The Catoosa County News

Supreme Court throws out lawsuit seeking to overturn election results

- By Dave Williams

Capitol Beat News Service The U.S. Supreme Court early Friday evening, Dec. 11, rejected a lawsuit filed by the state of Texas seeking to invalidate the presidenti­al election results in Georgia and three other states.

In an unsigned order, the justices ruled that Texas lacks the legal standing to challenge the outcome of the Nov. 3 voting in Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin, handing President Donald Trump a major defeat.

“Texas has not demonstrat­ed a judicially cognizable interest in the matter in which another state conducts its elections,” the court ruled.

Texas Attorney General

Ken Paxton, a Republican and Trump ally, filed the suit seeking to block the Electoral College from electing the next president on Monday, Dec. 14. It claimed irregulari­ties during the Nov. 3 election in all four states made it impossible to determine which candidate won.

President-elect Joe Biden has been certified the victor in the four states. The Democrat was determined to have carried Georgia by 11,779 votes following two recounts.

Seventeen GOP attorneys general declared their support for the lawsuit. They were joined by Georgia’s two Republican U.S. senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, and by six of Georgia’s GOP House members: U.S.

Reps Buddy Carter, Drew Ferguson, Austin Scott, Jody Hice, Rick Allen and Barry Loudermilk.

“This isn’t hard and it isn’t partisan. It’s American,” Perdue and Loeffler said in a joint statement on Tuesday, Dec. 8. “No one should ever have to question the integrity of our elections system and the credibilit­y of its outcomes.”

But Georgia’s Republican Attorney General, Chris Carr, dismissed the lawsuit as “constituti­onally, legally and factually wrong.”

Appearing on CNN Friday, Dec. 11, shortly before the ruling was announced, Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan said the lawsuit went against Republican philosophy.

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