coquan.bsky.social
@coquan.bsky.social
Texas born New Yorker. Architect in early retirement due to disability (PLS but diagnosis cannot be confirmed). Interested in physics, culture, music and politics. Do you want to get rid of old vinyl records in good condition, I'm interested
I didn't hear back from any lawmakers I wrote to in early December urging them to object to counting Trump's electoral votes on January 6. What's more, is there any public sign that they might do something? I'm sending another letter to more Democratic lawmakers. Only 7 days to go.
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December 30, 2024 at 6:56 PM
My version:
December 27, 2024 at 6:18 PM
For starters, Congress can reject Trump's votes on grounds they were not "regularly given" which includes voting for a candidate ineligible to serve. Once 20% of ea. House (Dems only) objects, a simple majority (Dems + handful of Pubs) can reject Trump's votes. WRITE YOUR CONGRESS MEMBERS as I did!
December 9, 2024 at 11:03 PM
On January 6 Congress can reject Trump's electoral votes on the grounds they were not "regularly given" which includes a vote for a candidate ineligible to serve. It takes 20% of each house to object and a simple majority to reject Trump's votes. WRITE YOUR CONGRESS MEMBERS! Read how below.
December 9, 2024 at 2:00 AM
On January 6 Congress can reject Trump's electoral votes on the grounds they were not "regularly given" which includes a vote for a candidate ineligible to serve. It takes 20% of each house to object and a simple majority to reject Trump's votes. WRITE YOUR CONGRESS MEMBERS! I wrote mine below.
December 7, 2024 at 1:53 AM
On January 6 Congress can reject Trump's electoral votes on the grounds they were not "regularly given" which includes a vote for a candidate ineligible to serve. It takes 20% of each house to object and a simple majority to reject Trump's votes. WRITE YOUR CONGRESS MEMBERS! Read how below.
December 6, 2024 at 8:41 PM