New York Times: “Last week, allies of President Trump accused Republican leaders in Pennsylvania of being ‘cowards’ and ‘liars’ and of letting America down. Mr. Trump himself called top Republicans in the General Assembly in his crusade to twist the arms of officials in several states and reverse an election he lost. The Pennsylvania lawmakers told the president they had no power to convene a special session to address his grievances. But they also rewarded his efforts: On Friday, the State House speaker and majority leader joined hard-right colleagues – whom they had earlier resisted – and called on Congress to reject Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s 81,000-vote victory in Pennsylvania.”
“The extraordinary intervention by the president, and the willingness of some top party leaders to abet his effort to subvert an election, demonstrates how Mr. Trump’s sway over elected Republicans is likely to endure after he leaves office and how his false claims of a ‘rigged’ 2020 vote may inflame the party base for years to come. Courts across the country have summarily thrown out Mr. Trump’s claims of a stolen election. But 64 Republicans in the General Assembly signed a letter last week urging Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation to reject the state’s Electoral College votes for Mr. Biden. Kim Ward, the Republican majority leader of the Pennsylvania Senate, said the president had called her to declare there was fraud in the voting. But she said she had not been shown the letter to Congress, which was pulled together hastily, before its release. Asked if she would have signed it, she indicated that the Republican base expected party leaders to back up Mr. Trump’s claims – or to face its wrath. ‘If I would say to you, ‘I don’t want to do it,’’ she said about signing the letter, ‘I’d get my house bombed tonight.’“