National Post

Penn. officials ask judge to toss Trump lawsuit

- Makini Brice Jan Wolfe and

WASHINGTON • Officials in the election battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit brought by U.S. President Donald Trump’s campaign seeking to prevent the state from certifying its results in the vote for president.

In court filing sin the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvan­ia, lawyers for the Pennsylvan­ia secretary of state and seven of the state’s counties said the case made vague and unsupporte­d allegation­s “on the basis of repeatedly- rejected legal theories and no evidence.”

“This Court should see this lawsuit for what it is: a transparen­t and premeditat­ed attack on our electoral system that broadly seeks to disenfranc­hise all Pennsylvan­ia voters who legally cast ballots in this election,” four of the counties said in a court filing.

Pennsylvan­ia officials said they “administer­ed a proper, fair, and secure election” and would vigorously defend the case. They also said that the plaintiffs lacked standing for their suit.

President-elect Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the majority of the vote in all seven of Pennsylvan­ia’s counties cited in the lawsuit and is up more than 53,000 votes with an estimated 97 per cent of ballots counted across the state.

Republican Trump’ s campaign said the “Democrat- majority counties” did not provide partisan election observers an opportunit­y to assess the processing of mail-in ballots, placed the observers too far from the tabulation of votes and allowed mail- in voters whose ballots were deficient to cast provisiona­l ballots in what they say was a flouting of the state’s electoral rules.

But Pennsylvan­ia officials said the election observers were, in fact, allowed to assess the processing of mailin ballots and that all of the state’s counties were permitted to inform residents if their mailed- in ballots were deficient, even if it was not mandatory for them to do so.

Trump’s campaign has filed a string of long- shot lawsuits in several battlegrou­nd states.

Legal experts say the lawsuits have little chance of changing the outcome of the election. A senior Biden legal adviser has dismissed the litigation as “theatrics, not really lawsuits.”

Pennsylvan­ia is due to certify the election results on Nov. 23.

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