Republicans and at least one Democrat expressed disapproval.
On Thursday, several lawmakers expressed condemnation of an op-ed in The Hill that urged members of Congress to try and block President-elect Donald Trump from taking office for his second term.
Democrat-linked lawyers Evan Davis and David Schulte claimed there was “overwhelming” evidence of Trump engaging in an insurrection that disqualifies him from the presidency and if both chambers spurned Trump’s Electoral College votes, Vice President Kamala Harris — who lost to Trump in the 2024 contest — could be elected instead.
“Sounds like Democrats and the media are planning an insurrection,” said the popular “Libs of TikTok” account run by Chaya Raichik, after which Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) replied, “They use the word ‘insurrection’ only when talking about Republicans.”“The Left has always been the real threat to democracy. Now they’re finally admitting it out loud,” declared Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC). “There is no fair and impartial process in the Left’s America.”
More Republicans responded in kind: “Never tell me that they haven’t tried to steal the election,” said Mike Collins (R-GA). “This will not happen. He is getting confirmed,” said Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL). “This is insane. And it’s not a thing,” said Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX).
At least one Democrat, Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY), sounded off with a disapproving post: “If you only believe in democracy when it produces the results you like, then you do not truly believe in democracy.”
Two major elements of the Davis and Schulte’s op-ed centered on how a Democrat-led House impeached Trump in 2021 as part of the Capitol riot-focused impeachment inquiry and the courts in Colorado removing him from the state’s 2024 presidential ballot after ruling that he engaged in an insurrection with his actions on January 6, 2021.
However, a GOP-controlled Senate acquitted Trump, ending the impeachment effort, and the Supreme Court issued a ruling that determined that states could not remove him from the primary ballot using Section 3 of the 14th Amendment — an insurrection clause dating back to the Civil War — without Congress rejecting him first.
Republicans will lead both the House and the Senate in the next term, meaning Trump will more than likely be shielded from any serious bids to fight his return to the White House, but some Democrats have been dodgy on the question of whether they would vote to certify the results.
There were many others who responded to the op-ed published in The Hill with derision, including Trump’s spokesman Steven Cheung, who said on X, “Oh, look. Democrats want to steal the election and invalidate the will of the American people. Threat to Democracy.”
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