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Bennett's avatar

Good column, John. And there's a slogan in your suggestion of this act of civil disobedience: "Count every vote."

As an additional sidebar, there is no reason necessarily to hew to those Supreme Court rulings anyway, based on recent practice and tactically.

In recent practice, the Trump Administration, for example, has not honored recent Supreme Court rulings that were not in its favor--in particular on the handling of immigrant status. https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2020/07/28/despite-supreme-court-ruling-trump-administration-moves-curb-daca. I don't advocate such a practice--that way lies anarchy or despotism (both actually). But it can be treated as a tactical measure, as well as a principled objection, and there is little reason to not respond to such pro-Trump/pro-Republican rulings as toothless. (It also puts a political thumb on the scale for rebalancing the Court.)

And tactically speaking: counting the votes publicly and right away makes it much, much harder to dispose of them altogether. Gore should never have accepted the stopping of the vote count in 2000, notwithstanding the court's ruling.

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Thornton Prayer's avatar

Your analysis is spot on and your recommendations are brilliant political strategy. If the Clown Conservatives on SCOTUS and other parts of the federal judiciary try to shut down the count, continuing the count will be both a massive act of civil disobedience and utterly shred the power and the already tattered legitimacy of the right wing jurists. Furthermore, assuming Biden assumes the presidency, he will have ample reason and justification to "reform and rebalance" an out of control judicial system that disrespects democracy and the will of the people.

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