ike was responsible for our nation's highways (mostly for military reason, after seeing how useful Hitler's Autobahn was for moving troops and military equipment).  He was an anti-Communist.

    Sure, there were the KKKonservative whacko's in the party!  The John Birch Society, whose members thought Ike was a Commie plant.  But the GOP mostly ignored those loons – but kept them nearby, just in case.

    After Ike, the Republicans were criical in securing civil and voting rights for African-Americans. 

    Nixon, of course, was the party's first major cancer.  His bigoted "Southern Strategy" changed America's political landscape, and flipped both party's positions regarding race.

    For decades, the Republican Party sold itself as the go-to party for "national security," "fiscal sanity," and "state's rights (and we ALL know what THAT meant!)"

    The downfall of the USSR and the Iron Curtain threw the party for a loop!

    And now, for all intents and purposes, the GOP is party to Putin's attempts at destroying our democracy.

    The election of our first Black POTUS made the GOP INSANE!  

    And this is why I call them the RepubliKKKLAN Party!

    If some alien came from space, and asked for people to describe our 2-Party system, a Democrat could proudly say, "Well, my party is for equal access to voting and economic rights for ALL Americans – regardless of race, color, creed, gender, sexual orientation, or any other obstacle to universal rights and access to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We're for cleaning-up the environment we've taken for granted for a few centuries.  And we're for a tax system that is fair for both rich and poor.  Blahdy-blahdy-blahdy…

    And if the alien asked a RepubliKKKLAN, s/he can't say, " National security and state's rights" anymore!  

    Not after helping tRUMP hump Putin's leg, and give American AND foreign individuals and companies MASSIVE tax breaks!!!

    So the RepubliKKKLAN's only answer to that curious alien, is, "You remember that guy/gal's list?  Well, we're AGAINST ALL of that!!!"

    But, "what do you stand FOR," the Lien may ask.

    "Liberal tears.  And for there to always be easily identifiable people to bd worse-off than we are – as low as we get, we want someone to mock, and laud things over."

    I hope that alien then takes them all naked, up into the the heavens.  The heavens , where they it's near absolute zero.

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    • When I was four, Ike became POTUS.  A WWII hero!  A economic liberal compared to today's corporately owned democrats, but one who kept FDR'S New Deal programs intact.

  2. Great article in the Atlantic about Hawley, The Unbearable Weakness of Trump’s Minions

    A longtime acquaintance of the Missouri senator explained to me Hawley’s actions this way: “Hawley never wants to talk down to his voters. He wants to speak for them, and at the moment, they are saying the election was stolen.”

    “He surely knows this isn’t true,” this acquaintance continued, “and that the legal arguments don’t hold water. And yet clearly the incentives he confronts—as someone who wants to speak for those voters, and as someone with ambitions beyond the Senate—lead him to conclude he should pretend the lie is true. This is obviously a very bad sign about the direction of the GOP in the coming years.”

    Think about this statement for a moment: The incentives Josh Hawley and many of his fellow Republicans officeholders confront lead them to conclude that they should pretend the lie is true.

    In recent weeks, I learned about “the Solzhenitsyn Test” – it’s whether ordinary people will go along with a lie. Hawley flunks.

  3. Hark, the herald angels shout

    Eighteen days 'til Trump is out!

    Eighteen days of misery

    In this penitentiary

    No more Sharpies, no more crooks

    No more Donald's dirty looks

    Hark, the herald angels shout

    Eighteen days 'til Trump is out!

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