Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee joins other red states in legal brief supporting Texas voting lawsuit

- BY NATALIE ALLISON

Tennessee has signed on to support an effort by Texas to delay four other states from casting Electoral College votes, a longshot lawsuit being touted by President Donald Trump as way to reverse the outcome of the election.

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery’s off ice on Wednesday announced that Tennessee had joined an amicus brief in the case, meaning the state is offering its support to Texas but not be a party to the lawsuit. Led by Missouri, Tennessee is one of 17 conservati­ve states that signed the brief.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Tuesday asked the U. S. Supreme Court to block Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin from finalizing election results when electors meet Monday, a last- ditch effort to keep

Trump in the White House. Each of those states were battlegrou­nds won by President-elect Joe Biden.

Trump is losing in results of the Nov. 3 election, 81.4 million to 74.2 million. All 50 states have already certified their results. Trump says only voter fraud could explain the results, but a number of lawsuits on his behalf regarding procedural issues have been rejected. Top officials in his own administra­tion have found no evidence of widespread fraud.

Tennessee Republican state legislator­s on Tuesday urged Slatery to get involved in the Texas lawsuit, which questions certain late- stage changes made to election rules in the battlegrou­nd states amid a pandemic.

Slatery said it shouldn’t come as a surprise that Tennessee signed on.

“The Tennessee Attorney General’s Office has consistent­ly taken the position that only a state’s legislatur­e has the authority to make and change election laws,” Slatery said in a statement. “This office pressed that argument in cases defending Tennessee’s election laws against pandemic-related challenges and in amicus briefs in cases involving similar challenges in other courts.

“This is not something new. Texas’s action in the Supreme Court seeks to vindicate the same important separation- of- powers principles, and that is why we joined Missouri’s amicus brief in support of that action.”

Trump is also supportive of the effort by Texas.

Paxton argued that due to the pandemic, the four states in question wrongfully expanded mail voting and weakened signature verificati­on, witness requiremen­ts and other measures meant to protect ballot integrity.

Officials in the four states criticized the filing as a publicity stunt that recycled false and disproven claims of widespread election fraud.

“Texas alleges that there are 80,000 forged signatures on absentee ballots in Georgia, but they don’t bring forward a single person who this happened to,” said Jordan Fuchs, Georgia’s deputy secretary of state. “That’s because it didn’t happen.”

Attorneys general in Tennessee are appointed by the state Supreme Court to eight-year terms, unlike most states where the AG is elected.

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