Government & Politics

Hawley seeks counter investigation of Democrats for their ethics complaint against him

Facing an ethics complaint for his role in trying to overturn the 2020 election, Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley filed his own complaint Monday against the seven Democratic senators seeking an investigation of him.

Hawley accused the Democratic senators of abusing the ethics process with their complaint against him and Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz related to the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol.

“They submitted their meritless complaint in potential coordination with a campaign by partisan and dark-money groups that have peddled falsehoods about me and my objection,” Hawley said in his letter to the Senate Ethics Committee requesting a counter investigation.

“By knowingly submitting a frivolous complaint to accomplish impermissible partisan purposes, these Senators have engaged in improper conduct that may reflect upon the Senate.”

Hawley filed the complaint the same morning he appeared on the front page of The New York Post with duct tape on his mouth for a column about how how corporations and Democrats are “muzzling” him for his objection to President Joe Biden’s electoral votes.

Hawley and Cruz led the effort to contest Biden’s victory in the Senate.

The initial complaint filed by the seven Democrats alleges that “they amplified claims of election fraud that had resulted in threats of violence” and by proceeding with their objections after the attack on the Capitol “lent legitimacy to the mob’s cause and made future violence more likely.”

The Democratic complaint asks the committee to consider recommendations on censure, a formal but largely symbolic reprimand, or expulsion, the process by which senators are removed from office.

Hawley’s counter complaint asks the committee to “take all disciplinary action that it deems appropriate” against the seven Democrats.

The Democratic senators include Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith, Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, a Kansas City area native who like Hawley is a graduate of Rockhurst High School.

In his counter complaint, Hawley defends his decision to object to Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes, despite no evidence of fraud, based on his assertion that the Pennsylvania Constitution prohibits mail voting, an argument disputed by Pennsylvania officials and legal experts.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected in December a GOP-backed lawsuit filed after the election as untimely. Hawley’s motion, if it had succeeded, would have overridden the state court’s authority and effectively canceled the 6.9 million ballots cast in Pennsylvania for the November election.

Hawley has received widespread condemnation, including from early backers such as former Sen. John Danforth and former Ambassador Sam Fox, for promoting Trump’s baseless claims and undermining trust in the election.

However, in his counter complaint he accuses the Democrats of defaming him without evidence and for undermining trust in the Senate.

“Most astonishingly, the Democrats who filed the complaint against me insinuate—without any evidence whatsoever—that I or my staff may have conspired with the criminals who stormed the Capitol,” Hawley said.

“Fabricating conspiracy theories to attack me for political purposes is bad enough. Offensively trying to tie me to Nazi antisemitism—as Senator Hirono did when she outrageously accused me of pushing ‘the Big Lie’—is even worse,” he said.

Hawley employed a similar tactic in Missouri last year by responding to an audit by Missouri Auditor Nicole Galloway of his tenure as Missouri attorney general, which found potential misuse of state resources, by asking a state board investigate Galloway, who was the Democratic nominee for governor.

The Senate Ethics Committee, the panel which will weigh both complaints, is led by Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons, a Biden ally who was one of first senators to call for Hawley’s resignation, and Oklahoma Republican Sen. James Lankford, who initially backed Cruz’s challenge to Arizona’s electoral votes but rescinded his support after the Capitol riot.

This story was originally published January 25, 2021 at 9:53 AM.

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Bryan Lowry
McClatchy DC
Bryan Lowry serves as politics editor for The Kansas City Star. He previously served as The Star’s lead political reporter and as its Washington correspondent. Lowry contributed to The Star’s 2017 project on Kansas government secrecy that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Lowry also reported from the White House for McClatchy DC and The Miami Herald before returning to The Star to oversee its 2022 election coverage.
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