Former GOP Sen. Jeff Flake (Ariz.) this week urged Republicans in Congress to stand against President Trump when a joint session meets Wednesday afternoon to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election.
“Unfortunately, President Trump refuses to accept the reality of his substantial loss, and so becomes determined to create an alternate reality in which he won,” Flake wrote this week in an op-ed published in the New York Times. “As he crosses that rubicon, Mr. Trump has taken many in my party with him, all of whom seem to have learned the wrong lessons from this anomalous presidency.”
Since President-elect Joe Biden was projected as the winner of the November election, Trump has claimed widespread voter fraud led to an unfair election against him. More than 100 House Republicans and a dozen GOP senators have said they will contest the election’s result, citing similar concerns.
Neither the president nor lawmakers has provided any substantial evidence of voter fraud.
“It is hard to comprehend how so many of my fellow Republicans were able — and are still able — to engage in the fantasy that they had not abruptly abandoned the principles they claimed to believe in,” Flake wrote. “It is also difficult to understand how this betrayal could be driven by deference to the unprincipled, incoherent and blatantly self-interested politics of Donald Trump, defined as it is by its chaos and boundless dishonesty. The conclusion that I have come to is that they did it for the basest of reasons — sheer survival and rank opportunism.”
Flake said that Republicans can free themselves from what he called the “chaos” of Trump’s presidency if they are willing to certify Biden as the winner and carry out their legislative duty as part of a peaceful transition of power.
“My fellow Republicans, as Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger of Georgia has shown us this week, there is power in standing up to the rank corruptions of a demagogue. Mr. Trump can’t hurt you. But he is destroying us,” Flake said.
Over the weekend, a recording of a conversation between Trump and Raffensperger revealed Trump had pressured the secretary of state to “find” enough votes to give him Georgia’s presidential electors, weeks after the state’s close vote had been recounted and certified.
Raffensperger, a Republican who says he voted for Trump, has repeatedly pushed back on claims of voter fraud from Trump and his political allies.
Flake, who said Trump’s ascension in the Republican Party “ended” his political career three years ago, called on Vice President Pence as he presides over the joint session of Congress on Wednesday to do “his job” and oversee a peaceful certification process.