Bondi's Record Fits Well With Trump's Deportation Plans
What CNN's Top Legal Analyst Said About Trump's AG Pick Might Have Irritated...
Conservative Activist to PA Dems: We're Coming for You
Insane Woman Hacked Up Her Dad on Election Night. Did Trump's Win Pushed...
Trump Has a New Attorney General Nominee
The Trump Counter-Revolution Is a Return to Sanity
ABC News Actually Attempts to Pin Laken Riley's Murder on Donald Trump
What Was the Matt Gaetz Attorney General Pick Really About?
Is It the End of the 'Big Media Era'?
A Political Mandate in Support of Pro-Second Amendment Policy
Here's Where MTG Will Fit Into the Trump Administration
Liberal Media Is Already Melting Down Over Pam Bondi
Dem Bob Casey Finally Concedes to Dave McCormick... Weeks After Election
Josh Hawley Alleges This Is Why Mayorkas, Wray Skipped Senate Hearing
MSNBC's Future a 'Big Concern' Among Staffers
Tipsheet

Rep. Steny Hoyer Says Democrats Won't Seat North Carolina Republican Amid Election Fraud Investigation

Incoming House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) told The Washington Post Friday that House Democrats will not seat North Carolina Republican Mark Harris due to allegations of election fraud in the state’s 9th Congressional District.

Advertisement

“Given the now well-documented election fraud that took place in NC-09, Democrats would object to any attempt by [Mark] Harris to be seated on January 3,” Hoyer said in a statement. “In this instance, the integrity of our democratic process outweighs concerns about the seat being vacant at the start of the new Congress.”

Hoyer’s statement came just after the North Carolina state board of elections dissolved Friday without certifying the results from the 9th Congressional District. That dissolution was due to an unrelated, lengthy court battle over the board’s constitutionality.

The board refused to certify Harris as the winner in November due to evidence of irregularities in the absentee ballot count and allegations of fraud conducted by a Republican operative working on Harris's campaign.

Dallas Woodhouse, executive director of the North Carolina Republican Party, told CNN Friday that the elections board "failed in their duty" to certify the election. Woodhouse claimed that Harris had been cooperating with the board's investigation.

While the board has dissolved, its staffers can work on the investigation, but "they will not be able to issue subpoenas, hold hearings or call for a new election," Josh Lawson, the board's general counsel, told CNN.

Advertisement

In the unofficial count, Harris led by 905 votes over Democratic candidate Dan McCready. Harris filed an emergency petition Friday to get the results certified.

The board's former chair Joshua Malcolm slammed Harris’s lack of response to the board in a response to the Harris campaign's petition to certify the results.

"As you know, your client (Harris) is under a subpoena dated December 1, but has made only one production on December 7 totaling 398 pages," Malcolm wrote. "Yet your client through counsel indicated that you possess roughly 140,000 additional documents that may be responsive but have not yet been produced. We have received repeated assurances—as recently as December 24—regarding your efforts to comply with the subpoena.”

"You are hereby requested to fully comply with the Board's subpoena so as to not further impact the agency's ability to resolve the investigation," he concluded.

"He's not required to send to a Democrat every piece of paper a campaign ever put forward," Woodhouse commented on CNN. "By the way, it is irrelevant. The board of elections needed to establish that these things happened, that they happened at all. Mr. Harris only ever touched his ballot. His. He doesn't have anything to add. This was an absolutely atrocious smear by a disgraced democrat elections chair, the former chair now on the way out. It is unconscionable."

Advertisement

A new board is expected will be appointed on January 31, 2019 and Republicans have rejected the idea of an interim board appointed by Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper as “unconstitutional.” Gov. Cooper announced Friday that he planned to appoint five members to an interim board.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement