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Trump unhappy DOJ stepped in to crush Gohmert lawsuit

President Donald Trump is unhappy that the Department of Justice responded on behalf of Vice President Mike Pence in a lawsuit filed by Texas Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert that aims to give Pence the power to overturn the presidential election.

The New York Times reported that Trump called Pence Friday morning to express surprise at the development. The president was more vocal to others about his displeasure, sources told the paper’s Maggie Haberman.  

Gohmert and Arizona’s slate of GOP ‘alternate’ electors have sued Pence to expand his powers, so that he can solely determine which Electoral College votes to count when he presides over the January 6 session of Congress to make President-elect Joe Biden’s win official.  

In a fresh filing Friday afternoon, Gohmert argued that Pence is more powerful than a ‘glorified envelope-opener in chief.’ 

‘Under the Constitution, he has the authority to conduct that proceeding as he sees fit,’ Gohmert wrote. ‘He may count elector votes certified by a state’s executive, or he can prefer a competing slate of duly qualified electors. He may ignore all electors from a certain state. That is the power bestowed upon him by the Constitution.’ 

Legal experts have strongly disagreed with Gohmert’s assessment.  

In the Thursday night DOJ filing, Pence’s lawyer, Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Coghlan, pointed out a basic fallacy in this case – in order to sue, the plaintiff and the defendant must be in opposition. 

President Donald Trump (left), pictured returning to the White House Thursday with first lady Melania Trump (right), is unhappy the Justice Department stepped in on behalf of Vice President Mike Pence to crush a lawsuit aimed at giving Pence the power to overturn the election

President Donald Trump (left), pictured returning to the White House Thursday with first lady Melania Trump (right), is unhappy the Justice Department stepped in on behalf of Vice President Mike Pence to crush a lawsuit aimed at giving Pence the power to overturn the election

Vice President Mike Pence's Justice Department lawyer wants a judge to toss out a case being spearheaded by Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert that seeks to expand Pence's powers so that he can choose which Electoral College votes count

Vice President Mike Pence’s Justice Department lawyer wants a judge to toss out a case being spearheaded by Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert that seeks to expand Pence’s powers so that he can choose which Electoral College votes count

Rep. Louie Gohmert, a Republican from Texas, filed a federal lawsuit in Texas alongside Arizona's 'alternate' Electoral College electors - and now some of Michigan's too - that seeks to allow Vice President Mike Pence to choose Trump electors over Biden electors on January 6

Rep. Louie Gohmert, a Republican from Texas, filed a federal lawsuit in Texas alongside Arizona’s ‘alternate’ Electoral College electors – and now some of Michigan’s too – that seeks to allow Vice President Mike Pence to choose Trump electors over Biden electors on January 6

In this case, Gohmert and Pence’s interests are aligned.

‘The Vice President is not the proper defendant in this lawsuit,’ Coghlan wrote. ‘The Vice President – the only defendant in this case – is ironically the very person whose power they seek to promote.’ 

‘A suit to establish that the vice president has discretion over the count, filed against the vice president, is a walking legal contradition,’ Coghlan noted in a Thursday night filing. 

Still, on Friday, a number of Michigan’s ‘alternate’ electors filed a brief in the case. 

If Trump had won Michigan, these individuals would have been the state’s members of the Electoral College. 

However, because Trump didn’t win Michigan, the state’s electors are Democrats – and cast their votes in favor of Biden in Lansing on December 14. 

In court documents the rogue electors say that ‘with the permission and endorsement of the Michigan Legislature’ they cast votes in favor of President Donald Trump ‘at the time, place, and manner required under Michigan state law and the Electoral Count Act.’ 

‘At the same time, Michigan’s Governor and Secretary of State appointed a separate and competing slate of electors who cast Michigan’s electoral votes for former Vice-President Joseph R. Biden, despite the evidence of massive multi-state electoral fraud committed on Biden’s behalf that changed electoral results in Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and other states that have also put forward competing slates of Presidential Electors,’ the court document reads. 

The group did not have the permission of the Michigan legislature – with Michigan State Police blocking their access to the capitol – but they did have approval from
the White House.  

On December 14, White House aide Stephen Miller revealed a plot to have separate Republican electors cast votes for Trump in key swing states including Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico. 

‘As we speak, today, an alternate slate of electors in the contested states is going to vote and we’re going to send those results up to Congress,’ Miller said on ‘Fox & Friends.’ ‘This will ensure that all of our legal remedies remain open. That means if we win these cases in the courts, we can direct that these alternate electors be certified.’  

This is where the Gohmert lawsuit comes in. 

The suit argues that the Electoral Count Act, which was passed in 1887, violates the 12th Amendment, which outlines the procedure for electing the president and vice president.  

The amendment, which was ratified in 1804, says that the ‘President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall be counted.’ 

On Friday, Trump continued to push his supporters to come to Washington, D.C. to protest on the day Pence will oversee a Congressional session in which the Electoral College votes are tallied

On Friday, Trump continued to push his supporters to come to Washington, D.C. to protest on the day Pence will oversee a Congressional session in which the Electoral College votes are tallied 

Trump's White House backed the effort to have 'alternate' electors show up in state capitols to vote on December 14, so that those votes could be used to challenge the actual Electoral College results when Congress meets on January 6

Trump’s White House backed the effort to have ‘alternate’ electors show up in state capitols to vote on December 14, so that those votes could be used to challenge the actual Electoral College results when Congress meets on January 6  

While the lawsuit aims to give Pence unprecedented power to choose from slates of electors, lawmakers have the ability to challenge the count, with Sen. Josh Hawley saying he would object to some states' results

While the lawsuit aims to give Pence unprecedented power to choose from slates of electors, lawmakers have the ability to challenge the count, with Sen. Josh Hawley saying he would object to some states’ results 

The lawsuit argues that the ‘President of the Senate,’ which is Pence, has the sole authority to determine which votes to count.  

‘That, with respect to competing slates of electors from the State of Arizona or other Contested States, the Twelfth Amendment contains the exclusive dispute resolution mechanisms, namely, that (i) Vice-President Pence determines which slate of electors’ votes count, or neither, for that State,’ the lawsuit says. 

Legal experts called the reasoning laughable. 

Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe tweeted that Gohmert effort ‘may be the dumbest law suit of all’ adding that it’s ‘jaw-droppingly stupid.’ 

‘The idea that the Vice President has sole authority to determine whether or not to count electoral votes submitted by a state, or which of competing submissions to count, is inconsistent with a proper understanding of the Constitution,’ Ohio State University law professor Edward Foley told The Hill.  

Gohmert will also be joining the effort backed by more than 140 House Republicans to object to state vote counts during the Congressional session. 

Congress has the power to toss out Electoral College votes – though has never done so. 

If a House member and a senator both sign on to an objection, lawmakers debate the merits of that objection for two hours and then vote.  

Sen. Josh Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, has said he will file objections, but he hasn’t said how many states’ votes he will protest. 

That effort, which could drag out the January 6 session for hours, even days, is doomed to fail, as only a simple majority is needed to knock down an objection. 

With Democrats in control of the House and enough Republicans objecting to the plot in the Senate, Biden’s win will get the Congressional seal of approval. 

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