Tom Emmer cast doubt on the 2020 election and supported lawsuit to throw election to Trump
In the aftermath of the 2020 election, Tom Emmer, a Republican member of the House of Representatives, baselessly said there were āquestionableā practices in the 2020 presidential election.
Later, Emmer signed an amicus brief in support of a last-ditch Texas lawsuit seeking to throw out the results in key swing states.
Though he would vote to certify the results on January 6, 2021, the comments and actions show Emmer flirted with some of the same election denial rhetoric as far-right members of the Republican caucus.
Emmer was selected as the GOPās nominee for speaker of the House Tuesday, but dropped out of the race later in the day after his bid appeared on the verge of collapse amid opposition from the right flank of his conference and fresh attacks waged by Trump.
Speaking with the radio show for the far-right publication Breitbart News 12 days after the election, Emmer baselessly suggested that mail-in ballots might have āskewedā the election against Trump.
āI think that you will see the courts, if nothing else, this president is making sure that he stays focused and his team stays focused on these questionable election practices,ā Emmer said. āWeāre gonna find out ā if itās accurate ā how much they skewed the outcome of the election in Georgia and elsewhere.ā
āI had one of my colleagues telling me in Georgia that where we got voter ID weāre doing great, where we canāt reasonably identify the voter, weāre getting killed,ā he added, saying he hoped the state would restrict vote by mail in the then-upcoming January Georgia Senate runoff elections.
Emmer was quieter than many Republicans in the aftermath of the 2020 election. But in interviews and public comments, reviewed by CNNās KFile ahead of the speakership vote, Emmer refused to say Biden won the election and bashed the press for calling the race.
Speaking to local news outlets in early December 2020 ā after results had been certified in all swing states ā Emmer attacked the press for calling the race for Joe Biden.
āEverybody has the right to count every vote. Right now, weāre in a process where the media wants to call the race, the media wants to create this situation that theyāre the ones that determine when people are done with the process,ā Emmer said. āItās about making sure that everybody ā people that voted for Joe Biden, people who voted for Donald Trump, or people who voted for somebody else ā that they know every legitimate vote is counted and they have confidence in the outcome.
āThereās a process,ā Emmer added. āThe process is the votes are cast, if thereās a question, there are recounts, there are signature verifications. This time across the country, mail-in ballots threw a whole new curveball into it. And then if you have specific areas where thereās more to be done, you do have the right to go to a court to have a difference of opinion result. Thatās all following the process. Itāll be resolved soon.ā
Emmer later defended signing the amicus brief in support of the Texas lawsuit filed by Attorney General Ken Paxton to invalidate 62 Electoral votes in swing states won by Biden ā which would have effectively thrown the election to Trump. The lawsuit was rejected by the US Supreme Court.
āThis brief asserts the democratic right of state legislatures to make appointments to the Electoral College was violated in several states,ā Emmer said in a statement published in the local St. Cloud Times. āAll legal votes should be counted and the process should be followed - the integrity of current and future elections depends on this premise and this suit is a part of that process.ā
Speaking at a forum on Dec. 17, 2020, Emmer acknowledged Bidenās win was certified by the Electoral College days earlier but said the process still had yet to play out and declined to call Biden president-elect when prompted.
āThe media would like to declare the ultimate end to this process. I think certain elected officials would like to declare the end of this process, but as someone who was in a recount himself 10 years ago, I know that we need to respect the process whether you agree with it or not,ā Emmer said. āBecause once itās over youāve got people that are going to be on one side or the other, and theyāve all got to be satisfied that our election was conducted in a fair and transparent manner.ā
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