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2020 Election

Republican says reps who voted to overturn election KNEW Donald Trump’s fraud claims were bogus

A freshman representative blasted his fellow Republicans for ‘lying’ about the possibility of overturning the election results in Congress because they wanted to fundraise off of the chaos and their loyalty to President Donald Trump.

Congressman Peter Meijer of Michigan, an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran, said accused the 

is not happy with how his first week of service in the House of Representatives went down, claiming his fellow Republicans who objected to the Electoral College results – even after a pro-Trump mob descended on the Capitol Wednesday – either did so to earn favor with the president and his supporters or felt threatened.

‘As we moved to accept Arizona‘s electors, a fellow freshman lingered near a voting terminal, voting card in hand. 

‘My colleague told me that efforts to overturn the election were wrong, and that voting to certify was a constitutional duty,’ Meijer detailed in an op/ed in The Detroit News on Saturday.

‘But my colleague feared for family members, and the danger the vote would put them in,’ the freshman representative continued. ‘Profoundly shaken, my colleague voted to overturn.

Condemnation: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican from Michigan, said that lawmakers who promoted election fraud claims - such as Missouri senator Josh Hawley - were responsible for riots

Condemnation: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican from Michigan, said that lawmakers who promoted election fraud claims - such as Missouri senator Josh Hawley - were responsible for riots

Condemnation: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican from Michigan, said that lawmakers who promoted election fraud claims – such as Missouri senator Josh Hawley – were responsible for riots

Sent while the Capitol was being desecrated: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican rep, slammed the 'grift' which GOP members of Congress were involved in

Sent while the Capitol was being desecrated: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican rep, slammed the 'grift' which GOP members of Congress were involved in

Sent while the Capitol was being desecrated: Peter Meijer, a freshman Republican rep, slammed the ‘grift’ which GOP members of Congress were involved in

'I have been called a traitor more times than I can count. I regret not bringing my gun to D.C.,' said freshman rep Peter Meijer, who refused to go along with fraud claims pushed by the most senior members of the GOP caucus

'I have been called a traitor more times than I can count. I regret not bringing my gun to D.C.,' said freshman rep Peter Meijer, who refused to go along with fraud claims pushed by the most senior members of the GOP caucus

‘I have been called a traitor more times than I can count. I regret not bringing my gun to D.C.,’ said freshman rep Peter Meijer, who refused to go along with fraud claims pushed by the most senior members of the GOP caucus

‘An angry mob succeeded in threatening at least one member of Congress from performing what that member understood was a constitutional responsibility,’ he wrote.

Of the several dozen GOP lawmakers in the House and Senate who voted to overturn the election, even after the unprecedented breach of the Capitol building, only five were freshmen: Senator Tommy Tuberville of Alabama and Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Diana Harshbarger of Tennessee.

Meijer did not say which of his freshmen colleagues was scared into submission.

Taylor Greene is a Q Anon follower and 9/11 truther, while Cawthorn, 25, spoke in the House after the mob had smashed through to back their demands. 

Boebert has demanded that she carry a firearm in Congress, but did not go out to face the rioters and joined other House members in a secure area.

‘Those of us who refused to cower, who have told the truth, have suffered the consequences,’ Meijer said in his op-ed. 

‘Republican colleagues who have spoken out have been accosted on the street, received death threats, and even assigned armed security.’

‘I have been called a traitor more times than I can count. I regret not bringing my gun to D.C.,’ he concluded.

But Meijer’s trenchant attack on House Republicans means he is directly criticizing the two most senior member so of the caucus  minority leader Kevin McCarthy and minority whip Steve Scalise.

Both went all-in on Trump’s claims and did nothing to reverse themselves as the Capitol was desecrated by his supporters.

Meijer and a dozen other GOP lawmakers objected to Republican attempts to delay certification of Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. He was joined by the likes of Representatives Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Chip Roy of Texas.

Meijer is taking over Justin Amash’s seat in Congress after the former Republican switched to Libertarian affiliation halfway through his term in a snub to the era of Trump Republicans.

'Treason caucus.' Critics have slammed House and Senate Republicans who voted to overturn the election results. The House minority leader Kevin McCarthy (left) is among them as was Jim Jordan, the Ohio rep who is a fanatical Trump loyalist

'Treason caucus.' Critics have slammed House and Senate Republicans who voted to overturn the election results. The House minority leader Kevin McCarthy (left) is among them as was Jim Jordan, the Ohio rep who is a fanatical Trump loyalist

‘Treason caucus.’ Critics have slammed House and Senate Republicans who voted to overturn the election results. The House minority leader Kevin McCarthy (left) is among them as was Jim Jordan, the Ohio rep who is a fanatical Trump loyalist

The 33-year-old Army Reserve veteran blasted other Republicans for using the attacks on Wednesday as an opportunity to align themselves closer with the objection effort and fundraise.

Both senators Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley send appeals for cash as the violence was happening and are now facing demands to resign or to face expulsion from the Senate. 

‘I was sitting in my office watching the speech that he was giving to the crowd, encouraging them to come to the Capitol, where he continued to talk about how this was a landslide election and that it was stolen from him,’ Meijer told Reason of the Wednesday chaos in an interview Friday. 

‘He believed that the outcome on November 3 could be reversed by Congress.’

‘And I talked to a number of folks who believed that,’ he continued. ‘And they believed that because they were being told that, right? They were being lied to. 

‘They were being misled. Some of my colleagues in Congress, they share responsibility for that. 

‘Many of them were fundraising off of this Stop the Steal grift. I don’t understand how you can look in the mirror and go to sleep at night without that weighing on your conscience, I fundamentally do not. I’m just at a loss for words about how some of them have acted in ways that are just knowingly, provably false. And they know they’re lying too.’

‘I mean maybe I’m coming in here with too naive an expectation of human capacity and decency, but I also was an interrogator in Iraq, so it’s not like I’m a Pollyanna,’ he said.

THE REPUBLICANS SO LOYAL TO TRUMP THEY VOTED TO OVERTURN THE ELECTION – AFTER HIS MOB SMASHED UP THE CAPITOL

SENATORS  

Ted Cruz – Texas 

Josh Hawley – Missouri 

Cindy Hyde-Smith – Mississippi 

John Kennedy – Louisiana   

Cynthia Lummis – Wyoming 

Roger Marshall – Kansas 

Rick Scott – Florida 

Tommy Tuberville – Alabama 

HOUSE  

 Robert B. Aderholt – Alabama

Rick Allen – Georgia 

Jodey Arrington – Texas 

Brian Babin – Texas 

Jim Baird – Indiana 

Jim Banks – Indiana 

Jack Bergman – Michigan 

Cliff Bentz – Oregon 

Stephanie Bice – Oklahoma 

Andy Biggs – Arizona 

Dan Bishop – North Carolina 

Lauren Boebert – Colorado  

Mike Bost – Illinois 

Ted Budd – North Carolina 

Michael C. Burgess – Texas 

Mo Brooks – Alabama

Tim Burchett – Tennessee 

Ken Calvert – California

Kat Cammack – Florida 

Jerry Carl – Alabama

Earl L. ‘Buddy’ Carter – Georgia 

John R. Carter – Texas 

Madison Cawthorn – North Carolina        

Steve Chabot – Ohio 

Ben Cline – Virginia 

Michael Cloud – Texas

 Andrew Clyde – Georgia 

Tom Cole – Oklahoma 

Rick Crawford – Arkansas 

Warren Davidson – Ohio 

Scott DesJarlais – Tennessee

Mario Diaz-Balart – Florida 

Byron Donalds – Florida

Jeff Duncan – South Carolina 

Neal Dunn – Florida  

Ron Estes – Kansas 

Pat Fallon – Texas 

Michelle Fischbach – Minnesota 

Scott Fitzgerald – Wisconsin 

Chuck Fleischmann – Tennessee  

Virginia Foxx – North Carolina 

Russ Fulcher – Idaho  

Scott Franklin – Florida  

Matt Gaetz – Florida 

Mike Garcia – California 

Bob Gibbs – Ohio 

Carlos Gimenez – Florida 

Louie Gohmert – Texas 

Bob Good – Virginia 

Lance Gooden – Texas 

Paul Gosar – Arizona 

Garret Graves – Louisiana 

Sam Graves – Missouri 

Marjorie Taylor Greene – Georgia 

Mark E. Green – Tennessee 

Morgan Griffith – Virginia 

Michael Guest – Mississippi 

Jim Hagedorn – Minnesota 

Andy Harris – Maryland 

Diana Harshbarger – Tennessee 

Vicky Hartzler – Missouri  

Kevin Hern – Oklahoma 

Jody Hice – Georgia 

Clay Higgins – Louisiana 

Yvette Herrell – New Mexico 

Richard Hudson – North Carolina 

Darrell Issa – California   

Chris Jacobs – New York 

Ronny Jackson – Texas 

Bill Johnson – Ohio 

Mike Johnson – Louisiana   

Jim Jordan – Ohio

John Joyce – Pennsylvania

Fred Keller – Pennsylvania 

Mike Kelly – Pennsylvania

Trent Kelly – Mississippi 

David Kustoff – Tennessee 

Doug LaMalfa – California

Brian Mast – Florida

Doug Lamborn – Colorado 

Jacob LaTurner – Kansas 

Debbie Lesko – Alabama 

Billy Long – Missouri 

Barry Loudermilk – Georgia 

Frank Lucas – Oklahoma 

Blaine Luetkemeyer – Missouri 

Nicole Malliotakis – New York 

 Tracey Mann – Kansas   

Kevin McCarthy – California 

Lisa McClain – Michigan 

Daniel Meuser – Pennsylvania 

Carol Miller – West Virginia 

Mary Miller – Illinois  

Alexander Mooney – West Virginia 

Barry Moore – Alabama 

Markwayne Mullin – Oklahoma 

Gregory Murphy – North Carolina 

Troy Nehls – Texas 

Ralph Norman – South Carolina 

Devin Nunes – California 

Jay Obernolte – California 

Burgess Owens – Utah 

Steven Palazzo – Mississippi 

Gary Palmer – Alabama

Greg Pence – Indiana 

Scott Perry – Pennsylvania 

August Pfluger – Texas 

Bill Posey – Florida 

Guy Reschenthaler – Pennsylvania 

Tom Rice – South Carolina 

Harold Rogers – Kentucky 

Mike Rogers – Alabama 

John Rose – Tennessee 

Matt Rosendale – Montana

David Rouzer – North Carolina

John Rutherford – Florida

Steve Scalise – Louisiana 

David Schweikert – Arizona 

Pete Sessions – Texas 

Adrian Smith – Nebraska 

Jason Smith – Missouri 

Lloyd Smucker – Pennsylvania 

Elise Stefanik – New York 

Greg Steube – Florida

Chris Stewart – Utah 

Glenn Thompson – Pennsylvania 

Tom Tiffany – Wisconsin 

William Timmons – South Carolina 

Jeff Van Drew – New Jersey 

Beth Van Duyne – Texas 

Tim Walberg – Michigan  

Jackie Walorski – Indiana 

Randy Weber – Texas 

Daniel Webster – Florida 

Roger Williams – Texas

Joe Wilson – South Carolina 

Robert Wittman – Virginia 

Ron Wright – Texas 

Lee Zeldin – New York  

 

 

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*** This article has been archived for your research. The original version from Daily Mail can be found here ***