Amid all the other chaos, you may have missed it in December 2020 when a group of “alternate electors” tried to cast their various states’ Electoral College votes for the loser of that election: then-President Donald Trump. That group’s efforts — and the Trump campaign’s coordination with them — is one of the latest areas of focus for the House Jan. 6 committee.
In hindsight, one of the wildest things about the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election was how many of Trump’s attempts to overturn the election took place in the open. Trump talked about it. His advisers talked about it. His lawyers talked about it. And yet, as it unfolded, it was mostly seen as more pathetic than dangerous.
Many of these efforts, including the pro-Trump slates of electors in states he didn’t win, were dismissed as “political stunts.” But here’s the thing: It’s only a “stunt” if you know it’s not going to work. A “stunt” is meant for show. It seems, though, that the Trump campaign was hoping its plan would be consequential; in other words, it lacked the presumption of failure.
On the surface, the fake electors scheme was as simple as it was asinine. When Michigan’s 16 Democratic electors gathered on Dec. 14, 2020, a group of GOP electors attempted to cast its votes as well. The same scene played out in six other states, including Arizona, Nevada and Wisconsin.
On the surface, the fake electors scheme was as simple as it was asinine.
The Michigan group never made it to the floor of the state Senate to cast its ballots, local news site MLive reported then, but that didn’t stop its members from sending in “alternative documents to Congress in case the state Legislature decides to replace Democratic electors.”
Again: There was nothing secret or clandestine about this effort. Trump had met with the Republican leaders of Michigan’s House and Senate the previous month, presumably to pressure them against certifying Biden’s win in the state. In December 2020, MLive reported that questions to the Michigan Republican Party about the “elector” efforts were directed to the Trump campaign. Trump White House official Stephen Miller went on “Fox and Friends” to promote the plan. And CNN reported last week that Rudy Giuliani and the Trump campaign were spearheading the efforts to get these alternate Electoral College votes cast.
Stephen Miller says Trump electors will be voting and sending results to Congress.
— Andrew Feinberg (@AndrewFeinberg) December 14, 2020
(They’ll be worthless because they won’t have the seals of the state Secretaries of State, though) pic.twitter.com/B9pKXqYGIa
“There’s nothing preventing any group of 16 people from getting together and saying ‘we’re electors,’ but it doesn’t have any legal force,” University of Michigan Law School professor Richard Friedman told MLive at the time. “My guess is that whatever mail 16 people choose to send in will not even see the light of day. But if it does, it would not have the same standing as the certificates of the governor.”
While Friedman was right about the certificates’ lack of legal standing, his prediction that they would “not even see the light of day” wasn’t. Instead, those documents were submitted to the National Archives, the agency charged with the preservation of government documents, as the official electoral votes of the state — which they were not. In March, watchdog group American Oversight posted the fake votes sent to Washington, but they’ve received renewed interest as the Jan. 6 committee has proceeded.








