The Presidential Election Reform Act, drafted to take a flamethrower to some of the tangled language that governs how Electoral College votes are counted, passed the House on Wednesday with the support of only nine Republicans. (That total included Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., a co-author.)
The Republican opposition was predictable but sad. Because this bill wouldn’t do anything but keep dishonest actors from promoting a deliberate misreading of the Constitution. It wouldn’t shore up voting rights; it wouldn’t protect poll workers. It would merely clear up the convoluted language of 1887’s Electoral Count Act, which former President Donald Trump and his cronies claimed provided Vice President Mike Pence unilateral authority to dismiss certain states’ electoral votes.
The fact that Trump and his supporters cited the Electoral Count Act in their shoddy justifications should be evidence enough that changes are needed to the process.
That was constitutional fan fiction at best. The fact that Trump and his supporters cited the Electoral Count Act in their shoddy justifications should be evidence enough that changes are needed to the process. Instead, what we got from the House GOP on Wednesday is proof that, should the status quo remain in place, blatant calls to overturn an election would at least be considered on a case-by-case basis under a Republican majority.
To be fair, some of the supposed ambiguities that Trump’s lawyers tried to exploit are “ambiguous” only if you’re determined to take Neil Armstrong-on-the-moon leaps of logic. Nothing in the text of the Electoral Count Act allows for the vice president as the president of the Senate to dismiss a state’s electoral votes, but it doesn’t explicitly say the vice president can’t. We can thus consider the revisions the House passed as the “Reverse Air Bud” of electoral vote counting.
If anything, you’d think that if House Republicans really believed Pence could have changed the election results, as Trump has claimed he could have, then they’d be entirely in favor of this bill. Because that would reveal a belief that nothing is stopping Vice President Kamala Harris from tossing out the votes of states Trump (or whoever is the GOP nominee) wins in 2024.
But the votes House Republicans cast Wednesday weren’t about the merits of the bill or the wording of the act or the legitimacy of our elections. Their votes were about making sure that the people who do believe that Pence could have — and should have — installed Trump for a second term don’t turn on them.








