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The Electoral College of the US states voted on the 14th to confirm Biden’s victory and enter the White House. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell finally congratulated Biden on his victory yesterday (15). The next Congress will be on January 6 next year. In the Japan Vote Count, some Republican congressmen previously stated that they would object to the result of the count. However, McConnell was reported to have privately warned congressmen not to do so, stressing that this measure “was not in the best interest of everyone.”
According to reports from CNN and The Hill, the electoral college of the 50 states of the United States voted on the 14th. In the end, Biden confirmed his election as the next president of the United States with 306 votes.
Six weeks after the election, Senate Republican Leader McConnell finally publicly congratulated Biden for the first time yesterday and called Biden the “president-elect.” McConnell said yesterday in the Senate that “the Electoral College has expressed its position.” I want to congratulate Biden, the president-elect. “
The new Congress will then hold a joint meeting on January 6, 2021, to count the votes of each state’s polling station. Once Biden’s votes pass the 270-vote threshold, Vice President Pence, who chaired the meeting, will immediately announce goodbye. Deng wins the election.
After the election results are announced, members of Congress can file objections once, and they must be signed by at least one senator and one member of the House of Representatives. If successfully signed, the Senate and House of Representatives will discuss and vote whether to veto the results of a state’s election. Republican Rep. Brooks (Mo Brooks) has stated that he will raise an objection and that a senator must co-sign with him.
However, according to sources, at yesterday’s caucus meeting, McConnell had asked Republican senators not to participate in the counter-signatures, warning that the counter-signatures would force the Senate to debate and vote. This measure “will put Republican senators at a disadvantage.” He stressed that the veto “is not the best for everyone.”
Also, including the Republican Senate whip (John Thune), Republican committee chair Blunt (Roy Blunt) and other big cafes have the same opinion, thinking that this measure is simply useless.
Currently, no Republican senators have voiced support for the signing, but conservative senators Josh Hawley, Ron Johnson and Paul (Rand Paul) have not ruled out the possibility of participating in the signing.
However, since the passage of the Voting College Counting Act in 1887, the United States has only successfully raised objections twice in 1969 and 2005, but they ultimately failed to pass Congress. In other words, Republicans tried to veto The Electoral College votes for Trump to return, there is little hope.
(Zhongshi News Network)
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