
© Stefani Reynolds/Pool via AP
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., poses with newly elected Republican senators, from left, Sen.-elect Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., Sen.-elect Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., Sen.-elect Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., and Sen.-elect Roger Marshall, R-Kan., on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, Nov. 9, 2020.
U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks' pursuit to overturn the presidential election results by tossing out Electoral College votes in key battleground states
will require at least one Senator to be successful when the new Congress convenes on January 6
.
Veteran Republican Senators
Ted Cruz of Texas and
Rand Paul of Kentucky have been named by national media outlets as possible allies.
Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri said he was undecided on the matter Wednesday.
And another name floated in recent days: Senate-elect Tommy Tuberville of Alabama.
But unlike Cruz, Paul and Hawley - among others - Tuberville is a rookie senator who will be sworn into office on January 3, a mere three days before Congress meets to ratify the Electoral College's decision on Monday that awarded the presidency to Joe Biden.
If Tuberville is the sole senator backing Brooks, it would also place the former Auburn University head football coach at odds with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell,
who congratulated Biden on Monday and - according to national news accounts -
is warning fellow Republicans not to challenge the election results.
Stan McDonald, Tuberville's campaign chairman,
during an interview on WVNN-radio in Huntsville on Tuesday, said:
"I think that he (Tuberville) and Ted Cruz are the two best candidates to do this. I don't know yet if or when he will do this. He's very seriously considering it."
Tuberville is in Georgia this week and was unavailable for comment.
Comment: Other
sources are reporting the new senator could surprise us and make that bold move:
Sen.-elect Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) indicated in a video that surfaced Thursday that that he thinks the Senate should support a challenge to the results of the Electoral College, which certified President-elect Joe Biden's victory this week.
Tuberville suggested he would back a challenge Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) has vowed to bring against the vote. If a senator joins Brooks, it would require the House and Senate to debate and then vote on the issue.
"You see what's coming. You've been reading about it in the House. We're going to have to do it in the Senate," Tuberville said in the video taken by liberal activist Lauren Windsor at a rally for Sens. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) and David Perdue (R-Ga.) in Georgia.
At the very least, Senator Tuberville seems willing to hit the ground running to start his tenure in the Senate. Not many have such convictions - be it early or even late in the game. Perhaps it takes a rookie to address the major flaws in the fabric of the nation and shows the rest of the bums in Congress how its done before political aphasia and mind-think arm-twisting kicks in. We shall see.
Comment: They are using this false pandemic to gain more control over the population. These vaccines are being pushed through with 'emergency authorization', despite the governments not knowing whether they're safe or effective.
Vaccine certificates will enable them totalitarian control over the population with a perfect excuse that it is all just to protect us from the "deadly" virus and from individuals who are refusing vaccines and are "socially irresponsible" in spreading the dreadful disease.