The new leader of one of the chambers of Congress that will certify the winner of next year's presidential election helped spearhead the attempt to overturn the last one, raising alarms that Republicans could try to subvert the will of the voters if they remain in power despite safeguards enacted after the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Mike Johnson, the Louisiana Congressman who was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives on Wednesday after a three-week standoff among Republicans, took the lead in filing a brief in a lawsuit that sought to overturn President Joe Biden's 2020 win. That claim, widely panned by legal scholars of all ideologies, was quickly thrown out by the U.S. Supreme Court.
After the 2020 election, Johnson also echoed some of the wilder conspiracy theories pushed by former President Donald Trump to explain away his loss. Then Johnson voted against certifying Biden's win even after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
Johnson's role three years ago is relevant now not only because the U.S. Constitution puts the Speaker second in the line of presidential succession, after the Vice President. The House Johnson now leads also will have to certify the winner of the 2025 presidential election.
"You don't want people who falsely claim the last election was stolen to be in a position of deciding who won the next one," said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. On Wednesday, he flagged another worry about Johnson, who is a constitutional lawyer.
"Johnson is more dangerous because he wrapped up his attempt to subvert the election outcomes in lawyerly and technical language," Hasen said.
Last year, Congress revamped the procedures for how a presidential win is certified, making it far harder to object in the way that Johnson and 146 other House Republicans did on Jan. 6, 2021. But there is a conservative school of thought that no legislation can control how Congress oversees the certification of a President's win — all that counts is the Constitution's broad granting of power to ratify the electoral college's votes.
The House in January 2025 will be filled with the winners of the previous November's election, so there's no guarantee a Speaker Johnson would remain in power. To be sure, it would be difficult for the Speaker to change any of the results. The Vice President -- who would be Democrat Kamala Harris at the time — presides over the joint House and Senate session in a ceremonial role and calls votes if there are enough objections to do so.
Still, the goal of Trump supporters in 2020 was to advance any legal argument against Biden's win to a Supreme Court where conservative justices have a 6-3 edge, three of whom were nominated by Trump. A Speaker who supported Trump's last effort to stay in power would be well-positioned to do so again if the former President is the GOP nominee next year and loses the election.
On Tuesday night, after Johnson was nominated to his new post by the House GOP caucus, he smiled and shook his head as the rest of the caucus laughed and booed at a reporter's question about his role in trying to halt certification of the 2020 results. "Next question," Johnson said. "Next question."
Democrats kept the issue center stage as the Speaker vote on the floor proceeded Wednesday.
"This has been about one thing," U.S. Rep. Pete Aguilar, House Democratic Conference chair, said. "This has been about who can appease Donald Trump. House Republicans have put their names behind someone who has been called the most important architect of the electoral college objections."
"Damn right," someone called from the Republican side of the House.
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press
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