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Tracy Beanz
@tracybeanz
· 22m
Replying to @LeeChatfield
If you wanted to keep the Republic you’d be doing the right thing and not allowing fraudulent votes to dilute the votes of your constituency. History will remember which side you chose. May God forgive you. We likely won’t.
A Republican state representative in Michigan was stripped of his committee assignments by GOP leaders Monday after refusing to rule out that violence would occur in the capital of Lansing as members of the Electoral College met to confirm the state’s choice of Joe Biden as president of the United States.
His interviewer on WPHM-AM said he was “concerned about violence today in Lansing,” given Eisen’s vague description of what Republicans planned to do.
The interviewer then asked Eisen, “Can you assure me that this is going to be a safe day in Lansing, nobody’s going to get hurt?”
The lawmaker paused and then said, “No.”
“I don’t know, because what we’re doing today is uncharted, it hasn’t been done, and it’s not me doing it, it’s the Michigan House, it’s the Michigan party ... I’m just here to witness,” said Eisen, who represents St. Clair Township.
Eisen later issued a statement saying he regretted “the confusion over my comments,” and said he wanted to attend the event he was talking about “to help prevent violence, not promote it.”
But House Speaker Lee Chatfield, a Republican, said: “We as elected officials must be clear that violence has no place in our democratic process. We must be held to a higher standard.”
“Because of that, Rep. Eisen has been removed from his committee assignments for the rest of the term,” Chatfield said in a statement.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/14/electoral-college-michigan-republican-hints-at-violence.html
This guy was on Newsmax earlier and said he thought the interviewer was referring to the bomb threats other threats made.