Slander and/or Libel
Figs
Sr. Member
Posts: 2,338
Political Matrix E: -6.32, S: -7.83
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« on: July 25, 2018, 11:17:25 AM » |
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In the electoral college process, a key step is the drafting and transmission of Certificates of Ascertainment. Those certificates serve to make official who the designated electors are from each state.
Here's my question: what if a state refused to prepare theirs?
Let's play out a scenario. Say the presidential election results in 2020 are the same as in 2016, with the exception that MI/WI/PA go as narrowly for the Democrat as they did for Trump in 2016. Suppose, then, that Scott Walker uses Trump's allegations that Russia would intervene in the election as reason to not certify his state's election results. Without Wisconsin's electoral votes, neither candidate would have 270. Would this throw the election to the House? Would some other authority compel Wisconsin to certify its results? Who would that be?
There would obviously be a court case if something like this happened. Would it be ruled that states have the right to refuse to certify in the event of what they argue are ambiguous results?
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