Update, 5:39 p.m.: Donald Trump officially secured a majority of the Electoral College votes needed to become the next president of the United States.
As the Electoral College’s 538 members gather across the country on Monday to formally cast their ballots for the next president and vice president of the United States, protesters have flocked to state capitals to urge electors to deny Donald Trump the presidency. The normally staid process has drawn an unusual amount of attention this year, as activists have mounted various efforts to challenge the Electoral College results amid alarm over Trump’s Cabinet picks and conflicts of interest, as well as revelations about Russia’s alleged role in hacking US political targets to aid Trump.
“Shame! You don’t deserve to be an American!” one protester shouted in Wisconsin, as all 10 of the state’s electors voted to officially make Trump president. “You have sold us out!”
Demonstrators erupt after Wisconsin’s 10 presidential electors cast their #ElectoralCollege ballots for Republican Donald Trump. pic.twitter.com/A0GrASaIbY
— Bill Ruthhart (@BillRuthhart) December 19, 2016
-20 wind chills didn’t stop about 50 demonstrators outside the Wisconsin capitol as the state’s presidential electors were set to vote. pic.twitter.com/yjYnNKudyy
— Bill Ruthhart (@BillRuthhart) December 19, 2016
Numerous arrests have been made, including in Pennsylvania where 12 immigration activists were cited for disorderly conduct for protesting Trump’s victory in the state.
A look at the #ElectoralCollege protesters who’ve converged on the Pennsylvania Capitol Rotunda pic.twitter.com/0iNNDjTtyi
— Wallace McKelvey (@wjmckelvey) December 19, 2016
In Minnesota, a state that Hillary Clinton won, one elector was replaced after refusing to vote for her. A Maine Democratic elector decided to cast his protest vote for Bernie Sanders instead of Clinton. In Washington, three electors voted for Colin Powell instead of Clinton; a fourth elector wrote in “Faith Spotted Eagle.”
The unprecedented effort to upend the Electoral College vote is unlikely to amount to much. As Mother Jones reported last week, it’s highly unlikely that enough electors will change their votes and abandon the party’s nominee. While President Barack Obama called the Electoral College process a “vestige” on Friday, he said voters searching for a “silver bullet” fix to American politics are probably in for a disappointment. The large absence of “faithless” electors revolting against Trump further fuels this notion.
On Sunday, Trump rebuked his opponents and the movement to reject his path to the White House.
If my many supporters acted and threatened people like those who lost the election are doing, they would be scorned & called terrible names!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 18, 2016