Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) is hunting for a Senate Republican to take part in his guaranteed-to-fail effort to overthrow the election results on Jan. 6. 

The fight is emerging as a division point between Senate GOP leadership and President Trump.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is privately warning his caucus against objecting because it would force a high-profile vote that would not change the outcome, while Trump has publicly endorsed the effort and met with a group of conservative firebrands to plot strategy. 

There’s no chance Republicans backing Trump will be able to block the results when Congress formally counts the Electoral College votes on Jan. 6, with Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) predicting it will “go down like a shot dog” in the upper chamber. 

In order for Congress to contest a state’s election results, majorities in both chambers would have to vote to uphold the objection, something that has never happened. 

But Brooks needs only one GOP senator to side with him to force a debate and vote on any objection. If he’s successful, it would be the third time Congress has had to debate an objection since 1887, according to the Congressional Research Service.

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Here are the five Senate Republicans to watch in the Electoral College fight. 

Sen.-elect Tommy Tuberville (Ala.)

Tuberville doesn’t join the Senate until Jan. 3, but he’s already causing headaches for leadership. 

Tuberville — who aligned himself closely with Trump while defeating former Attorney General Jeff Sessions in the primary and then unseating Democratic Sen. Doug Jones (Ala.) — is viewed as the GOP senator most likely to join Brooks’s effort. 

Tuberville suggested in a video, posted online by progressive activist Lauren Windsor, that he would support challenging the results, saying, “You’ve been reading about it in the House. We’re going to have to do it in the Senate.” 

Tuberville’s campaign manager has also said he’s “very seriously” considering objecting to the Electoral College results next month. 

Trump and his allies have seized on Tuberville’s potential objection, putting him in a high-profile political bind. 

Trump disclosed in a radio interview with his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani that he had spoken with Tuberville. And amid reports that Tuberville could help challenge the results, Trump weighed in on Twitter, calling him “a great champion and man of courage” and saying that “more Republican Senators should follow his lead.” 

But he’s likely to face efforts from Senate GOP leaders to dissuade him going forward or at least get a read on what he’s thinking. A senior GOP senator said they expected McConnell to call Tuberville. 

“I would hope he wouldn’t do that. I think it’s time ... to move on,” Thune said about Tuberville. “The fact of the matter is that’s been litigated over and over. ... It’s time to be done with this.” Read more at The Hill