• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle
If Republicans Want to Reform the Electoral Count Act, Democrats Should Take It thumbnail

If Republicans Want to Reform the Electoral Count Act, Democrats Should Take It

January 14, 2022
20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025 thumbnail

20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025

November 23, 2025
Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here's When You Actually Need to Go. thumbnail

Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here’s When You Actually Need to Go.

November 20, 2025
Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja'Marr Chase suspension thumbnail

Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja’Marr Chase suspension

November 18, 2025
New England Patriots Sign Rookie TE to Active Roster thumbnail

New England Patriots Sign Rookie TE to Active Roster

November 18, 2025
How a 50-Year Mortgage Would Differ From a 30-Year Mortgage—and What It Would Mean for Homebuyers thumbnail

How a 50-Year Mortgage Would Differ From a 30-Year Mortgage—and What It Would Mean for Homebuyers

November 17, 2025
Trump asks Justice Department to probe Epstein's ties to Democrats, banks thumbnail

Trump asks Justice Department to probe Epstein’s ties to Democrats, banks

November 17, 2025
‘Like A Personal Translator’: Jabrill Peppers Simplified Steelers’ Defense For Kyle Dugger thumbnail

‘Like A Personal Translator’: Jabrill Peppers Simplified Steelers’ Defense For Kyle Dugger

November 16, 2025
Jets vs. Patriots: Thursday Night Football Open Thread thumbnail

Jets vs. Patriots: Thursday Night Football Open Thread

November 15, 2025
Game Observations: 8 Takeaways From the Patriots Victory Over the Jets on Thursday Night Football thumbnail

Game Observations: 8 Takeaways From the Patriots Victory Over the Jets on Thursday Night Football

November 14, 2025
Thursday Night Football: Jets vs. Patriots thumbnail

Thursday Night Football: Jets vs. Patriots

November 14, 2025
A baby formula recall linked to an infant botulism outbreak is expanding. Here’s what to know. thumbnail

A baby formula recall linked to an infant botulism outbreak is expanding. Here’s what to know.

November 14, 2025
Government Shutdown May Be Nearing End As Senators Break Impasse; Democrats Take Heat For Caving With Demands Unmet — Update thumbnail

Government Shutdown May Be Nearing End As Senators Break Impasse; Democrats Take Heat For Caving With Demands Unmet — Update

November 11, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate
Sunday, November 23, 2025
66 °f
Wellfleet
58 ° Tue
63 ° Wed
68 ° Thu
61 ° Fri
  • Login
  • Register
FREE Cape Cod News
DONATE
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Free Cape Cod News
No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
  • Videos
Home News

If Republicans Want to Reform the Electoral Count Act, Democrats Should Take It

FREE Cape Cod News by FREE Cape Cod News
January 14, 2022
in News, Politics
Reading Time: 6 mins read
Donate
0
If Republicans Want to Reform the Electoral Count Act, Democrats Should Take It thumbnail
633
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

Many lawmakers in Congress appear to have made the same new year’s resolution: to rewrite the Electoral Count Act of 1887, or ECA. Democrats have floated reforms to the law that governs the quadrennial task of counting and recording the votes of the Electoral College since last year’s attack on the Capitol, which put the ECA’s workings under a harsh spotlight. More recently, and perhaps surprisingly, a growing number of conservative lawmakers and commentators are calling for reforms, as well.

“Rewriting or repealing the Electoral Count Act leaves neither party with a partisan advantage,” The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board argued last week. “Now is also a good time to pass such legislation, since no one knows who will control each chamber of Congress in 2025.” National Review’s editorial board declared unironically that because Democrats “have a long history of post-election contests and rejecting the legitimacy of their election losses, Republicans should also want rules in place that make it harder for the other party to overturn a future Republican victory.”

Even Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell stated last week that the law “obviously has some flaws” and that changes would be “worth discussing.” Whatever the political and legislative dynamics of that discussion would look like, it’s certainly one worth having. No law can entirely prevent a Trump-style plot against the republic, but at the very least, it should not make it easier to accomplish.

What, you might be asking, does the Electoral Count Act of 1887 currently do? As its name implies, the law supplements the Constitution’s provisions on the Electoral College and sets up procedures if there are disputes over a state’s slate of electors. Generally speaking, if at least one senator and one House representative call for a challenge of a particular state’s results during the joint session, the two chambers then vote on whether to accept those results.

The once-obscure law played a pivotal role in the January 6 attack on Congress, which Trump incited during his eleventh-hour efforts to cling onto power last year. Trump had pressured then–Vice President Mike Pence, who presided over the joint session in his role as president of the Senate, to unilaterally throw out state results for Biden and tilt the constitutional outcome in the GOP’s favor. The former president also leaned on loyalist Republican lawmakers to challenge the results in key states. Since Pence and most members of Congress opposed those efforts, and the pro-Trump mob failed to harm any of them, the insurrection ultimately failed.

Part of the problem with the ECA is how it is written—or, to be more blunt, how poorly it is written. “It’s sort of impenetrable,” Edward Foley, an Ohio State University law professor who specializes in election law, told me. “It’s just a dense morass of verbiage that is very hard to understand, which is dangerous because the role that it’s supposed to play is to provide clarity.” He pointed in particular to 3 U.S.C. 15, the 809-word paragraph that tries to spell out the entire counting procedure and barely succeeds at the effort. That lack of clarity invites warped interpretations and bad-faith manipulations of what should be a more staid process.

“At the federal level, we don’t have adequate institutions for this,” Foley told me. If someone at the state level tries to subvert an election outcome, he explained, there are multiple legal and political remedies that can be used between Election Day and January 6 to stop them. A state election official who perpetrated the sort of act of electoral subversion that Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to undertake on his behalf in 2020, by throwing out lawfully cast ballots, could be stymied in state and federal courts by, among other things, the Equal Protection Clause principle laid down by the Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore.

Foley was careful not to minimize the risk posed by “rogue governors or rogue secretaries of states” in 2024. At the same time, he stressed that there are more checks on those actors at the moment than there are on members of Congress who want to reverse the outcome of a presidential election. “The concept of the ECA was to bind Congress to the adjudication in the states,” Foley told me. “And, you know, [Missouri Senator Josh] Hawley completely ignored that, [Texas Senator Ted] Cruz completely ignored that, [Alabama Representative] Mo Brooks completely ignored that. So did [California Senator] Barbara Boxer, for that matter, back in 2005.”

The relative obscurity of the ECA used to be a good thing, much as Americans only know about the Emergency Broadcast System from its routine monthly tests. Unfortunately, the United States has not had a presidential election where the results were universally accepted in more than a quarter-century. After Bush v. Gore and the Florida recount debacle of 2000, some House Democrats objected to that state’s electoral votes during the ritual counting, only to be brushed aside by then–Vice President Al Gore, who effectively presided over his own defeat. Democrats objected after the 2004 election, claiming irregularities in Ohio, and again in 2016 as a symbolic protest of Trump’s victory despite losing the popular vote.

None of those efforts by Democrats were serious attempts to reverse the election’s outcome. But they underscored the strange role that Congress can play when overseeing the results of a presidential election. Ironically, the ECA itself is the product of a constitutional crisis. In 1876, Democratic candidate Samuel Tilden and his Republican opponent Rutherford B. Hayes both found themselves without a clear majority of electors after Election Day. In four states where voting had been tainted by election fraud and white-supremacist violence, officials drew up rival slates of electors for each candidate.

With the shadow of violence looming on the horizon, Congress created a special commission to determine the winner, which handed the presidency to Hayes. In exchange for Democrats’ acceptance of the result, Republicans withdrew federal troops from the South and effectively ended Reconstruction. Most histories of the crisis of 1876 end there. But Foley explained that similar problems bubbled beneath the surface of the next two presidential elections, as well. Four years later, in 1880, James Garfield defeated Winifried Hancock by just a few thousand votes across the country, with some Democrats suspecting that fraud in New York tipped the results.

By 1887, Congress finally drafted the ECA as a compromise. “The people who lived through the experience of 1880 and 1884, having also lived through 1876, said, ‘We cannot have another election where we don’t have a set of agreed-upon procedures, as best as we can come up with, to handle the possibility of another situation like this,’” Foley told me. “And indeed, it was another very close election but not close enough to tailspin into 1876-like controversy.” As anyone who’s done a group project can sympathize with, the law’s sloppy drafting reflects its own complicated and consensus-driven origins.

Despite the insurrection, Republicans have good reasons to want to reform the law, as well. For one, they aren’t the party that’s shown the greatest willingness to invoke the ECA over the last few decades. The Cato Institute’s Andy Craig warned conservatives last month that Democrats could theoretically use it to exclude Trump from the presidency, even if he wins the most electors in 2024, by citing the Fourteenth Amendment’s ban on public office for those who participate in insurrections. In the long term, Craig noted, Democrats could also use it as a backdoor mechanism to hand the presidency to whoever wins the popular vote, rendering the Electoral College superfluous without the trouble of amending the Constitution.

For Democrats, the good-governance justifications for rewriting the ECA are obvious. A party that claims to champion the American democratic process cannot reasonably stomach a law that allows it to be subverted by the whims of a few hundred members of Congress. Though it was written with something resembling good intentions, a law designed to prevent the instability of disputed elections has instead become a key factor in that instability itself. Congressional Democrats have no shortage of good ideas for election reform and improving our democracy. Few, if any, are as urgent as this one.

Read More

Tags: politicsrepublicanrepublicans

FREE Digital Newspaper Subscription!
Sign up for your free digital subscription. The FREE Cape Cod News

Unsubscribe
FREE Cape Cod News

FREE Cape Cod News

Free Cape Cod News is what's happening in the Cape Cod, U.S and World & what people are talking about right now. Local newspaper. Stay in the know. Subscribe to get notified about our latest news.

Related Posts

Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here's When You Actually Need to Go. thumbnail
Lifestyle

Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here’s When You Actually Need to Go.

by FREE Cape Cod News
November 20, 2025
Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja'Marr Chase suspension thumbnail
News

Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja’Marr Chase suspension

by FREE Cape Cod News
November 18, 2025
New England Patriots Sign Rookie TE to Active Roster thumbnail
News

New England Patriots Sign Rookie TE to Active Roster

by FREE Cape Cod News
November 18, 2025
How a 50-Year Mortgage Would Differ From a 30-Year Mortgage—and What It Would Mean for Homebuyers thumbnail
News

How a 50-Year Mortgage Would Differ From a 30-Year Mortgage—and What It Would Mean for Homebuyers

by FREE Cape Cod News
November 17, 2025
Load More
Please login to join discussion

Follow Us on Twitter

FREE Cape Cod News - Your source for local Cape Cod news, latest breaking U.S. and World news. Every day, all day. Subscribe for your favorite categories.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Army suspends general after tweet appearing to mock Jill Biden thumbnail

Army suspends general after tweet appearing to mock Jill Biden

July 10, 2022
Massachusetts Lawmakers Push for Mandatory Human Trafficking Training in Hotels thumbnail

Massachusetts Lawmakers Push for Mandatory Human Trafficking Training in Hotels

March 14, 2025
US stocks slide as investors hope for stimulus ahead of Tuesday deadline thumbnail

US stocks slide as investors hope for stimulus ahead of Tuesday deadline

October 20, 2020
20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025 thumbnail

20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025

0
Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here's When You Actually Need to Go. thumbnail

Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here’s When You Actually Need to Go.

0
Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja'Marr Chase suspension thumbnail

Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja’Marr Chase suspension

0
20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025 thumbnail

20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025

November 23, 2025
Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here's When You Actually Need to Go. thumbnail

Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here’s When You Actually Need to Go.

November 20, 2025
Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja'Marr Chase suspension thumbnail

Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja’Marr Chase suspension

November 18, 2025

FREE Cape Cod News On Twitter

Today’s News

  • 20 of the Best Thanksgiving Movies to Watch in 2025 November 23, 2025
  • Founders Are Fleeing to Florida. Here’s When You Actually Need to Go. November 20, 2025
  • Patriots haters might be the biggest winners of Ja’Marr Chase suspension November 18, 2025
  • New England Patriots Sign Rookie TE to Active Roster November 18, 2025
  • How a 50-Year Mortgage Would Differ From a 30-Year Mortgage—and What It Would Mean for Homebuyers November 17, 2025
FREE Cape Cod News

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
  • Login
  • Sign Up

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News