(Your faithful observer confesses to being less observant than he thought he was, as at least three of you faithful consumers have been good enough to remind me. For those who don’t or won’t in the future know about that to which I refer, go on with your lives. For those who do, please note that I have made the slight correction you suggest, with thanks. But Mr. Biden is still P45.)
—won’t be known until January 6, 2021, two weeks before inauguration day.
Not officially, anyway.
We think we’ll know. The networks will think they know. The print reporters and the pundits will think they know. But they won’t be correct until January 6.
Officially.
Before we launch into an explanation of those statements, we want to say two things.
First: Joseph Biden will NOT be the 46th President of the United States. He will be the 45th. He will lead the 46th presidential administration but he will be the 45th president. Grover Cleveland screwed up the numbering system when he served two non-consecutive terms and somebody decided he would be the 22nd and 24th President. He was not two people. But he did lead two administrations. It’s a small thing. But there are those who get really irritated with the lack of clarity in describing Mr. Biden as our 46th president. If should be apparent who one of them is.
(On Monday, we heard Governor Parson talk briefly about what an honor it is to be Missouri’s 57th governor and to realize how small the group is of men who have led the state in its 200 years. Actually, the group is more exclusive than that. He’s our 55th Governor, serving the 57th administration. Phil Donnelly was 41 and 43 and Christopher Bond was 47 and 49 in terms of state administrations. So Governor Parson is one of only 55.)
Second and more important to today’s discussion: Our county election officials and the hundreds of volunteers who filled various roles on election day—for pitifully little pay—did something remarkable two weeks ago. Not just in Missouri. Nationwide. With all of the concern about trouble from poll watchers, concerns that the number of voters would overwhelm the system, that the pandemic added hostile and confusing elements, and with the U. S. Postal Service set up to be a fall guy if some absentee or mail-on ballots didn’t get counted, election day happened without noticeable problems beyond the usual ones. Election days are never easy days for those responsible for administering them. But November, 2020 should be remembered because our election authorities stayed focused on their jobs and their responsibilities and did a highly-praiseworthy job. Thank Heavens our state went Republican. Otherwise those good folks would be living with unreasonable accusations and insults they do not deserve.
Now, on with our explanation of why we won’t have an official winner until the first week of the new year.
A week ago today we went to bed and we woke up and we didn’t know who would take the oath of office in Washington on January 20, 2021.
There’s a lot about this process of picking a president that we have forgotten about—if we ever knew it.
First, there’s this reminder. You and I were not electing a president two weeks ago. We were indicating a preference for a president. We were deciding which party’s electors would elect a president. Missouri Democrats and Republicans each select ten electors, one for each of our members of congress plus two because we have two Senators. Our system says the person who finishes ahead in the popular vote in Missouri gets all ten of our electors. The electors then vote for the president. In 2016, Donald Trump won Missouri 10-0.
But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Our friend Phill Brooks, who started covering the Capitol about the same time your obedient servant did and writes a weekly political column about Missouri politics, said in a recent column, “the results reported on election night are neither official nor complete.”
Those of us who enjoy reporting the numbers on election night like to think they are, but Phill is correct. Mail-in and absentee ballots are counted after election day if they are postmarked by election day. That’s why the numbers from the November 3 election were not certified by local election authorities on the spot.
But those are not the official numbers.
“The state law gives the state Board of Canvassers several more weeks before announcing the official state results based on those local reports,” Phill wrote. It is during this time that required recounts in local elections take place and protests or lawsuits are filed. Once all of that is resolved and canvassers certify no problems with the count, a determination is made about which electoral college panel gets some work to do while the others go home.
The Missouri electoral college delegates will not meet until December 14. Our ten D or R delegates will give all ten of Missouri’s real determining votes to the state winner, meaning Donald Trump will carry Missouri again 10-0.
But the winner is not determined then, either.
Congress collects all of the Electoral College reports and will hold a joint session on January 6. It will count the electoral votes and declare the person who got 270 or more electoral votes the winner of the big chair in the oval office. Two weeks later that person will be inaugurated.
That’s how it works. We voted November 3 to pick someone from our district to represent all of the winner’s voters. That person will present all ten of our votes to one candidate.
And then it’s official.
The Secretary of State reports Donald Trump got 1,711,848 votes in Missouri last week. But actually, he got 10. Joe Biden got 1,242,851. Actually, he got none. But thank you, 1,242,851 Missourians for taking part.
One other thing to mention. Missouri saw 3,012,436 votes cast for president. The total number of votes cast (because some people did not vote for president but voted for other candidates or issues) is going to be more than that. But the number of votes for president was almost 200,000 more ballots that were cast in the 2016 election.