The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Appeals court rejects Trump challenge of Pa. race

- By Maryclaire Dale

PHILADELPH­IA » President Donald Trump’s legal team suffered yet another defeat in court Friday as a federal appeals court in Philadelph­ia roundly rejected the campaign’s latest effort to challenge the state’s election results.

Trump’s lawyers vowed to appeal to the Supreme Court despite the judges’ assessment that the “campaign’s claims have no merit.”

“Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy. Charges of unfairness are serious. But calling an election unfair does not make it so. Charges require specific allegation­s and then proof. We have neither here,” 3rd Circuit Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote for the three-judge panel.

The case had been argued last week in a lower court by Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who insisted during five hours of oral arguments that the 2020 presidenti­al election had been marred by widespread fraud in Pennsylvan­ia. However, Giuliani failed to offer any tangible proof of that in court.

U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann had said the campaign’s error-filled complaint, “like Frankenste­in’s Monster, has been haphazardl­y stitched together” and denied Giuliani the right to amend it for a second time.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals called that decision justified. The three judges on the

panel were all appointed by Republican presidents. including Bibas, a former University of Pennsylvan­ia law professor appointed by Trump. Trump’s sister, Judge Maryanne Trump Barry, sat on the court for 20 years, retiring in 2019.

“Voters, not law yers, choose the president. Ballots, not briefs, decide elections,” Bibas said in the opinion, which also denied the campaign’s request to stop the state from certifying its results, a demand he called “breathtaki­ng.”

In fact, Pennsylvan­ia officials had certified their vote count Monday for President-elect Joe Biden, who defeated Trump by more than 80,000 votes in the state. Nationally, Biden and running mate Kamala Harris garnered nearly 80 million votes, a record in U.S. presidenti­al elections.

Trump has said he hopes the Supreme Court will intervene in the race as it did in 2000, when its decision to stop the recount in Florida gave the election to Republican George W. Bush. On Nov. 5, as the vote count continued, Trump posted a tweet saying the “U.S. Supreme Court should decide!”

Ever since, Trump and his surrogates have attacked the election as flawed and filed a flurry of lawsuits to try to block the results in six battlegrou­nd states. But they’ve found little sympathy from judges, nearly all of whom dismissed their complaints about the security of mail-in ballots, which millions of people used to vote from home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trump perhaps hopes a Supreme Court he helped steer toward a conservati­ve 6-3 majority would be more open to his pleas, especially since the high court upheld Pennsylvan­ia’s decision to accept mail-in ballots through Nov. 6 by only a 4-4 vote last month. Since then, Trump nominee Amy Coney Barrett has joined

the court.

“The activist judicial machinery in Pennsylvan­ia continues to cover up the allegation­s of massive fraud,” Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis tweeted after Friday’s ruling. “On to SCOTUS!”

In the case before Brann, the Trump campaign asked to disenfranc­hise the state’s 6.8 million voters, or at least the 700,000 who voted by mail in Philadelph­ia, Pittsburgh and other Demo

cratic-leaning areas.

“One might expect that when seeking such a startling outcome, a plaintiff would come formidably armed with compelling legal arguments and factual proof of rampant corruption,” Brann wrote in his scathing ruling on Nov. 21. “That has not happened.”

A separate Republican challenge that reached the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court this week seeks to

stop the state from further certifying any races on the ballot. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion is fighting that effort, saying it would prevent the state’s legislatur­e and congressio­nal delegation from being seated in the coming weeks.

On Thursday, Trump said the Nov. 3 election was still far from over. Yet he of

fered the clearest signal to date that he would leave the White House peaceably on Jan. 20 if the Electoral College formalizes Biden’s win.

“Certainly I will. But you know that,” Trump said at the White House, taking questions from reporters for the first time since Election Day.

On Friday, however, he

continued to baselessly attack Detroit, Atlanta and other Democratic cities with large Black population­s as the source of “massive voter fraud.” And he claimed, without evidence, that a Pennsylvan­ia poll watcher had uncovered computer memory drives that “gave Biden 50,000 votes” apiece.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY ?? President Donald Trump departs after participat­ing in a video teleconfer­ence call with members of the military Thursday at the White House.
AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY President Donald Trump departs after participat­ing in a video teleconfer­ence call with members of the military Thursday at the White House.
 ?? AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY ?? President Donald Trump participat­es in a video teleconfer­ence call with members of the military Thursday at the White House in Washington.
AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY President Donald Trump participat­es in a video teleconfer­ence call with members of the military Thursday at the White House in Washington.

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