DAVENPORT, Iowa — House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy traveled to Iowa on Wednesday, trying to turn a seat his party won by just six votes into a charge of hypocrisy against Democrats.

Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks won the narrow victory and was seated in Congress in January.

But Democrat Rita Hart continues to fight the results and is asking the House controlled by her own party to use their authority to investigate the vote count, contending that if 22 uncounted ballots are tallied, she will be declared the rightful winner.

Congressional reviews are common and allowed under federal law. Only three times has an outcome been overturned.

But this year, the rather routine review process has become more political, fueled by former President Donald Trump’s unsuccessful effort to get Congress to overturn his electoral defeat and refuse to certify Joe Biden’s victory.

McCarthy, along with 138 other House Republicans, voted on January 6th to not certify the results from two states, Arizona and Pennsylvania — in the midst of an angry mob of Trump supporters storming the Capitol.  

March 30, 202103:47

Republicans say House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is trying to exploit the law to widen her slim majority in the House and that her actions are hypocritical after the relentless criticism from Democrats about the Jan. 6th vote.

“I think the hypocrisy is right at the feet where the Democrats were unanimous in telling everyone in America and all Republicans in the House that you have to respect every election certificate once it’s certified by the state laws in each individual state in the nation,” the top Republican on the House Administration Committee Rep Rodney Davis, R-IL, said in an interview. He added that neither he nor Miller-Meeks objected to the presidential election certification. 

McCarthy, R-Calif., is traveling to the Hawkeye State to appear at events with Miller-Meeks, an attempt to draw attention to the House Administration Committee’s on going review of the Iowa election. 

“This is the people’s House, not Pelosi’s House,” McCarthy said during an interview with FOX News on Wednesday. “Pelosi is scared of losing power.”

After a recount, the Iowa State Board of Canvassers certified the election on November 30th that Miller-Meeks beat Hart by just six votes out of nearly 400,000 cast in November.

But Hart argues in a brief filed by her attorney Marc Elias, a prominent Democratic election lawyer, that 22 legal ballots were not counted. If those votes were counted, Elias writes, then Hart would have actually won the race by nine votes. 

Elias wrote in a follow-up brief filed Monday that Miller-Meeks hasn’t made a case why those 22 votes shouldn’t be counted. 

The lawyers for Miller-Meeks discount the claims made by Hart in their new brief.

The danger of what Hart proposes cannot be overstated. One cannot change the rules after the election was conducted without favoring one candidate or the other — and without destroying the public’s confidence in our election system,” the brief states.

The House Administration Committee is expected to continue the investigation. Hart has already begun conducting depositions and gathering evidence, an aide to Hart told NBC News. 

Republicans point out that Hart opted against filing a challenge in the Iowa court system and instead took her case directly to the Democratic-controlled Congress, which has the authority to investigate under the Federal Contested Elections Act of 1969.  

But many Democrats say the presidential election and the Iowa congressional race aren’t comparable. Trump lost by millions of votes and there was not widespread election fraud. The Iowa election was close, not fraudulent, they argue, and all they are seeking is a full recount, including the legally cast votes that were left out of the original tally. 

Pelosi has said it is possible that Miller-Meeks gets unseated depending on the outcome of the investigation, telling reporters earlier this month: “Yeah, there could be a scenario to that extent.” 

But it’s creating a dilemma for some moderate Democrats who are uneasy with the speaker’s position, and would be forced to cast a vote on the House floor to unseat Miller-Meeks if it reached that point.

“I have deep reservations,” Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., said in an interview.  

Republicans think the politics are on their side and have tailored their language to fit polling.

A National Republican Campaign Committee polled what language resonates with voters in 16 battleground districts found that 68 percent of voters, when asked, said they would oppose an attempt to “overthrow the election results” and that 53 percent of suburban voters and 57 percent of independent voters “agree with the sentiment that Democrats are acting hypocritically,” according to a memo obtained by NBC News.  

Not all voters in Iowa are happy with Congress getting involved.  

Alyssa Keel, a registered independent of Davenport, voted for Hart but opposes the ongoing litigation.

“I think it’s a really sticky situation,” she said. “Nobody’s going to be happy, regardless of what the outcome is.”

Leigh Ann Caldwell reported from Iowa, and Alex Moe reported from Florida.

Haley Talbot contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

TikTok incentivizes creators to make money with longer videos

More creators on TikTok will soon be able to earn money through…

Latino civil rights group could see bigger push for Puerto Rico statehood

Puerto Rican members of the country’s oldest Latino civil rights organization are…

Univ. of Nebraska changes mascot logo to avoid confusion with white power sign

The University of Nebraska- Lincoln altered its mascot logo to remove an…

Amazon closes NJ warehouse after workers test positive for coronavirus

Amazon has closed a warehouse in northern New Jersey until Dec. 26…