Connecticut Post

High court dismisses bid to overturn election results

- By Robert Barnes THE WASHINGTON­POST

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday dismissed a long-shot bid by President Donald Trump and the state of Texas to overturn the results in four states won by Democrat Joe Biden, blocking the president’s legal path to reverse his reelection loss.

The court’s unsigned order was short: “Texas has not demonstrat­ed a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts its elections. All other pending motions are dismissed as moot.”

Justices Samuel Alito Jr. and Clarence Thomas, as they have in the past, said they did not believe the court had the authority to simply reject Texas’s request. “I would therefore grant the motion to file the bill of complaint but would not grant other relief, and I express no view on any other issue.”

Trump, who has appointed three of the court’s nine members, has long viewed the Supreme Court as something of an ace-inthe-hole, and called for the justices to display “courage” and rescue him in postelecti­on litigation.

After Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died in September, he said filling the seat was essential because of the possibilit­y of litigation that might otherwise end in a tie. Justice Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed in a party-line vote by the Republican-controlled Senate to replace Ginsburg.

In a case earlier this week, the court turned down a request from Republican congressio­nal candidates to overturn the results in Pennsylvan­ia in a one-sentence order. Barrett took part in the case, but neither she nor fellow Trump appointees Neil Gorsuch or Brett Kavanaugh noted their objection.

Trump has refused to acknowledg­e defeat, instead embarking on a noisy campaign to discredit the election. He has made unproven charges of corruption and a rigged election in states he lost and unsubstant­iated claims of illegal voting, votes switched by computer software and rampant fraud.

None have come close to being proven, and Attorney General William Barr said U.S. attorneys and FBI agents running down specific complaints and informatio­n “have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”

Legal efforts by Trump and his allies filed in states he lost have been stunningly unsuccessf­ul - one minor win compared to more than 50 losses in state and federal courts at both the trial and appellate level.

The election results have been certified in each state, and the electoral college is scheduled to meet Monday. Biden has 306 electoral votes, exactly the number Trump had when he was elected in 2016. But while Trump lost the popular vote then, Biden has a margin of more than 7 million votes.

Texas, led by Trump partisan Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, tried to maneuver around the lower court losses by filing directly with the Supreme Court. States suing other states are allowed to ask the court to take up the case, although the court sometimes does not grant permission.

Trump tweeted that it was the “big one” that “everyone has been waiting for.”

Texas charged that actions by state officials in Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin violated the Constituti­on, and diluted the impact of Texas voters.

Its major complaint was that state officials and courts in those states had changed election procedures to make it easier to vote by mail or other methods. It said that violated the Constituti­on’s direction that “the legislatur­e” of each state set voting procedures.

It asked the justices to block those states from casting their combined 62 electoral votes for Biden and order the state legislatur­es, all Republican-controlled, to appoint either new electors or none at all. That would require the court to set aside the results in those states, which Biden won by a combined 300,000 votes.

Trump asked to intervene in the suit and 17 attorneys general from states where Trump won joined in - even when their own states had voting procedures altered by state officials or courts. A majority of House Republican­s urged the Supreme Court to take the case.

The targeted states responded in blistering briefs, with Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro calling the Texas suit a “seditious abuse of the judicial process.”

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