@coldjoint,
coldjoint wrote:
neptuneblue wrote:
coldjoint wrote:There we go. If it gets thrown into Congress Trump will win. Republican states out number Democratic ones. Politicians in those states will have no choice.
What an idiot you are. It doesn't work like that. Go back to school.
It sure does.
The problem with dealing with idiots is - well, they're idiots.
"Objecting to the Counting of One or More Electoral Votes
Section 15 establishes a procedure for making and acting on objections to the counting of one or more of the electoral votes from a state or the District of Columbia. When the certificate or equivalent paper from each state or the District of Columbia is read, “the President of the Senate shall call for objections, if any.” Any such objection must be presented in writing and must be signed by at least one Senator and one Representative. The objection “shall state clearly and concisely, and without argument, the ground thereof.” During the joint session of January 6, 2001, the presiding officer intervened on several occasions to halt attempts to make speeches under the guise of offering an objection.
When an objection, properly made in writing and endorsed by at least one Senator and one Representative, is received, each house is to meet and consider it separately. The statute states, “No votes or papers from any other State shall be acted upon until the objections previously made to the votes or papers from any State shall have been finally disposed of.” However, in 1873, before enactment of the law now in force, the joint session agreed, without objection and for reasons of convenience, to entertain objections with regard to two or more states before the houses met separately on any of them.
Disposing of Objections
The joint session does not act on any objections that are made. Instead, the joint session is suspended, the Senate withdraws from the House chamber, and each house meets separately to debate the objection and vote whether, based on the objection, to count the vote or votes in question.
Both houses must vote separately to agree to the objection by simple majority. Otherwise, the objection fails and the vote or votes are counted. (3 U.S.C. §15 provides that “the two Houses concurrently may reject the vote or votes.”)
https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL32717.pdf?fbclid=IwAR1p-PMSNkwR3F9-zoSvlbYl3Ml3FcwfLQsLeTbSIB1MkMXMDJDB8POalS4
The House will not agree to an objection as the controlling party is Democratic and does not object to Biden as President-Elect. Ergo, the one state, one count vote you are so wrongly portraying as "saving" the election is moot.