11 February 2022
TRENDING

The Jan. 6 Committee Won’t Be Intimidated by Liz Cheney.

Voices4America
Voices4America

I keep on my desk a copy of the oath my great-great-grand­fa­ther signed when he re-en­listed in the Union Army in 1863. Like the oath given by all those who serve in gov­ernment and every mem­ber of our armed forces, Samuel Fletcher Ch­eney swore to “sup­port and de­fend the Con­sti­tu­tion of the United States against all en­e­mies for­eign and do­mes­tic.” Gener­ations of Amer­i­cans have sworn that same oath and given their lives to de­fend the Con­sti­tu­tion and our na­tion.

Last week, for­mer Vice Pres­i­dent Mike Pence spoke about the events of Jan. 6, 2021. Pres­i­dent Trump was “wrong,” he said, to in­sist that Mr. Pence or any vice pres­ident could “over­turn” the elec­tion by re­fus­ing to count cer­ti­fied slates of elec­toral votes. That no­tion was, as Mr. Pence said, “un-Amer­i­can.” What Mr. Trump had in­sisted that Mr. Pence do on Jan. 6 was not only un-Amer­i­can, it was un­con­sti­tu­tional and il­le­gal.

Ar­ti­cle II and the 12th Amend­ment gov­ern how the na­tion se­lects the pres­i­dent. Con­gress doesn’t se­lect the pres­i­dent; the states do. Every state in the union now se­lects a pres­i­den­tial can­di­date through a pop­u­lar vote. And every state iden­ti­fies the man­ner in which dis­putes re­gard­ing the elec­tion are ad­dressed un­der state law. Those laws set forth a process for chal­leng­ing an elec­tion when con­cerns arise, in­clud-ing po­ten­tial re­counts or au­dits and an op­por­tu­nity to lit­i­gate dis­puted is­sues in court. When courts have re­solved any elec­tion chal-lenges, and the elec­tion re­sult has been cer­ti­fied by the gov­er­nor of a state, the elec­tion is over. That is the rule of law.

The 12th Amend­ment also leaves lit­tle doubt that Con-gress must count the cer­ti­fied elec­toral votes it re­ceives from the states: “The pres­i­dent of the Sen­ate shall, in the presence of the Sen­ate and House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives, open all the cer­tifi­cates and the votes shall then be counted. The per­son hav­ing the great­est num­ber of votes for pres­i­dent, shall be the pres­i­dent.” This pro­vi­sion doesn’t say, for ex­ample, Con­gress must count cer­ti­fied elec­toral votes un­less it has con­cerns about fraud al­le­ga­tions, or un­less it dis­agrees with the out­come of state or fed­eral court lit­i­ga­tion. And the vice pres­i­dent, as pres­i­dent of the Sen­ate pre­sid­ing over the count, can’t sim­ply refuse to count a state’s cer­ti­fied slate of elec­toral votes—ei­ther un­der the Con­sti­tu­tion or un­der the Elec­toral Count Act of 1887.

Repub­li­cans used to ad­vo­cate fi­delity to the rule of law and the plain text of the Con­sti­tu­tion. In 2020, Mr. Trump con­vinced many to aban­don those prin­ci­ples. He falsely claimed that the elec­tion was stolen from him be­cause of wide­spread fraud. While some de­gree of fraud oc­curs in every elec­tion, there was no ev­i­dence of fraud on a scale that could have changed this one. As the Se­lect Com­mit­tee will demon­strate in hear­ings later this year, no for­eign power cor­rupted Amer­ica’s vot­ing ma­chines, and no mas­sive se­cret fraud changed the elec­tion out­come.

Al­most all mem­bers of Con­gress know this—al­though many lack the courage to say it out loud. Mr. Trump knew it too, from his own cam­paign of­fi­cials, from his own ap­pointees at the Jus­tice De­part­ment, and from the dozens of law­suits he lost. Yet, Mr. Trump ig­nored the rul­ings of the courts and launched a massive cam­paign to mis­lead the pub­lic. Our hearings will show that these false­hoods pro­voked the vi­o­lence on Jan. 6. Mr. Trump’s lawyers have be­gun to pay the price for spread­ing these lies. For ex­am­ple, Rudy Giu­liani’s li­cense to prac­tice law has been sus­pended be­cause he “commu­ni­cated demon­stra­bly false and mis­lead­ing statements to courts, law­mak­ers and the pub­lic at large in his ca­pacity as lawyer for for­mer Pres­i­dent Don­ald J. Trump,” in the words of a New York ap­pel­late court.

The Jan. 6 in­ves­ti­ga­tion isn’t only about the in­ex­cus-able vi­o­lence of that day: It is also about fi­delity to the Con­sti­tu­tion and the rule of law, and whether elected rep­re­sen­ta­tives be­lieve in those things or not. One mem­ber of the House Freedom Cau­cus warned the White House in the days be­fore Jan. 6 that the pres­ident’s plans would drive “a stake in the heart of the fed­eral re­pub­lic.” That was ex­actly right.

Those who do not wish the truth of Jan. 6 to come out have pre­dictably re­sorted to at­tack­ing the process—claim­ing it is tainted and po­lit­i­cal. Our hear­ings will show this charge to be wrong. We are fo­cused on facts, not rhetoric, and we will present those facts with­out ex­ag­ger­a-tion, no mat­ter what crit­i­cism we face. My friend the late Charles Krautham­mer once said: “The les­son of our his­tory is that the task of merely main­tain­ing strong and sturdy the struc­tures of a con­sti­tu­tional or­der is un­ending, the con­tin­u­ing and cease­less work of every gen­er­a­tion.” Every gen­er­a­tion of Amer­i­cans has ful­filled its duty to sup­port and de­fend the Con­sti­tu­tion. That re­sponsi­bil­ity now falls to us.


Ms. Ch­eney, a Wyoming Re­pub­li­can, is a U.S. rep­re­sen-ta­tive and vice chair of the House Se­lect Com­mit­tee on the Jan­uary 6 At­tack. Wall Street Journal. February 11, 2022

###

February 11, 2022

Voices4America Post Script. Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY) in her WSJ op-ed today, “What Mr. Trump had in­sisted that Mr. Pence do on Jan. 6 was not only un-Amer­i­can, it was un­con­sti­tu­tional and il­le­gal.” She got that right!

Other Articles

TRENDING
Annette Niemtzow

The fight for Democracy continues in Wisconsin. The elections are on February 21.

11 February 2023
TRENDING
Annette Niemtzow

Video and transcript of the State of the Union, plus a summary by Heather Cox Richardson.

08 February 2023
On Social
Eric Swalwell

Ask yourself something: are you willing to pay higher taxes and have less affordable health care so you can “own the libs” because that’s the price you’ll have to pay if the GOP agenda is enacted … you pay more, their cronies pay less.

06 February 2023
On Social
Congressman Maxwell Alejandro Frost

I’m excited to join @ProChoiceCaucus as Freshman Leader! With Roe protections gone and Governor Ron DeSantis and the Florida legislature passing one of the harshest abortion bans in the nation, my home state has been on the frontlines of the battle for reproductive freedom.

06 February 2023