How many votes are required in Congress (presumably the House only?) to “toss” a state’s electoral votes in the count to 270?
On what grounds could the house nullify the results of the election (and then subsequently cast their own votes)?
I am sure this is on everyone’s mind, but its been a week with limited updates on the litigation aspects of this (state and/or federal).
I want to be positive, but a week has gone by and no states have flipped. Nothing has come from the SCOTUS. We have a month left and 5-7 states worth of work to do. 2000 took a month for only one state. Democrats will try to delay every step of the way, and electors vote on Dec 14. Any insight?
I want to be positive, but a week has gone by and no states have flipped. Nothing has come from the SCOTUS. We have a month left and 5-7 states worth of work to do. 2000 took a month for only one state. Democrats will try to delay every step of the way, and electors vote on Dec 14. Any insight?
All I hear is people complaining, but I have heard NOTHING about what is being done to stop it (by Trump or others). Are these preventative efforts just under the radar/behind the scenes? Am afraid this could cost us the election - I got a USPS flyer in the mail today with info on how to vote by mail (obviously I didn't request it).
All I hear is people complaining, but I have heard NOTHING about what is being done to stop it (by Trump or others). Are these preventative efforts just under the radar/behind the scenes? Am afraid this could cost us the election - I got a USPS flyer in the mail today with info on how to vote by mail (obviously I didn't request it).
I keep hearing all this terrible info about ballot and election fraud, but I've heard NOTHING about what is being done to stop it.
How is it that the GOP has put themselves into the position of having to be on the defensive about this, and more importantly, what is being done to stop it? Starting to think this could cost Trump the election if we're not on it.