Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson posted this after news broke that a phone call by Benedict Donald and Ronna Romney to two 2020 Michigan electors, pressuring them not to certify Biden's win, had been recorded. (And it seems prosecutors have it. Film at eleven.) Benson's comments are probably the most helpful in filling in the backstory.
Also, buckle up: There is so much Trump crap that we don't know yet, but will know — and it'll blow our minds when we do. We cats HISS.
"Tonight feels like a good time to tell you all that, for me, the absolute lowest moment in the post-election battle we endured to protect Michigan's accurate and legitimate election results in 2020 was not when armed protesters stormed my home. It was the night of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers meeting.
"I distinctly remember coming home that evening feeling completely defeated. We knew about the pressure not to certify (though until tonight I did not know about the recording). We were prepared to go to court to successfully ensure certification at the local and state level — and we were confident we'd win in court. But blocking certification in Wayne County and pushing this to the courts would still delay and create enough doubt and uncertainty to enable the Trump campaign to push Pennsylvania, which was certifying the next week, to delay as well. And we knew other dominoes would fall after that.
"How could we overcome the pressure of the then-President of the United States on local and state officials? Were the facts and law not enough? Well, then, something I’ll never forget happened.
"Hundreds — hundreds (!) — of citizens showed up to the meeting of the Wayne County Canvassing Board to remind them of their duty under the law to ensure their votes counted. Their voices mattered. Their votes mattered. In my view, that turned the tide. Citizens and election officials in Wayne County and statewide didn’t flinch, stood firm, and demanded their votes be certified as required under the law. And in the end, the Wayne County Canvassing Board fulfilled their legal duty, followed the law, and certified the election.
"What started as the lowest moment of the post-election melee became the most inspiring. The voters won. Facts and the rule of law carried the day. Democracy prevailed."
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