The Sentinel-Record

High court rejects GOP bid to halt Biden’s Pennsylvan­ia win

- MARK SHERMAN AND MARC LEVY

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected Republican­s’ last-gasp bid to reverse Pennsylvan­ia’s certificat­ion of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the electoral battlegrou­nd.

The court without comment refused to call into question the certificat­ion process in Pennsylvan­ia. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf already has certified Biden’s victory over President Donald Trump and the state’s 20 electors are to meet on Dec. 14 to cast their votes for Biden.

In any case, Biden won 306 electoral votes, so even if Pennsylvan­ia’s results had been in doubt, he still would have more than the 270 electoral votes needed to become president.

The court’s decision not to intervene came in a lawsuit led by Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly of northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia and GOP congressio­nal candidate and Trump favorite Sean Parnell, who lost to Pittsburgh-area U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, a Democrat.

“Even Trump appointees & Republican­s saw this for what it was: a charade,” Lamb said on Twitter.

In court filings, lawyers for Pennsylvan­ia and Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, had called the lawsuit’s claims “fundamenta­lly frivolous” and its request “one of the most dramatic, disruptive invocation­s of judicial power in the history of the Republic.”

“No court has ever issued an order nullifying a governor’s certificat­ion of presidenti­al election results,” they wrote.

Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas had offered to argue the case, if the high court took it.

Having lost the request for the court to intervene immediatel­y, Greg Teufel, a lawyer for Kelly and Parnell, said he will file a separate request to ask the court to consider the case on its underlying merits on an expedited basis.

Still, hopes for immediate interventi­on “substantia­lly dimmed” with the court’s action Tuesday, Teufel said.

Republican­s had pleaded with the justices to intervene immediatel­y after the state Supreme Court turned away their case last week.

The Republican­s argued that Pennsylvan­ia’s expansive vote-by-mail law is unconstitu­tional because it required a constituti­onal amendment to authorize its provisions. Just one Republican state lawmaker voted against its passage last year in Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

Biden beat President Donald Trump by more than 80,000 votes in Pennsylvan­ia, a state Trump had won in 2016. Most mail-in ballots were submitted by Democrats.

The state’s high court said the plaintiffs waited too long to file the challenge and noted the Republican­s’ staggering demand that an entire election be overturned retroactiv­ely.

In the underlying lawsuit, Kelly, Parnell and the other Republican plaintiffs had sought to either throw out the 2.5 million mail-in ballots submitted under the law or to wipe out the election results and direct the state’s Republican- controlled Legislatur­e to pick Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al electors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States