The Sunday Guardian

US Supreme Court ends Trump-backed Texas bid to upend election results

- CORRESPOND­ENT WASHINGTON

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday rejected a longshot 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 stateby-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.

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Donald Trump

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