Washington – For the first time, a base of leading Republicans said on Monday that Democrat Joe Biden had won the presidential election, essentially abandoning his attack on President Donald Trump as a result after certifying the electoral college vote.
With the states confirming the results, the Republicans faced an important choice – to declare Biden elected president, as calculated, or to stand quietly as Trump embarks on a malicious campaign to thwart the election.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Guy, remained silent on Monday. But many senators said the time had come.
“Sometimes you have to deal with music,” said Sen, a second-ranked GOP leader from South Dakota. John Dune said. “Once the Electoral College has resolved the issue today, it is time for everyone to move forward.”
Sen. of Missouri, chairman of the founding committee. Roy Blunt said the group will now “deal with Vice President Biden as President-elect.”
Just last week, Republicans on the inauguration committee publicly refused to do so. He said Monday’s election college poll was “significant”.
Texas GOP Sen. It looks like Biden will be president, avoiding further legal challenges from John Corn.
“This is the nature of this election. You have to get a winner. Once Trump’s legal arguments are over,” Joe Biden is on track to become president of the United States, “Cornin said.
The turning point comes almost six weeks after Election Day. Many Republicans have quietly run out of time, and Trump has been able to challenge the country’s valuable voting system in an unprecedented way.
Some GOP lawmakers have promised to hold a protest until Jan. 6 when Congress votes to accept or reject the election college results. Others say Trump’s legal battles must be resolved by January 20, the day of his inauguration.
“This is the narrowest path for the president,” said Sen. Trump, a top ally of the RSC. Lindsay Graham said. “But with that being said, I think we will allow those legal challenges to be eliminated.”
Historians and election officials have warned that Trump’s unsubstantiated claims about voter fraud threaten to undermine Americans’ confidence in the electoral system and that lawmakers have an obligation under the inauguration law to defend the Constitution.
“The campaign to change the decision is a dangerous one,” said Julian Jellyser, a professor of history and public policy at Princeton.
“This is a Republican move, not a presidential move,” Jelier said. “Without their silence, he would not be able to do what he is doing.”
Trump is trying to oust thousands of Americans, especially those who voted by mail, in dozens of failed cases. Attorney General William Barr, who resigned abruptly on Monday, said there was no evidence of widespread fraud in altering the election results, but his legal team is demanding abuses. State election officials, including Republicans, have called the election fair and valid.
As a decisive blow to Trump’s legal efforts, the Supreme Court last week dismissed two of his cases challenging the electoral process in key states.
Former Senate GOP President Trent Lott said Monday that there were no small reasons for Trump to continue the struggle.
“I don’t see many ways left to pursue the presidency,” Lott said in an interview. “Once the Electoral College votes, most people are going to recognize Joe Biden as the president-elect.”
Former House Speaker John Bohner has made it clear that Republicans are Biden’s winner, saying in a forum last month that “the election is over, in the minds of everyone except Donald Trump.”
Earlier on Monday, a handful of officials elected by the current Republican Party in Congress acknowledged that Biden had been elected president. Fewer people have even come to greet him.
Among GOP senators, Susan Collins, Mitt Romney and Lisa Murkowski spoke most openly in declaring Pita the winner.
Others said the election college was waiting for a referendum, which is usually a routine step in the election process, but has been multiplied by Trump’s refusal to agree.
“Even though I supported President Trump, the election college poll today makes it clear that Joe Biden is now elected president,” Sen of R-Ohio said. Rob Portman said in a statement.
“The presidential election is over,” said R. Sen. Said Lamar Alexander.
Still, many Republicans in Congress are backing Trump’s legal battles. 120 House Republicans signed into the Texas case, which failed last week, and the Supreme Court has asked for a hearing in the states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Georgia to expel election results.
The case is being re-assigned to another judge, Texas’ GOP Sen. Ted Cruz held a telephone down town hall on Monday, urging voters to “take part in the struggle to preserve unity.”
One House Republican, Alabama’s Rep. Mo Brooks, has promised to challenge the Election College’s results on Jan. 6.
At that time, any challenge in Congress must be raised by at least one member of the House and Senate. It is unclear whether any GOP senator will join the case. It is very unlikely that there will not be enough congressional support to defeat the election.
Senate Democrat leader Chuck Schumer said Monday that Biden must win “again” before Republicans can accept it.
Many Republicans did not want to declare Pita a winner, and for the same reasons they avoided him when Trump was president.
The president is returning home, and they are reluctant to pass him by or risk public retaliation against him on Twitter and beyond. As Trump prepares to step down, his supporters need voters and lawmakers for their own re-election.
Representative Alex Mooney, RWV, introduced a resolution in Congress last week stating that no one would be elected president until all hearings are over. He proposed it after confronting him last month demanding that more be done to support Trump.
Georgia’s by-elections are Jan. 5, which will determine the Senate ‘s control. Current GOP senators David Bertue and Kelly Lofler need Trump’s support to defend their seats against Democratic challengers John Osof and Rafael Warnock.
Copyright 2020 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.