Skip to main content

Trump 'wants to appoint a special counsel to probe election fraud and Hunter Biden' after Supreme Court deals him another thumping defeat in rejecting Texas AG's bid to overturn Biden's election victory in four states

President Donald Trump is seeking to have a special counsel appointed that would investigate his claims of election fraud and carry out a probe into the allegations made against his rival’s son, Hunter Biden, according to new reports.

The president has called on his advisors to look for a person who could take on the role, the Wall Street Journal says, as he grows increasingly frustrated with his legal team’s steady stream of losses in overturning the election results and at his attorney general Bill Barr’s failure to act on the Hunter claims.

Barr is the only person who could appoint a special counsel to independently investigate the two issues, as per official regulations, but the AG already announced earlier this month that the Justice Department had found no evidence of the widespread election fraud that Trump and his campaign claim.

Trump has allegedly grown more and more incensed with Barr and voiced his anger in a meeting Friday after it emerged that the AG allegedly knew of a federal investigation into Hunter before the election but failed to make it public, the Journal reports.

The president is also reported to have threatened to fire Barr but has so far been dissuaded by aides.

Trump’s determination to establish a special counsel for his fraud claims and the Hunter issue comes as the Supreme Court on Friday evening administered another devastating blow to his attempts to change the election result. 

President Donald Trump is allegedly seeking to have a special counsel appointed that would investigate his claims of election fraud and carry out a probe into the allegations made against his rival’s son, Hunter Biden, after his Supreme Court loss Friday

President Donald Trump is allegedly seeking to have a special counsel appointed that would investigate his claims of election fraud and carry out a probe into the allegations made against his rival’s son, Hunter Biden, after his Supreme Court loss Friday

Trump remains determined not to concede the election to president-elect Joe Biden, pictured center, and remains angered by his belief that allegations made against his rival's son, Hunter, pictured left, deserve greater investigation

Trump remains determined not to concede the election to president-elect Joe Biden, pictured center, and remains angered by his belief that allegations made against his rival's son, Hunter, pictured left, deserve greater investigation

The court voted 7-2 to dismiss a case filed on Monday by the attorney general of Texas who had asked the court to intervene and overturn the election in four states that went for Joe Biden, dealing a crippling legal blow to Trump's legal strategy.  

Justice Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito said they would have heard the case - but that they would have refused to overturn the election result effectively making the result 9-0. 

The stunning end to Trump's legal bid to overturn the election came just after 6.30pm in a one-page ruling from the court. 

'Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts its elections,' the ruling said – refusing to even take up a case that legal scholars had already ripped as a legal farce. 

Trump had called the case 'the big one,' and tweeted a series of messages designed to push the court to rule in his favor.

Attorney General Bill Barr, pictured above, is the only person who could appoint a special counsel to independently investigate the two issues, as per Justice Department rules

Attorney General Bill Barr, pictured above, is the only person who could appoint a special counsel to independently investigate the two issues, as per Justice Department rules

Now, with the high court dismissing the high-profile effort – the mother of all the 'Kraken' lawsuits – Trump is without an avenue to overturn the election he calls 'rigged'. 

Yet as he went on a spiral of rage-filled tweets over the Supreme Court decision on Friday night, in which he appeared determined to continue in huis refusal to conceded, Trump was allegedly still mounting another last-chance effort with his special counsel plan. 

The Journal reports that White House chief of staff Mark Meadows has told people of the president's interest and that he wishes to act quickly. 

Officials are said to have discussed the possibility that it could investigate Hunter, not just the election result, over fears that Joe Biden would shut down any investigations regarding his son once he is inaugurated, one source told the publication. 

One a special counsel is appointed, they work independently to any day-to-day supervision by agency officials and can only be removed by the AG for misconduct or a conflict of interest.

Yet it is unlikely that Barr will make such an appointment, even after Trump's Friday Supreme Court loss.  

After the Supreme Court loss on Friday night, a disappointed Texas AG Ken Paxton responded to the result on Twitter, saying: 'It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court decided not to take this case and determine the constitutionality of these four states' failure to follow federal and state election law.' 

The president sought to intervene in the case – and 126 Republican House members followed suit, while 17 states signed a friend of the court brief supporting the Texas suit.  

That didn't stop the four states being sued, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Georgia, from blasting the suit as 'legally indefensible and is an affront to principles of constitutional democracy.' 

And it also didn't prevent the majority of SCOTUS Justices in finding that Texas lacked 'standing' to even bring the case. 

It also had not demonstrated a 'judiciably cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts elections.' In other word, its legal argument failed to justify why it was justified in having a court consider it's objections to how another state chose to run its elections.

The Supreme Court declined to take the case Trump called 'the big one'

The Supreme Court declined to take the case Trump called 'the big one'

Stunning blow: Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, regarded as the two most outspokenly conservative justices said that they were obliged to take it - and would then have refused to overturn the electionStunning blow: Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, regarded as the two most outspokenly conservative justices said that they were obliged to take it - and would then have refused to overturn the election

Stunning blow: Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, regarded as the two most outspokenly conservative justices said that they were obliged to take it - and would then have refused to overturn the election

Rejected: Amy Coney Barrett, installed on the high court only in October helped decide the election as Donald Trump had predicted she would - but not in his favor, joining the unanimous rejection

Rejected: Amy Coney Barrett, installed on the high court only in October helped decide the election as Donald Trump had predicted she would - but not in his favor, joining the unanimous rejection

Two more picks who went against him: Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, both raised to the high court by Trump, dashed his hopes they would overturn Joe Biden's victory

Two more picks who went against him: Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, both raised to the high court by Trump, dashed his hopes they would overturn Joe Biden's victory

The dissent by Alito and Thomas was a particular blow. The two conservatives gave no quarter to the substance of Texas' argument. 

Their separate dissent spoke only to their position that they would have heard the case, or granted certiorari, due to its nature as an inter-state dispute. 

They said it 'falls within our original jurisdiction,' a reference to the Constitutions grant of authority to the Supreme Court to hear such cases. Both have previously said they believe that they have no choice but to hear cases brought by states.

Their statement that they 'would not grant other relief' constitutes a rebuke to the case itself, and it was not required that they telegraph what they would decide. 

But the Court's majority of seven did not believe such a dispute would automatically get a hearing. In the case at hand, which was bound to Trump's own claim to have suffered 'massive' electoral fraud – not a single justice, liberal or conservative, spoke to the substance of his claim.

That would include the Court's newest justice, Amy Coney Barrett, despite Trump having openly discussed the imperative to push through her confirmation in order to hear election disputes. 

Three of the justices in the majority: Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Barrett, were in the majority voting not to even hear the case. 

'Every American who cares about the rule of law should take comfort that the Supreme Court — including all three of President Trump's picks — closed the book on the nonsense,' said Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, one of the few Republicans to publicly condemn the effort. 

It also wiped away any hope Trump had of getting any Bush v. Gore-style intervention from the Court – in an analogy that showed up in pro-Trump legal briefs that overlooked how that Supreme Intervention involved an exceedingly close contest in a single state and a judicial question of whether to stop a count taking place. 

Hailing the decision was Pennsylvania's Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose legal filing eviscerated the claims made by the Texas Republican attorney general.

'Our nation's highest court saw through this seditious abuse of our electoral process. This swift denial should make anyone contemplating further attacks on our election think twice,' he said.

Said Michigan's attorney general Dana Nessel: 'Today's Supreme Court decision is an important reminder that we are a nation of laws, and though some may bend to the desire of a single individual, the courts will not.' 

Republican Sen. Ben Sasse commended the Supreme Court for refusing to take a Texas case that President Donald Trump wanted to use to overturn the results of the presidential election.

The Nebraska senator also mocked the president and his legal team's conspiracy theories used on Trump supporters to call into question the winner. 

'Since Election Night, a lot of people have been confusing voters by spinning Kenyan Birther-type 'Chavez rigged the election from the grave' conspiracy theories, but every American who cares about the rule of law should take comfort that the Supreme Court - including all three of President Trump's picks - closed the book on this nonsense,' Sasse said. 

Some of Trump's allies, however, were incensed. 

The head of the Republican Party of Texas, Allen West, sent out a statement where he floated the idea of secession.

'Perhaps law-abiding states should bond together and form a Union of states that will abide by the constitution,' he said. 

The Supreme Court on Friday denied a Hail Mary effort by the attorney general of Texas who had asked the court to intervene and overturn the election in four states that went for Joe Biden, dealing a crippling legal pro to Donald Trump'e legal strategy.  

Trump's obsession with the case was such that he even reportedly asked Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) if he would argue the case if the Court agreed to hear it.  

With the Supreme Court's refusal to take the case, the next key moment comes Monday, when the electoral college meets in state capitals around the country, effectively ensuring Biden's inauguration.

Biden leads in the electoral college by 306 to 232 electoral votes, unless a 'faithless' elector tries to vote contrary to the popular vote in a state. 

A 'safe harbor' period for challenges to the count in each state has already passed.

But that doesn't mean political backing for Trump's continued efforts to rage against the election will end. Throughout weeks' worth of challenges since Election Day, the vast majority of elected Republicans have refused to declare Joe Biden the winner while Trump pursued his options.  

126 REPUBLICAN HOUSE MEMBERS GOT BEHIND IT - AND ARE NOW LEFT EMBARRASSED BY THEIR FAILURE 

The court's move came after wave of Republicans sought to align with Trump even in what looked to be his last days in office.

House minority leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California joined the effort Friday.

He is now one of 126 Republican lawmakers who have signed onto a legal brief seeking to join the seat – out of a caucus of 196 members, meaning well over half of elected Republicans have lent their names to the effort. 

In addition, 17 states have sought to file a 'friend of the court' brief in support of the Texas suit to have the court disallow the result and have the Republican-run legislatures in four states choose Trump Donald Trump electors rather than those that voters chose for Joe Biden. 

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has signed onto a brief seeking to support a lawsuit by the Texas attorney general seeking to overturn the election

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has signed onto a brief seeking to support a lawsuit by the Texas attorney general seeking to overturn the election

The names provide a real-time guide within the elected GOP for who supports 'Kraken' style lawsuits to overturn the election despite the popular vote, versus a smaller bloc clinging to traditional norms.

In the Senate, Republican whip John Thune of South Dakota was dismissive of the suit. 'I just don't know why a state like Texas which never wants anybody telling them what to do, now wants to tell a bunch of other states how to run their elections. I doubt the Supreme Court will take it up,' he told The Hill newspaper.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a Trump rival in 2016, called the Texas lawsuit 'crazy.'

'This is crazy. it will be killed on arrival. Why are smart people advancing this notion? Let it go. The election is over, he tweeted Thursday night.

  

TEXAS AG HAD EVEN CLAIMED IT WAS UP TO THE SWING STATES TO SHOW THERE WASN'T FRAUD - HE JUST HAD TO CLAIM THERE WAS MISCONDUCT 

The state AG had claimed in a new filing Friday that it is 'impossible' to know who won the election – and faulted the four states for failing to 'show' that Biden won.

AG Ken Paxton, who has been photographed with the Trump in the presidential limousine and who is under indictment but maintains his innocence, responded to the charge that his lawsuit seeks to 'overthrow the votes of the American people.'

Although the suit sought to overturn the vote in four states that went for Joe Biden, Paxton rejected the claim that it would do such a thing. 

'Texas does not ask this Court to reelect President Trump, and Texas does not seek to disenfranchise the majority of Defendant States' voters,' according to the response. 'To both points, Texas asks this Court to recognize the obvious fact that Defendant States' maladministration of the 2020 election makes it impossible to know which candidate garnered the majority of lawful votes,' according to the filing.

'Texas IS likely to prevail' according to the legal brief filed with the Supreme Court by the office of Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, seen here with Trump in June.

'Texas IS likely to prevail' according to the legal brief filed with the Supreme Court by the office of Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, seen here with Trump in June. 

Supporters of President Donald Trump gather outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on December 11, 2020 in Washington, DC

Supporters of President Donald Trump gather outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on December 11, 2020 in Washington, DC

The suit seeks to overturn the vote in Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania – which would be sufficient to award Trump the White House. The suit claims the states violated the constitution through major expansions of mail-in voting amid the pandemic. 

'Texas IS likely to prevail' according to the brief. 

After Georgia's Republican lieutenant governor on Thursday night responded to the suit saying there had 'not seen a single ounce of systemic or organized fraud,' Paxton's filing maintains the burden falls on the states to prove that their elections were legitimate.   

'The balance of equities tips to the Plaintiff State,' according to the filing. 'Defendant States first assume that Mr. Biden won their States legitimately, then use that assumption to criticize Texas's arguments for disenfranchising voters. If the flawed 2020 results stand, that result would disenfranchise voters,' according to the filing.

The filing says the four states 'assume' that Biden won legitimate. Each operates a legal apparatus to assess the vote, and two of them conducted recounts

The filing says the four states 'assume' that Biden won legitimate. Each operates a legal apparatus to assess the vote, and two of them conducted recounts

'At best for Defendant States, the balance of equities could be neutral. But because Defendant States cannot—or at least do not— seriously defend the merits or show that Mr. Biden actually prevailed, the equities tip in favor of Texas and of the lawful process for resolving contested elections 'do precious little to defend the merits of their actions,' according to the filing.

All four states have already certified their results for Joe Biden. Georgia already conducted multiple statewide recounts, and Wisconsin conducted a recount in two heavily Democratic counties at the request and cost of the Trump campaign. 

 

TRUMP TURNED UP HEAT ON TWITTER 

Trump repeatedly used his Twitter megaphone seeking to drive up political pressure and even make arguments that might influence the court.

'If the Supreme Court shows great Wisdom and Courage, the American People will win perhaps the most important case in history, and our Electoral Process will be respected again!' he wrote late Friday afternoon.

He brought up campaign speculation that Biden would seek to pack that court – although Biden was being pushed by some on the party's left flank to do so assuming he won a substantial Senate majority, which didn't happen.

'If the two Senators from Georgia should lose, which would be a horrible thing for our Country, I am the only thing that stands between 'Packing the Court' (last number heard, 25), and preserving it. I will not, under any circumstances, Pack the Court!' he said, in tweet that appeared designed to appeal to the individual justices, who hold tremendous power as lifetime appointees to a group of nine under the current system.

'SEDITIOUS ABUSE' AND 'FANTASY': HOW THE FOUR SWING STATES SLAMMED THE TEXAS AG  

The thumping defeat for Texas came  after the four states responded to the initial suit, which President Trump wants to join.  

Their filing shredded the effort to turn the vote as a 'surreal alternate reality' and 'seditious' abuse of the courts.

They attacked the lawsuit as an attempt to 'overthrow' the results of the election. 

It was a last-ditch argument Trump immediately latched onto in his effort to have courts and state legislatures 'overturn' the election. 

But the Texas suits' arguments were 'moot, meritless, and dangerous,' argued the four states who would have their votes discounted.

'Let us be clear. Texas invites this Court to overthrow the votes of the American people and choose the next President of the United States. That Faustian invitation must be firmly rejected,' they asked the court.

The Pennsylvania AG's office described the Texas suit as a crass political maneuver to extend Trump's term. 

'Texas's effort to get this Court to pick the next President has no basis in law or fact. The Court should not abide this seditious abuse of the judicial process, and should send a clear and unmistakable signal that such abuse must never be replicated,' they urged.

The lawyers for the four states, headed by Pennsylvania Josh Shapiro's office, took aim at a major federalism flaw in the case – allowing one state to seek to 'dictate' the election laws of another, even as the Constitution grants states the authority to run their own elections.

'Texas has not suffered harm simply because it dislikes the result of the election, and nothing in the text, history, or structure of the Constitution supports Texas's view that it can dictate the manner in which four other states run their elections. Nor is that view grounded in any precedent from this Court. Texas does not seek to have the Court interpret the Constitution, so much as disregard it.'

The Pennsylvania AG even took time to dispatch a 'statistical analysis' provided by the Texas suit that the chance of Biden winning despite Trump's 'lead' at 3 am on election night was 'less than one in a quadrillion.'

'Texas also relies on a statistical analysis prepared by Charles J. Cicchetti, Ph.D., in support of the assertion that the results in the four defendant states were so improbable as to be evidence of misconduct. Bill of Complaint ¶¶ 9–12. Texas's allegations and Dr. Cicchetti's analysis are nonsense,' according to the filing.

''It bases this astounding assertion on Dr. Cicchetti's assessment, for each of the states, of the extremely low probability that the votes counted before 3 a.m. and those counted afterwards were 'randomly drawn from the same population.' 

However the way the votes came in were not random.  

 'But the votes counted later were indisputably not 'randomly drawn' from the same population of votes, as those counted earlier were predominantly in-person votes while those counted later were predominantly mail-in votes,' they noted.

The claims by Texas 'are neither serious nor dignified,' according to the filing. The dispute 'involves Pennsylvania's interpretation of its own laws, and Texas's disagreement with that interpretation.'

Texas 'repeats the same false allegations of election fraud that have already been repeatedly rejected by other courts,' according to the filing, following dozens of defeats by Trump and his allies in election lawsuits since Nov. 3.

'And its request for relief—to disenfranchise tens of millions of voters who reasonably relied upon the law—is uniquely unserious.'

Georgia's lieutenant governor, Geoff Duncan, blasted the suit.  'This is not American, this is not democracy. This is not our finest moment. My hope is we quickly move past this,' he told the PBS News Hour.

'We have not seen a single ounce of systemic or organized fraud,' he said. 'I'm proud of that even though the person I supported didn't win.

ADULTERY AND AN FBI PROBE: MEET THE AG BEHIND HAIL MARY BID TO VOID ELECTION 

The FBI is investigating allegations that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton broke the law in using his office to benefit a wealthy donor.

Federal agents are looking into claims by former members of Paxton's staff that the Republican committed bribery, abuse of office and other crimes to help Austin real estate developer Nate Paul.

The investigation was reported in mid-November by the Associated Press.

Paxton has denied wrongdoing and refused calls for his resignation since his top deputies reported him to federal authorities at the end of September.

Trump ally: Ken Paxton with Eric Trump and his wife Angela - who he admits cheating on

Trump ally: Ken Paxton with Eric Trump and his wife Angela - who he admits cheating on

It's unclear how far the FBI is into investigating the allegations against Paxton. An agency spokeswoman in San Antonio declined to comment.

Paxton is accused of using his position as Texas' top law enforcement official to benefit Paul in several ways.

Central to their claims is the fact that Paxton hired an outside lawyer to investigate the developer's allegations that the FBI improperly searched his home and offices last year.

Each of Paxton's accusers has resigned, been put on leave or been fired since reporting him. Last week, four of them filed a state whistleblower lawsuit against the attorney general, claiming he ousted them as retribution.

The full nature of Paxton and Paul's connection remains unclear. In 2018, Paul donated $25,000 to the attorney general's reelection campaign. The developer also said in a recent deposition that Paxton recommended a woman for her job with his company.

Two people previously told The Associated Press that Paxton acknowledged in 2018 having an extramarital affair with the woman, who was then a state Senate aide. The people spoke on condition of anonymity due to fears about retaliation.

Paxton has spent most of his tenure in office maintaining his innocence in the face of an indictment on unrelated securities fraud charges. The case has been stalled for years over legal challenges.

THE FBI SUBPOENAED THE TEXAS AG WHILE HE FILED HIS CASE (AND CRITICS SAID HE WAS HUNTING FOR A PARDON) 

Adding to the intrigue and farce of the situation, it was revealed just hours after the latest filing that Texas Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton, who filed the suit, had his office served with a federal subpoena on Wednesday.

FBI agents delivered 'at least one' subpoena to the AG's office, the Austin-American Statesman reported Thursday, in connection to an ongoing investigation. 

The subpoena follows multiple aides in his office quitting and alleging abuse of his office and bribery. Paxton's prominent role in the case, combined with his own legal troubles, has led to speculation he is seeking a presidential pardon – following Trump intends to dole out a slew of pardons to allies in his final weeks in office.

Paxton was among the Republican attorneys general who met with Trump at the White House Thursday amid his suit seeking to overturn the election.  

Nebraska GOP Sen. Ben Sasse was among a few elected Republicans dissing the case, even as 17 state attorneys general sought to sign on. 

A total of 22 states plus the District of Columbia signed an amicus brief against it. 

'I'm no lawyer, but I suspect the Supreme Court swats this away. 

From the brief, it looks like a fella begging for a pardon filed a PR stunt rather than a lawsuit – as all of its assertions have already been rejected by federal courts and Texas' own solicitor general isn't signing on,' he wrote.

His 'begging for a pardon' comment likely referenced Texas AG Ken Paxton, who was indicted in 2015 for alleged securities fraud and been accused by former aides of abuse of office and bribery. He is currently under FBI investigation.  

REPUBLICAN AGs GOT BEHIND TRUMP AND GOT A TRIP TO THE WHITE HOUSE TOO 

Trump kept up his bid to try to get the Supreme Court to overturn the election Thursday, tweeting about a 'coup' and a 'corrupt election' hours after another federal judge dismissed an election challenge by a Trump ally.

Trump met Thursday with state attorneys general have have followed his lead in seeking to intervene in a Texas lawsuit asking the high court to disregard millions of ballots in four states that Joe Biden Won.

And he continued to tout a conspiracy theory involving voting machines that Trump's lawyers say were designed to rig the election, despite courts and state officials not buying it. 

'Great. Most corrupt Election in history, by far. We won!!!' Trump tweeted, as he blasted out post about Republican House members seeking a special counsel to probe the election, which Joe Biden won by more than 7 million votes. 

'Voter Fraud!' he wrote in another tweet, where he retweeted a Newsmax host who posted video purporting to show 'mysterious ballots' being counted in Georgia.  

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro filed a blistering response to the Texas AG's lawsuit seeking to overturn the election

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro filed a blistering response to the Texas AG's lawsuit seeking to overturn the election

The filing calls out a 'cacophony of bogus claims' and calls it 'legally indefensible'

The filing calls out a 'cacophony of bogus claims' and calls it 'legally indefensible'

Trump retweeted video purporting to show voter fraud that the Georgia Secretary of State said showed nothing improper

Trump retweeted video purporting to show voter fraud that the Georgia Secretary of State said showed nothing improper

THE 126 HOUSE REPUBLICANS WHO WANT SCOTUS TO OVERTURN THE ELECTION RESULT

 Ralph Abraham Louisiana 

Robert Aderholt Alabama 

Rick W. Allen Georgia 

Jodey Arrington Texas

James R. Baird Indiana

Jim Banks Indiana

Jack Bergman Michigan 

Andy Biggs Arizona

Gus Bilirakis Florida

Dan Bishop North Carolina  

Mike Bost Illinois

Kevin Brady Texas

Mo Brooks Alabama 

Ken Buck Colorado 

Ted Budd North Carolina 

Tim Burchett Tennessee 

Michael C. Burgess Texas

Bradley Byrne Alabama 

Ken Calvert California 

Earl L. 'Buddy' Carter Georgia 

Ben Cline Virginia 

Michael Cloud Texas 

Doug Collins Georgia 

Mike Conaway Texas 

Rick Crawford Arkansas 

Dan Crenshaw Texas 

Scott DesJarlais Tennessee  

Mario Diaz-Balart Florida

Jeff Duncan South Carolina

Neal P. Dunn Florida

Tom Emmer Minnesota 

Ron Estes Kansas 

A. Drew Ferguson Georgia 

Chuck Fleischmann Tennessee 

Bill Flores Texas  

Jeff Fortenberry Nebraska  

Virginia Foxx North Carolina 

Russ Fulcher Idaho

Matt Gaetz Florida  

 Greg Gianforte Montana 

Bob Gibbs Ohio

Louie Gohmert Texas  

Lance Gooden Texas

Sam Graves Missouri 

Mark Green Tennessee

Morgan Griffith Virginia 

Michael Guest Mississippi 

Jim Hagedorn Minnesota 

Andy Harris Maryland 

Vicky Hartzler Missouri 

Kevin Hern Oklahoma 

Clay Higgins Louisiana 

Jody Hice Georgia 

Trey Hollingsworth Indiana 

Richard Hudson North Carolina 

Bill Huizenga Michigan

Bill Johnson Ohio   

Mike Johnson Louisiana 

Jim Jordan Ohio 

John Joyce Pennsylvania

Fred Keller Pennsylvania

Mike Kelly Pennsylvania 

Trent Kelly Mississippi 

Steve King Iowa 

David Kustoff Tennessee 

Darin LaHood Illinois 

Doug LaMalfa California 

Doug Lamborn Colorado 

Robert Latta Ohio

Debbie Lesko Arizona

Billy Long Missouri

Barry Loudermilk Georgia 

Blaine Leutkemeyer Missouri 

Kenny Marchant Texas 

Roger Marshall Kansas 

Kevin McCarthy California Minority leader 

Tom McClintock California 

Cathy McMorris Rogers Washington

 Dan Meuser Pennsylvania  

Carol D. Miller West Virginia 

John Moolenaar Michigan 

 Alex Mooney West Virginia 

Markwayne Mullin Oklahoma     

Gregory Murphy North Carolina 

Dan Newhouse Washington

Ralph Norman South Carolina

Steven Palazzo Mississippi 

Gary Palmer Alabama 

Greg Pence Indiana 

Scott Perry Pennsylvania 

Bill Posey Florida 

Guy Reschenthaler Pennsylvania

Tom Rice South Carolina 

Mike Rodgers Alabama 

John Rose Tennessee

 David Rouzer North Carolina

John Rutherford Florida

Steve Scalise Louisiana Minority whip 

Austin Scott Georgia

Mike Simpson Idaho 

Adrian Smith Nebraska 

Jason Smith Missouri

Ross Spano Florida 

Pete Stauber Michigan  

Elise Stefanik New York 

Gregory Steube Florida 

Glenn 'GT' Thompson Pennsylvania 

Tom Tiffany Wisconsin 

William Timmons South Carolina 

Jeff Van Drew New Jersey 

Ann Wagner Missouri 

Tim Walberg Michigan 

Mark Walker North Carolina

Jackie Walorski Indiana 

Michael Waltz Florida 

Randy Weber Texas

Daniel Webster Florida 

Brad Wenstrup Ohio 

Bruce Westerman Arkansas

Roger Williams Texas

Joe Wilson South Carolina 

Rob Wittman Virginia 

Ron Wright Texas 

Ted S. Yoho Florida

Lee Zeldin New York 

 

Advertisement

THE 126 HOUSE REPUBLICANS WHO WANT SCOTUS TO OVERTURN THE ELECTION RESULT

 Ralph Abraham Louisiana 

Robert Aderholt Alabama 

Rick W. Allen Georgia 

Jodey Arrington Texas

James R. Baird Indiana

Jim Banks Indiana

Jack Bergman Michigan 

Andy Biggs Arizona

Gus Bilirakis Florida

Dan Bishop North Carolina  

Mike Bost Illinois

Kevin Brady Texas

Mo Brooks Alabama 

Ken Buck Colorado 

Ted Budd North Carolina 

Tim Burchett Tennessee 

Michael C. Burgess Texas

Bradley Byrne Alabama 

Ken Calvert California 

Earl L. 'Buddy' Carter Georgia 

Ben Cline Virginia 

Michael Cloud Texas 

Doug Collins Georgia 

Mike Conaway Texas 

Rick Crawford Arkansas 

Dan Crenshaw Texas 

Scott DesJarlais Tennessee  

Mario Diaz-Balart Florida

Jeff Duncan South Carolina

Neal P. Dunn Florida

Tom Emmer Minnesota 

Ron Estes Kansas 

A. Drew Ferguson Georgia 

Chuck Fleischmann Tennessee 

Bill Flores Texas  

Jeff Fortenberry Nebraska  

Virginia Foxx North Carolina 

Russ Fulcher Idaho

Matt Gaetz Florida  

 Greg Gianforte Montana 

Bob Gibbs Ohio

Louie Gohmert Texas  

Lance Gooden Texas

Sam Graves Missouri 

Mark Green Tennessee

Morgan Griffith Virginia 

Michael Guest Mississippi 

Jim Hagedorn Minnesota 

Andy Harris Maryland 

Vicky Hartzler Missouri 

Kevin Hern Oklahoma 

Clay Higgins Louisiana 

Jody Hice Georgia 

Trey Hollingsworth Indiana 

Richard Hudson North Carolina 

Bill Huizenga Michigan

Bill Johnson Ohio   

Mike Johnson Louisiana 

Jim Jordan Ohio 

John Joyce Pennsylvania

Fred Keller Pennsylvania

Mike Kelly Pennsylvania 

Trent Kelly Mississippi 

Steve King Iowa 

David Kustoff Tennessee 

Darin LaHood Illinois 

Doug LaMalfa California 

Doug Lamborn Colorado 

Robert Latta Ohio

Debbie Lesko Arizona

Billy Long Missouri

Barry Loudermilk Georgia 

Blaine Leutkemeyer Missouri 

Kenny Marchant Texas 

Roger Marshall Kansas 

Kevin McCarthy California Minority leader 

Tom McClintock California 

Cathy McMorris Rogers Washington

 Dan Meuser Pennsylvania  

Carol D. Miller West Virginia 

John Moolenaar Michigan 

 Alex Mooney West Virginia 

Markwayne Mullin Oklahoma     

Gregory Murphy North Carolina 

Dan Newhouse Washington

Ralph Norman South Carolina

Steven Palazzo Mississippi 

Gary Palmer Alabama 

Greg Pence Indiana 

Scott Perry Pennsylvania 

Bill Posey Florida 

Guy Reschenthaler Pennsylvania

Tom Rice South Carolina 

Mike Rodgers Alabama 

John Rose Tennessee

 David Rouzer North Carolina

John Rutherford Florida

Steve Scalise Louisiana Minority whip 

Austin Scott Georgia

Mike Simpson Idaho 

Adrian Smith Nebraska 

Jason Smith Missouri

Ross Spano Florida 

Pete Stauber Michigan  

Elise Stefanik New York 

Gregory Steube Florida 

Glenn 'GT' Thompson Pennsylvania 

Tom Tiffany Wisconsin 

William Timmons South Carolina 

Jeff Van Drew New Jersey 

Ann Wagner Missouri 

Tim Walberg Michigan 

Mark Walker North Carolina

Jackie Walorski Indiana 

Michael Waltz Florida 

Randy Weber Texas

Daniel Webster Florida 

Brad Wenstrup Ohio 

Bruce Westerman Arkansas

Roger Williams Texas

Joe Wilson South Carolina 

Rob Wittman Virginia 

Ron Wright Texas 

Ted S. Yoho Florida

Lee Zeldin New York 

 

IS IT REALLY ALL OVER? ELECTORAL COLLEGE WILL MEET ON MONDAY - AND TRUMP IS LIKELY TO TRY ANOTHER ROUND OF FIREWORKS IN JANUARY

With the end of the case Trump called the 'big one,' his legal options appear to have fizzled. It is possible Trump allies who lost in lower courts could seek to appeal more cases to the Supreme Court. 

But those appeals wouldn't likely reach the court until after Monday, when the Electoral College meets.

And the Texas appeal already included even far-fetched appeals from lower court cases, such as claims that voting machines 'flipped' votes from Trump to Biden. 

The new Congress will convene on Jan. 3. 

Congress meets in a joint session on Jan. 6, the day after the Georgia run-off elections. 

It presents an opportunity for political fireworks, but it there are procedures in place for both chambers voting on any challenges to the electors that emerge.

According to the Electoral Count Act, if a state only sends one set of electoral votes, they will be counted unless both chambers 'determine that they were not ''regularly given'' by ''lawfully certified'' electors,' according to a Lawfare blog on the subject.

The Texas suit seeks to have the four states delay their participation, despite the Constitution's call for a single meeting. 

'There are 20 million reasons' the case will fail, Republican election lawyer Ben Ginsburg told CNN this week, referencing the number of people who would be disenfranchised if the Court decided as Texas proposes. 'Now this is just a sour grapes case,' he said.

NO DAY IN THE SUPREME COURT FOR MELLISSA THE STRIPPER WHO WAS TRUMP'S STAR WITNESS  (OR FOR TED CRUZ OR THE KAMALA BIRTHER WHO WAS TRUMP'S LAWYER) 

The Supreme Court Texas case, filed this week, featured an affidavit by Mellissa Carone, whose wild and antagonistic testimony went viral and got treated to a sketch on Saturday Night Live. 

It references a case filed in Michigan supported by the affidavit, and it includes her sworn statement in the appendix for the case. 

Carone was recently on probation after initially being charged with a computer crime.         

Trump on Wednesday night told a White House Hanukkah party that he is going to 'win this election' if Supreme Court judges have 'courage and wisdom' to overturn results.    

This came after Trump's new lawyer produced a filing claiming there was something 'deeply amiss' in the election results.

The lawyer, John Eastman, had also penned an op-ed this summer doubting whether Vice President-elect Kamala  Harris was eligible for office despite her being born in California. 

The legal brief with Trump's name on it, included a motion for Trump, identified as the president, 'to intervene in his personal capacity as candidate for re-election'. 

The brief included many of the same arguments Trump has put forward on his Twitter account – including Wednesday, when Trump tweeted no candidate has ever lost the White House while carrying Florida and Ohio.

'The fact that nearly half of the country believes the election was stolen should come as no surprise,' according to the filing. 

'President Trump prevailed on nearly every historical indicia of success in presidential elections. 

'For example, he won both Florida and Ohio; no candidate in history—Republican or Democrat—has ever lost the election after winning both States.'

Attorney John Eastman, pictured above, who filed the motion for Trump to intervene in the Texas lawsuit, penned an op-ed this summer doubting whether Vice President-elect Kamal Harris was eligible for office despite her being born in California

Attorney John Eastman, pictured above, who filed the motion for Trump to intervene in the Texas lawsuit, penned an op-ed this summer doubting whether Vice President-elect Kamal Harris was eligible for office despite her being born in California

It also relied on statistical claims about the vote, in a race Trump has claimed was 'rigged' despite Joe Biden getting 7 million more votes than he did.   

'This, despite the fact that the nearly 75 million votes he received—a record for any incumbent President—was nearly 12 million more than he received in the 2016 election, also a record (in contrast to the 2012 election, in which the incumbent received 3 million fewer votes than he had four years earlier but nevertheless prevailed).'

'These things just don't normally happen, and a large percentage of the American people know that something is deeply amiss,' according to the filing, which comes after passage of the 'safe harbor' deadline and after enough states certified their vote for Joe Biden to win the Electoral College. 

Trump had asked Texas Sen. Ted Cruz to argue the case if the Supreme Court decides to listen to its merit. 

Cruz argued numerous cases before the Supreme Court before he was elected to the Senate and been a loyal Trump defender, although he also ran for president in 2016.

By way of remedy, Trump asked that the vote be thrown out and for the high court to 'direct' that state legislatures 'have the authority to appoint a new set of Electors in a manner that does not violate the Electors Clause, or to appoint no Electors at all' – which would have the result of nullifying millions of votes in the four states.

A DARING LAWSUIT - OR DOOMED TO HIT THE TRASH? NOW WE KNOW...

Texas AG Ken Paxton lawsuit made a legal Hail Mary by going straight to the Supreme Court - meaning he could either win big, or he could simply be ignored. In the end it was even worse: he got humiliated.

The Supreme Court is the correct place for disputes between states to be played out, but usually such disputes are long-running, such as over water rights. In 2014, Oklahoma and Nebraska asked the Supreme Court to stop Colorado's marijuana legalization - but it declined to hear the case.

That could be well be the justices' first response to Paxton. 

To convince them to take the case, he had to convince them that the people of Texas - whom he represents - suffered harm from the election's outcome, and that the four states either breached the Article 1 clause establishing how elections are run, or the Equal Protection clause, by making the votes of the people of Texas somehow less important than those of the swing states. 

The states themselves pointed out that election law is dealt with in individual states, and that cases there have universally lost. If the case had gone to trial, they would have pointed to the results in federal circuit courts and - in Pennsylvania - federal appeals courts which have dismissed claims too. 

The usual approach the justices take to disputes between states is to set up their own special court, under a 'special master' to investigate both sides' cases, take evidence, and approach the case like its own trial.

That is because, unusually, the Supreme Court is starting from scratch rather than dealing with a case which has already made its way through the courts system and is very well defined. 

Paxton would have had to present voluminous evidence to back up his demand, that millions of ballots be voided and the results of four swing states' elections be overturned - rather than the two brief sets of papers he filed.

The core of Paxton's case was that the four states changed mail-in ballot rules before the election, then used those to fraudulently switch the result to Biden from Trump.   

The Supreme Court would have had to rule both that the four states acted unconstitutionally, and then that the way to deal with those actions is by voiding their elections. Such an extreme act runs in the face of the Supreme Court's ruling earlier this year on 'faithless electors,' which allowed states to punish or remove those who planned to vote against the states' winning candidate.

During the case, Justice Brett Kavanaugh spoke about 'the chaos principle of judging' saying if it's a 'a close call...we shouldn't facilitate or create chaos.'

As for his evidence, Paxton faced an obvious challenge: his submission relied on a string of claims about both the constitutional actions of the states in allowing more widespread access to mail-in voting, and of fraud, which have already been slapped down by state and federal judges in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Georgia. 

Among the 'evidence' was that Republicans were not allowed to watch ballots being counted in Philadelphia, which was laughed out of court when a Trump lawyer admitted there was a 'non-zero' number of observers.

He also claimed that Georgia's mail-in ballots would have gone to Trump if they had been rejected at the same rate as they were in 2016 - which the state has already ruled out happening.

In Michigan, the evidence included the affidavit of Jessy Jacob, already dismissed by a Detroit judge, claiming that that election workers coached voters to either vote Biden or straight Democrat by standing beside them in the voting station, and that she was asked not to seek photo ID from voters. The judge dismissed her claims as 'generalized,' said she did nothing about it when she claimed it was happening, and only came forward when Trump lost.

In Wisconsin Paxton claimed voting drop boxes were unconstitutional. The state's attorney general invoked what is known as 'laches,' a defense that Paxton should have sued at the time the boxes were authorized, rather than waiting to see the outcome of the vote. It also included a claim from a USPS sub-contractor about ballots being backdated after polls closed - even though the state had already reported its result.

And in all four states Paxton quoted a statistical analysis: 'The probability of former Vice President Biden winning the popular vote in the four Defendant States—Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin— independently given President Trump's early lead in those States as of 3 a.m. on November 4, 2020, is less than one in a quadrillion, or 1 in 1,000,000,000,000,000.' But its basis is undeclared and comes from an energy economist, not an elections expert. 

Now it will never be fully tested in court - and both sides of the case don't need a statistician to tell them who won. 

Popular posts from this blog

Study Abroad USA, College of Charleston, Popular Courses, Alumni

Thinking for Study Abroad USA. School of Charleston, the wonderful grounds is situated in the actual middle of a verifiable city - Charleston. Get snatched up by the wonderful and customary engineering, beautiful pathways, or look at the advanced steel and glass building which houses the School of Business. The grounds additionally gives students simple admittance to a few major tech organizations like Amazon's CreateSpace, Google, TwitPic, and so on. The school offers students nearby as well as off-grounds convenience going from completely outfitted home lobbies to memorable homes. It is prepared to offer different types of assistance and facilities like clubs, associations, sporting exercises, support administrations, etc. To put it plainly, the school grounds is rising with energy and there will never be a dull second for students at the College of Charleston. Concentrate on Abroad USA is improving and remunerating for your future. The energetic grounds likewise houses various

Best MBA Online Colleges in the USA

“Opportunities never open, instead we create them for us”. Beginning with this amazing saying, let’s unbox today’s knowledge. Love Business and marketing? Want to make a high-paid career in business administration? Well, if yes, then mate, we have got you something amazing to do!   We all imagine an effortless future with a cozy house and a laptop. Well, well! You can make this happen. Today, with this guide, we will be exploring some of the top-notch online MBA universities and institutes in the USA. Let’s get started! Why learn Online MBA from the USA? Access to More Options This online era has given a second chance to children who want to reflect on their careers while managing their hectic schedules. In this, the internet has played a very crucial in rejuvenating schools, institutes, and colleges to give the best education to students across the globe. Graduating with Less Debt Regular classes from high reputed institutes often charge heavy tuition fees. However onl

Sickening moment maskless 'Karen' COUGHS in the face of grocery store customer, then claims she doesn't have to wear a mask because she 'isn't sick'

A woman was captured on camera following a customer through a supermarket as she coughs on her after claiming she does not need a mask because she is not sick.  Video of the incident, which has garnered hundreds of thousands of views on Twitter alone, allegedly took place in a Su per Saver in Lincoln, Nebraska according to Twitter user @davenewworld_2. In it, an unidentified woman was captured dramatically coughing as she smiles saying 'Excuse me! I'm coming through' in the direction of the customer recording her. Scroll down for video An unidentified woman was captured dramatically coughing as she smiles saying 'Excuse me! I'm coming through' in the direction of a woman recording her A woman was captured on camera following a customer as she coughs on her in a supermarket without a mask on claiming she does not need one because she is not sick @chaiteabugz #karen #covid #karens #karensgonewild #karensalert #masks we were just wearing a mask at the store. ¿ o