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OPINION
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Thank Pence for Biden's Trainwreck

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

There can be little doubt that former Vice President Mike Pence thought he was doing the right thing. There are certainly many pragmatic reasons for his decision to not intervene in the electoral processes during those fateful days in January 2020. We’re a year and a half into the geriatric Biden regime and those pragmatic reasons are quickly losing their luster. 

The nation is suffering—not from the constitutional crisis feared by the establishment but a systemic, methodical, sadistic infliction of pain and loss resulting from disasters of policy that are breathtaking in scope and frequency. It's almost as if Biden and his administration hate Americans, our Constitution, and want to extract a pound of flesh from anyone they think supported President Trump. 

The list of horribles is almost too extensive to believe: thirteen dead servicemen and women resulting from the botched retreat from Afghanistan, with thousands more left behind to suffer the predations of a stone age tribe—billions in weapons and machinery left to be co-opted by the oppressive Taliban. A war in Ukraine ignited by Biden’s insipid, bungling foreign policy, his disaster in Afghanistan, and his failure to act unequivocally in the face of Russian aggression. Soaring energy prices. A dismantling of the southern border and an invasion of illegal aliens by the millions. A flood of fentanyl, pouring through a porous border, that’s slaughtering vulnerable Americans wholesale—a product of communist China. Unbridled inflation. An impending food shortage. Bloated gas prices. Critical race theory in public schools—indoctrinating our children with the dogma of inherent racism. The injection of transgender theory and the normalization of pedophilia and grooming by liberal “educators.” Hunter’s laptop filled with child pornography, and evidence of a real Chinese influence campaign involving his father. The political persecution and imprisonment of January sixth protestors. And, COVID mandates that criminalize conscience.

It’s astounding how tattered and debased America has become in such a short time. The Democrat party seems to always bring destruction in its wake. 

All of this begs the question—was it worth capitulating to the constitutional crisis crones and Never-Trumpers in January 2020? With the impending discontinuance of Title 42 immigration measures, our country will be transformed by the end of Biden’s first term. A staggering 20% of America’s population will be composed of illegal immigrants. We will lose our republic. In light of this, any argument regarding setting a bad precedent concerning the Vice President’s meddling with electoral college votes seems silly in the extreme. We’re now struggling for national survival. 

The duties of the Vice President are ambiguous, given the language in the 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and in Article two of the same. The 12th Amendment states, in pertinent part,”the President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted.” What follows is a procedure to be used in case of an electoral college tie vote. Essentially, the House of Representatives is to vote without delay, each state having one vote. “The person having the greatest number of votes shall be president.”

Additionally, the Electoral Count Act of 1877 (ECA) attempts to address questions concerning Congress’ and the Vice Presidents’ role in deciding a presidential election. However, the ECA is a poorly written, ponderous piece of legislation that, on its face, raises serious questions as to its constitutionality. The short answer on the ECA is that it should be amended to explicitly define the Constitutional roles of the Vice President and Congress when discharging their distinct duties during the counting of the electoral college votes—which it does not. 

A clear, common sense reading of the 12th Amendment and Article two of the Constitution imply a power given to the “President of the Senate,” or Vice President, to make a determination as to counting the submitted certificates from the states. Many argue that use of the passive voice implies more than just a ceremonial function. It is plausible, from the text, to draw the conclusion that the Vice President may determine which certificates to count. Otherwise, he’d serve no logical function when determining an electoral college tie. The Vice President is clearly more than just a bean counter. This implied power resides solely with the Vice President, not Congress. 

The Supreme Court has not issued an opinion on this matter, and refused to do so during the 2020 election cycle. In fact, no lawsuit concerning these 12th Amendment issues brought before a federal court was ever litigated on the merits. Laches—a legal term meaning you’ve brought your suit too late—or standing—a legal term meaning the plaintiff has not and will not suffer any demonstrable harm—were used to dismiss 12th Amendment suits. The dismissals on procedural grounds strongly suggest a judicial reticence to address substantive matters of law for reasons that can only be speculated about. However, a massive intimidation campaign was being waged by the legacy media, the tech oligarchy, and by Democrat party operatives. It’s not difficult to imagine how judges might prefer to punt rather than do the hard work and swim upstream against the onslaught of activist outrage. 

Pence could have rejected the certificates from some states and done so on clear constitutional grounds. Whether voting machines were compromised or mail in balloting was abused were questions that needn’t have been addressed. Pence could have rejected the certificates from Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin based on the indisputably unconstitutional practice of state executive branch alteration of voting laws in violation of the Elector’s Clause in Article 2 of the U.S. Constitution—this is explicitly a legislative function. This was an unambiguous, flagrant violation of the Constitution that should have been the subject of judicial review. But not a single court, including the Supreme Court, had the courage to assert the clear meaning of the Constitution. 

Fundamentally, Pence is a politician and chose expediency over principle. He may say differently, but actions always speak louder than words. Our founders pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to each other and to the principles enshrined in the Constitution—if only Vice President Pence held the same sacred convictions.

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