WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

https://youtu.be/cl935kNFmP8

At 1 p.m. local time on Jan. 6, members of Congress will gather in the chamber of the House of Representatives to observe the formal certification of Electoral College votes for president of the United States.

While it’s usually a formality, nothing has been usual so far about this year’s election amid numerous allegations of voter fraud in key swing states.

The situation is complicated by a lack of clarity on the legal and constitutional guardrails for the process. The joint session of Congress may well result in gridlock, in which a clear winner of the race isn’t announced at all.

Based on current election results, former Vice President Joe Biden has received 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232 votes. Meanwhile, Republicans in seven states where Biden claimed victory have sent their own sets of electoral votes to Washington, and some members of the House have indicated that they will object to Biden electors in some states.

Any objection would require support from one House member and one senator to be considered, and at least one senator has left open the possibility he would join the effort.

So what will happen?

https://youtu.be/cl935kNFmP8 At 1 p.m. local time on Jan. 6, members of Congress will gather in the chamber of the House of Representatives to observe the formal certification of Electoral College votes for president of the United States. While it’s usually a formality, nothing has been usual so far about this year’s election amid numerous allegations of voter fraud in key swing states. The situation is complicated by a lack of clarity on the legal and constitutional guardrails for the process. The joint session of Congress may well result in gridlock, in which a clear winner of the race isn’t announced at all. Based on current election results, former Vice President Joe Biden has received 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232 votes. Meanwhile, Republicans in seven states where Biden claimed victory have sent their own sets of electoral votes to Washington, and some members of the House have indicated that they will object to Biden electors in some states. Any objection would require support from one House member and one senator to be considered, and at least one senator has left open the possibility he would join the effort. So what will happen?

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

It doesn’t matter because of the objection in both houses happens then the senate and the house both take a vote. There aren’t enough republicans in the senate willing to vote our way. We don’t have majority in the house either. We need The state legislatures to convene and change their states certification. Or we need the military to come to our aid and arrest all the traitors. Or the people there that day need to rush the capitol and drag them out ourselves.

[–] 0 pt
  1. a state cannot change it's electors after it has certified them
  2. The military has already said they won't get involved.
  3. They would be stopped by the capital hill police and military.
[–] 0 pt

Assuming for the nonce that Pence is a white hat, do you then discount the fact that he could recognize only the states without ballots in contention?

[–] 0 pt

He doesn't have that power. He's basically the secretary who opens the envelopes. He doesn't control anything else.

[–] 0 pt

What he said, options #1, #2 or #3. Only way.

[–] 0 pt

If there is an objection then there is a 2 hour debate after which the full house and senate vote. You would need a majority in both the house and senate in order to remove a slate of electors. It won't happen in either chamber. Only 140 house republicans have said they'll vote to remove the electors and several republican senators and have said they will not vote to remove. So, Biden's electors will be accepted.