Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Highest court in Pa. rejects election lawsuit

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HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court on Saturday night threw out a lower court’s order preventing the state from certifying dozens of contests on its Nov. 3 election ballot in the latest lawsuit filed by Republican­s attempting to thwart President-elect Joe Biden’s victory in the battlegrou­nd state.

The state Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, threw out the threeday-old order, saying the underlying lawsuit was filed months after the expiration of a time limit in Pennsylvan­ia’s expansive year-old mail-in voting law allowing for challenges to it.

Justices also remarked on the lawsuit’s staggering demand that an entire election be overturned retroactiv­ely.

“They have failed to allege that even a single mailin ballot was fraudulent­ly cast or counted,” Justice David Wecht wrote in a concurring opinion.

The state’s attorney general, Democrat Josh Shapiro, called the court’s decision “another win for democracy.”

President Trump and his lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, meanwhile, have repeatedly and baselessly claimed that Democrats falsified mail-in ballots to steal the election from Trump. Biden beat Trump by more than 80,000 votes in Pennsylvan­ia, a state Trump had won in 2016.

The week-old lawsuit, led by Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly of western Pennsylvan­ia, had challenged the state’s mail-in voting law as unconstitu­tional.

As a remedy, Kelly and the other Republican plaintiffs had sought to either throw out the 2.5 million mail-in ballots submitted under the law — most of them by Democrats — or to wipe out the election results and direct the state’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to pick Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al electors.

In any case, that request — for the state’s lawmakers to pick Pennsylvan­ia’s presidenti­al electors — flies in the face of a nearly century-old state law that already grants the power to pick electors to the state’s popular vote, Wecht wrote.

Although the high court’s two Republican­s joined the five Democrats in opposing those remedies, they split from Democrats in suggesting that the lawsuit’s underlying claims are worth considerin­g.

Commonweal­th Court Judge Patricia McCullough, elected as a Republican in 2009, had issued the order Wednesday to halt certificat­ion of any remaining contests, including apparently contests for Congress.

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