U.S. Supreme Court swiftly ends Trump-backed Texas bid to upend election
results
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[December 12, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme
Court on Friday rejected a long-shot lawsuit by Texas and backed by
President Donald Trump seeking to throw out voting results in four
states, dealing him a likely fatal blow in his quest to undo his
election loss to President-elect Joe Biden.
The decision allows the U.S. Electoral College to press ahead with a
meeting on Monday, where it is expected to formally cast its votes and
make Biden's victory official.
Biden, a Democrat, has amassed 306 votes to Trump's 232 in the
state-by-state Electoral College, which allots votes to all 50 states
and the District of Columbia based on population.
The four states in question - Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin - contributed a combined 62 votes to Biden's total. To win the
White House, 270 votes are needed.
In a brief order, the justices said Texas did not have legal standing to
bring the case, abruptly ending what Trump had touted this week as his
best hope for overturning the election.
After midnight, Trump said on Twitter, “The Supreme Court really let us
down. No Wisdom, no Courage!”
Complaining that the court had rejected the case "in a flash" despite
his winning more votes than any other sitting president, Trump wrote: "A
Rigged Election, fight on!"
While Biden has moved forward with a wave of appointments for his
incoming administration ahead of assuming office on Jan. 20, Trump and
his legal team have filed a flurry of unsuccessful lawsuits in several
states baselessly claiming voter fraud and challenging the results.
Trump's goal had long been for a case to reach the Supreme Court, where
he had placed three new justices in his first term and where
conservatives hold a 6-3 majority. The lawsuit brought by Texas and
supported by 17 other states and more than 100 Republican members of
Congress gave him that opportunity.
In the run-up the Nov. 3 election, Trump had pushed for the swift
confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, with the publicly stated hope
that she could be in a position to help rule on an election challenge.
But Barrett and the two other justices appointed by Trump - Neil Gorsuch
and Brett Kavanaugh - signed onto the court's order derailing the Texas
suit without comment.
"Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the
manner in which another state conducts its elections," the court's order
said.
Two of the court's conservatives, Justice Samuel Alito and Justice
Clarence Thomas, said they would have allowed Texas to sue but would not
have blocked the four states from finalizing their election results.
'NATION OF LAWS'
Together with a case from Pennsylvania it was the second time this week
that the court spurned the attempt to overturn the will of voters.
The Texas case was filed on Tuesday by Ken Paxton, the Republican
attorney general of the state and a Trump ally. The Republican president
on Wednesday filed a motion to intervene and become a plaintiff.
"There's no way to say it other than they dodged," White House
spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said of the justices on Fox News Channel.
"They dodged, they hid behind procedure, and they refused to use their
authority to enforce the constitution."
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Kathleen Kratt, of Orlando, Florida, and a supporter of U.S.
President Donald Trump holds a flag in front of the Supreme Court as
the court reviews a lawsuit filed by Texas seeking to undo
President-elect Joe Biden's election victory in Washington, U.S.,
December 11, 2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
A Biden spokesman said it was "no surprise" the high court rejected
"baseless attempts" to deny Trump lost the election.
"Our nation's highest court saw through this seditious abuse of our
electoral process," Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a
Democrat, said on Twitter.
Dana Nessel, Michigan's attorney general, also a Democrat, said in a
statement that the ruling was "an important reminder that we are a
nation of laws, and though some may bend to the desire of a single
individual, the courts will not."
The Texas lawsuit argued that changes made by the four states to
voting procedures amid the pandemic to expand mail-in voting were
unlawful.
"It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court decided not to take this
case and determine the constitutionality of these four states'
failure to follow federal and state election law," Paxton said in a
statement.
Trump and many of his fellow Republicans have made unfounded claims
that the expansion of mail-in voting during the coronavirus pandemic
led to Biden fraudulently winning in election battleground states.
State election officials have said they have found no evidence of
fraud. Lawyers for Trump and his allies have failed to present
evidence in court of the type of fraud he has alleged.
Democrats and other critics have accused Trump of seeking to shatter
public belief in the integrity of U.S. elections and sabotage
American democracy by trying to subvert the will of the voters.
Trump advisers in and out of the White House have long been resigned
to Trump's defeat despite the president's quixotic quest to overturn
the results. Trump has refused to concede the election and advisers
expect him to continue to do so.
Trump's top legal advisers, Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis, said the
president's legal remedies were not exhausted and they would
continue to work to invalidate the election ahead of Jan. 6, when
Congress formally adopts the Electoral College results. Its role in
doing so is largely ceremonial.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Steve
Holland, Michael Martina, Simon Lewis and James Oliphant; Editing by
Will Dunham, Grant McCool, Daniel Wallis and Billy Mallard)
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