GOP chairwoman suggests RNC plans to get ‘litigious’ over push for national popular vote
February 28, 2020 in News by RBN Staff
via: MSN.com
By Julia Manchester, The Hill
NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. – Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said on Thursday that she plans on being “litigious” in response to the national popular vote movement.
“I think it is devastating to our country to get rid of the electoral vote. This is what the founders intended for every state to have representation,” McDaniel told attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference during a panel with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas).
“Stay tuned because the RNC is not going to let this go, and there’s something coming,” she added.
“Let me just say, I have an intention to be the most litigious chair in history,” McDaniel said. “I think what Democrats have done systematically to take away our rights, to rig the election system, and this, to take away our votes, our Electoral College votes, and have California and New York dictate who the next president of the United States …”
Cruz said the push would “probably” be unconstitutional.
McDaniel’s comments come as leaders of the group Conservatives for Yes on National Popular Vote look to inform other conservatives about the movement at the conference.
Many conservatives are skeptical of the popular vote, given that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote in 2016, while President Trump won the Electoral College.
However, the movement’s leaders say that this agreement would not abolish the Electoral College. The electoral system would still be used, but the electors would be distributed based on the national popular vote instead of the state’s popular vote in the winner-take-all method.