Political guru Dick Morris says GOP state legislatures can declare Trump winner of stolen election
Sat 7:43 am +00:00, 7 Nov 2020At this hour, Democratic operatives in a number of battleground states are continuing to work overtime to steal results for Joe Biden and take away President Donald Trump’s well-earned second term.
The president did such a good job at rebuilding our country from the economic destruction and politicization of our institutions caused by the disgustingly dishonest Barack Obama that Democrats know the only way they can ‘get rid of’ Trump is by stealing this election.
The president’s legal teams are being deployed as I write this, and there are lots of ways he can still beat back the hordes of dishonest Biden and Democrat minions hell-bent on blasting away what’s left of our institutions. And of course, the grotesquely corrupt and biased ‘mainstream’ media will never report the truth — that the Democrat Party is the biggest threat to our republic — because the mainstream media is all-in for that party.
All of this said, there is another way that is constitutional Trump could win, if it comes down to it: A majority of state legislatures that are currently still in Republican hands after Election Day.
Political pundit and wizard Dick Morris laid it out this week:
Members of Republican-controlled legislatures in four states must “step up” and take charge of the ballot-counting process from their governors, who happen to be Democrats, and help President Donald Trump win reelection, political analyst Dick Morris told Newsmax TV.
Morris was on “Stinchfield” Wednesday evening and explained how the GOP can take charge as votes are still being counted and no winner has been declared.
“We have to move the fight from the executive branch of the states to the legislative branch of the states. In all of these four key states — North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin — there are Democratic governors, but both houses of the legislature are Republican. Those guys need to wake up,” Morris, an adviser for former President Bill Clinton, told Grant Stinchfield, the host.
“And if you live in those states, you need to call your state rep and your state senator and say, get on the ball. Get to the state capitol, demand that the legislature be called into session, and take over the counting process,” he said. (Related: SAVE THE REPUBLIC: Trump may invoke the Fourteenth Amendment to strip Electoral College votes from states engaged in an illegal INSURRECTION against our republic.)
He went on to note that under Article II, Sect. 1 of the U.S. Constitution, the “legislature” of each state takes the dominant role in the Electoral College process:
Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, shall be appointed an Elector.
“The U.S. Constitution does not say that the states shall decide the procedure for electoral votes. They say the legislature should decide. Not the governors, the legislature,” Morris continued (or state and federal courts as well, for that matter).
“And what they should do is step in and say the evidence of missing votes, suddenly discovered votes, unexplained delays, not granting access to poll watchers shows the corruption of this process, and we the state legislature are taking it over,” Morris continued.
“We’re going to set up a joint committee to run this process, and then we the legislature will do what our Constitution charges us to do: determine who won the election and to get the electoral votes of our states. That’s what they should do.”
One final note: Under the Constitution, if no clear winner is declared, the House decides who is president, but there’s a catch: Though Democrats retained control on Election Day, each state delegation to Congress only gets one vote. And currently, Republicans control the majority of state legislatures.
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