Saturday, December 19, 2020

The Conduct Of Congressional Objections To Presidential Electors-By Harsha Sankar(December 2020)

This is how it should work on January 6th, 2021, according to Title 3 Section 15 and Title 3 Section 17, United States Code, when US Congress decides if objections to the choice of electors are necessary.

If member(s) of both the House Of Representatives and the US Senate decide that the electors were unlawfully appointed according to the laws of its own state, then that objection has to be voted on by members of each legislative chamber. If a majority of both houses objects to a slate of electors from a certain state, then that state's electors' votes are rescinded.

Every state will be subject to a vote if objections about its electors are made from member(s) from both houses. If a sufficient number of electors have their votes rescinded to cause no candidate to reach 270 electoral votes, then the House of Representatives will pick the President with each state having one vote. The top 3 candidates will be eligible to be chosen by such representatives.

If a sufficient number of electors have their votes rescinded to cause no VP candidate to reach 270 electoral votes, then the US Senate will pick the Vice-President. The top 2 candidates will be eligible to be chosen by the senators. 
 

If Biden still receives enough electoral votes to become President, then Trump can declare a National Emergency to declare new elections. He can cite both the Insurrection Act of 1807 and the 14th Amendment as justifications if he feels the state governments were complicit in the fraudulent elections.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home