Washington electors who didn’t cast votes for Hillary Clinton Monday will be fined $1,000.
Washington’s four “faithless” electors face a $1,000 fine each for not voting for Hillary Clinton when the Electoral College met Monday, state elections officials said.
Three voted for retired Gen. Colin Powell and one voted for Native American activist Faith Spotted Eagle.
Washington has a law that requires electors, who are chosen by the state’s political parties, to cast their Electoral College ballots for the person who wins the state’s popular vote. Failure to do so can result in a fine as high as $1,000.
The Secretary of State’s office said it will send each a notice next week of the $1,000 fine, with payment due in 60 days. The electors will be given a chance to appeal, although the exact details of that process haven’t been set.
At least two who voted for Powell were part of a group that called themselves “Hamilton electors,” an effort to force the presidential election into the House of Representatives, and deny Donald Trump from taking office, by persuading Republican electors in other states to cast their votes for someone other than Trump.