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‘The Big One’: Trump Intervenes In Texas Case At Supreme Court

The fight is beginning to ramp up now. Make extra large bowls of popcorn and sit back and watch the fireworks. Maybe we’ll luck out and see a few Democrat/Commies executed online.

Source: WND

The Texas case asking the U.S. Supreme Court to block the Electoral College votes of Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin is the “big one” his team has been waiting for, President Trump said Wednesday.

“We will be INTERVENING in the Texas (plus many other states) case. This is the big one. Our Country needs a victory!”

President Trump

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed the case late Monday night alleging that unconstitutional changes made to election rules before the vote invalidates the 62 Electoral College votes from the four battleground states.

Associate Justice Samuel Alito has given the states until 3 p.m. on Thursday to file their replies to the complaint.

The attorneys general of Arkansas, Louisiana and Missouri have issued statements saying they will back the lawsuit.

The two Republican candidates in the crucial Jan. 5 runoffs in Georgia that will decide the U.S. Senate majority issued a joint statement declaring support for Trump’s legal challenges and the Texas lawsuit.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a case filed by a Pennsylvania congressman challenging a 2019 law to expand mail-in voting. The high court left intact the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s dismissal of the lawsuit, which sought to block certification of the state’s vote.

‘My gut is they are going to take it’

John Eastman, a constitutional scholar at the Claremont Institute who formerly served as a Supreme Court clerk, said Tuesday night he believes the Supreme Court will take the Texas case on the merits.

He explained in an interview with Fox News’ Laura Ingraham that in cases between two states, the Supreme Court has “original and exclusive jurisdiction” to settle disputes.

Eastman said the case “turns on a very simple legal question: Did these states conduct an election in violation of their state law?”

He explained that Article 2 of the U.S. Constitution says the state legislatures have the sole authority to create the manner for choosing presidential electors.

The Pennsylvania secretary of state, for example, ignored state statutes and sent out absentee ballots without voter ID or signature checking.

Ingraham asked Eastman his “gut” sense of whether or not the Supreme Court will take the case.

He noted that twice in history the Supreme Court has ruled that not following election laws violates the U.S. Constitution, citing Bush v. Gore in 2000 and McPherson v. Blacker, regarding the 1892 election between Benjamin Harrison and Grover Cleveland.

‘This is the end all, be all case’

The Texas case is the kind of “outcome-determinative case” the Trump campaign has been looking for, said campaign attorney Jordan Sekulow.

He said the case seeks to allow the legislatures in the four states, which are controlled by Republicans, to “seat new electors because the elections violated the electors clause due process and equal protection.”

If the election went to the House of Representatives, where each state would have one vote, he noted, Republicans would choose the next president, because they control state delegations 27 to 22.

Statistically impossible Biden victory

One of the briefs filed in the Texas case is the testimony of University of Southern California economics professor Charles J. Cicchetti.

In his analysis of the vote in the four states, he concluded the probability of Joe Biden winning all four states after President Trump’s early morning lead is statistically impossible.

The actual probability, he said, is less than one in a quadrillion to the fourth power.

That’s one followed by 60 zeroes.

Cicchetti formerly served as deputy director of the Energy and Environmental Policy Center at Harvard University’s John Kennedy School of Government.

‘The Big One’: Trump Intervenes In Texas Case At Supreme Court

TD

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