Rep. Mo Brooks, the Alabama Republican
spearheading the effort to object in the House, said earlier this month
Republicans were considering objecting to six states that Biden won,
meaning as much as 12 hours of debate that would turn the process into a
political circus and could spill into a second day of debate.
The last time the chambers voted on an
objection was in 2005, when then-Sen. Barbara Boxer, a California
Democrat, joined with then-Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, an Ohio Democrat,
to object to Bush's Ohio win. Hawley cited the objection in his
statement Wednesday.But Boxer told CNN earlier this month the circumstances of the objection were starkly different to the GOP efforts to overturn Biden's election win.
"Our
intent was not to overturn the election in any way. Our intent was to
focus on voter suppression in Ohio," said Boxer, who has retired from
the Senate. "They're talking about the vote that the presidency was
stolen from Donald Trump. It's not even a close comparison."
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