


Marc Elias is back and that is not good news.
Despite the Pennsylvania race called by the AP almost a week ago, Elias is working with Democratic Sen. Bob Casey to try to change that outcome. It is not surprising that Casey was left with Elias.
Ellias is an attorney who has been sanctioned in court and denounced by critics as a Democratic “dirty trickster” and even an “election denier.”
Self-anointed as the defender of democracy, Elias has remained the go-to lawyer for many Democratic campaigns.
It was Elias who was the general counsel to the Clinton presidential campaign when it funded the infamous Steele Dossier, which falsely pushed the idea that Donald Trump was a Russian asset.
During the campaign, reporters asked about the possible connection to the campaign, but Clinton campaign officials denied any involvement in the Steele Dossier.
When journalists discovered after the election that the Clinton campaign hid payments for the dossier as “legal fees” among the $5.6 million paid to Perkins Coie, they met with nothing but shrugs from the Clinton staff.
New York Times reporter Ken Vogel accused Elias of denying involvement in the anti-Trump dossier. When Vogel tried to report the story, he said, Elias “pushed back vigorously, saying ‘You (or your sources) are wrong.’”
Times reporter Maggie Haberman declared, “Folks involved in funding this lied about it, and with sanctimony, for a year.”
Elias was back when John Podesta, Clinton’s campaign chairman, was questioned by Congress on the Steele Dossier and denied categorically any contractual agreement with Fusion GPS.
Sitting beside him was Elias, who reportedly said nothing to correct the misleading information given to Congress.
The Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee were ultimately sanctioned by the FEC over the handling of the funding of the dossier through his prior firm.
The Democratic National Committee reportedly later cut ties with Elias.
Nevertheless, other Democrats continued to hire Elias despite his checkered past. He unsuccessfully led efforts to challenge Democratic losses. Elias also was the subject of intense criticism after a tweet that some have called inherently racist, after suggesting Georgia voters couldn’t find their own driver’s license number.
Get opinions and commentary from our columnists
Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter!
Thanks for signing up!
Elias continued to be accused of not defending but thwarting democracy.
In Maryland, Elias filed in support of an abusive gerrymandering of election districts that a court found violated not only Maryland law but the state constitution’s equal protection, free speech and free elections clauses. The court said that the map pushed by Elias “subverts the will of those governed.”
His work for New York redistricting not only ignored the express will of the voters to end such gerrymandering, it effectively negated the votes of Republican voters.
In 2024, the Chief Judge of the Western District of Wisconsin not only rejected but ridiculed the Elias Law Group for one of its challenges. Judge James Peterson (an Obama appointee) said that the argument “simply does not make any sense.”
The point is that it does not have to make sense. Democratic campaigns fund Elias and his various profitable enterprises to push undemocratic causes.
That is the case with Casey. Trump won Pennsylvania’s presidential election, and Dave McCormick received tens of thousands more votes.
With 99% of the votes counted, even Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer relented in allowing McCormick to attend the orientation for new senators.
What is most striking is the strategy of Elias.
The state has roughly 87,000 provisional ballots to count, but those ballots were generally challenged for defects or suspected invalidity.
Even if they were to count, it is unlikely that they will break so overwhelmingly for Casey to overturn the result. Indeed, only about 30,000 were coming from Casey strongholds in Philadelphia and Allegheny County.
However, Elias just wants to get within .5% to trigger a mandatory recount.
It is reminiscent of Trump demanding an additional recount in Georgia, maintaining on a call that all he needed was to “find 11,780 votes” to change the outcome.
All Elias needs to do is find 40,000 votes.
Of course, when Trump made that comment, Elias and Democrats insisted that he was seeking to defraud the state by demanding a new recount. No such outrage from liberals here.
It is not the first time Elias seemed to morph into those he denounced. Previously in New York, Elias unsuccessfully sought to flip the result in a congressional race by claiming that the Dominion voting machines somehow switched or changed votes. Sound familiar?
Casey will eventually have to accept defeat, but Elias will remain the break-the-glass option for Democratic campaigns when other lawyers have lost the appetite for challenging election results.
Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. He is the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.”