Senate Introduces Bipartisan Bill Updating the Electoral Count Act
After months of negotiations between senators on both sides of the aisle, Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) along with 14 cosponsors introduced the?Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act of 2022,?which updates an outdated law from 1887 that?outlines procedures for casting and counting?Electoral College votes in presidential elections.
America’s ability to elect a president fairly and peacefully every four years is a hallmark of our democracy. For over a century, the ECA has?provided the primary framework?governing how presidential votes are cast and confirmed, including establishing procedures for how Congress counts each state’s electoral votes.??
But recent events demonstrate the pressing need to update this archaic law to combat the ongoing threat of election sabotage.?
The ECA has not been updated since it was first enacted more than 130 years ago, and it is rife with imprecise language, gaps and ambiguities that partisan actors attempted to?exploit?as part of an organized effort to overturn the 2020 election. Although this effort failed, the obscure language of the ECA unfortunately remains ripe for manipulation.??
As a result, interest in clarifying the ECA’s language has grown, and members of Congress from both sides of the aisle have now introduced a?vital proposal?to protect the will of the people. Campaign Legal Center (CLC) thanks the senators for introducing the Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act and urges Congress to pass it without delay.??
This bipartisan legislation makes four key, urgent changes to the ECA:?
Taken together, these four updates would help prevent the events of 2020 from happening again, and they rightfully have widespread public support.?
A?poll commissioned by CLC, Protect Democracy, Issue One and RepresentUS showed strong, bipartisan support among voters for updating the ECA. It also highlighted the serious concern held by a majority of voters (58%) that one party in Congress could try to overturn the results of an upcoming presidential election to put their own candidate in power.??
The next presidential election could be one of the most contentious ever. Now is the time for the Senate to move this crucial legislation.?Congress must act as soon as possible to pass the Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act to protect the will of the people, because elections should be decided by voters, not partisan politicians.?