On Sat, Dec 12, 2020 at 06:17:23PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>    Citing a lack of standing, Justice Samuel Alito wrote in a brief order 
> that the state "has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the 
> manner in which another State conducts its elections," adding "All other 
> pending motions are dismissed as moot."
> 
>    Supreme Court Tosses Texas Bid To Overturn Election
>    
> https://www.zerohedge.com/political/supreme-court-tosses-texas-bid-overturn-election
> 
> 
> 
> Well, citizens of the swing states have standing, so they can file.
> 
> Trumpers, both legal eagles and folks in their personal capacity, in the 4 
> swing states (GA, PA, WI, MI?) need to file this case from their home turf, 
> as their interest is surely direct and personal - effected personally.
> 
> I guess this is new territory for some folks...


SCOTUS balked, likely due to compomise and/or cowardice.

Solid analysis on this and how this case, which IS rightly in the original 
jurisdiction of the SCOTUS and OUGHT to have been heard in the first instance 
by that court:

   TWJ Exclusive: New Legal Memo Brings Hope to Trump Supporters This Christmas
   
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/12/twj-exclusive-new-legal-memo-giving-trump-supporters-hope-christmas/
   https://www.westernjournal.com/

   By William J. Olson, The Western Journal
   Published December 24, 2020 at 6:17pm

   The Western Journal is presenting this memorandum, written by two prominent 
conservative legal scholars, essentially verbatim, with only enough editing to 
format it for the Op-Ed section of our website. This is the second memo by 
Messrs. Olson and McSweeney to be published exclusively by The Western Journal, 
and it, like the first, outlines a possible legal strategy for the Trump 
campaign to follow in the coming weeks. Prior to its publication here, it was 
sent to President Trump. — Ed. note


   Overcoming the Court’s Abdication in Texas v. Pennsylvania
   William J. Olson & Patrick M. McSweeney

   In refusing to hear Texas v. Pennsylvania, the U.S. Supreme Court abdicated 
its constitutional duty to resolve a real and substantial controversy among 
states that was properly brought as an original action in that Court. As a 
result, the Court has come under intense criticism for having evaded the most 
important inter-state constitutional case brought to it in many decades, if not 
ever.

   However, even in its Order dismissing the case, the Supreme Court identified 
how another challenge could be brought successfully — by a different plaintiff. 
This paper explains that legal strategy. But first we focus on the errors made 
by the Supreme Court — in the hopes that they will not be made again.


   Texas v. Pennsylvania
   ---------------------

   The Supreme Court declined to hear the challenge brought by the State of 
Texas against four states which had refused to abide by Article II, § 1, cl. 2 
— the Presidential Electors Clause, which establishes the conditions and 
requirements governing the election of the President of the United States. In 
adopting that provision, the Framers vested in each State legislature the 
exclusive authority to determine the manner of appointing Presidential 
electors. The Framers’ plan was shown to be exceedingly wise, because we have 
now learned that allowing other state and private actors to write the election 
rules led to massive election fraud in the four defendant states. Individuals 
can be bought, paid for and corrupted so much easier than state legislatures.

   In refusing to hear the case, the sole reason given was that Texas lacked 
“standing.” In doing so, all nine justices committed a wrong against: (i) Texas 
and the 17 states that supported its suit; (ii) the United States; (iii) the 
President; and (iv) the People.


   The Court’s Many Wrongs in Texas v. Pennsylvania.
   -------------------------------------------------

   As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist No. 78, courts have “neither 
FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment.” As such, in deciding cases courts have a 
duty to explain their decisions so the rest of us may know if they constitute 
arbitrary exercises of political power, or reasoned decisions of judicial power 
which the People can trust. In Texas v. Pennsylvania, all that the justices 
felt obligated to do was to state its — “lack of standing” — supported by a one 
sentence justification: “Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable 
interest in the manner in which another State conducts its election.” Resolving 
a case of this magnitude with one conclusory sentence is completely 
unacceptable.

   The Supreme Court docket consists primarily of only those cases the High 
Court chooses to hear. However, just like when it agrees to decide a case, and 
in disputes where the original jurisdiction of the Court is invoked, it has a 
duty to decide cases properly brought to them. Two centuries ago, Chief Justice 
John Marshall construed the obligation of contracts clause in a decision where 
he wrote: “however irksome the task may be, this is a duty from which we dare 
not shrink.” Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 17 U.S. 518 (1819). 
Courts have a duty to resolve important cases even if they would prefer to 
avoid them. In Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803), Marshall described “the 
duty of the Judicial Department to say what the law is” because “every right, 
when withheld, must have a remedy, and every injury its proper redress.” 
Abdication in a case of this sort is not a judicial option.

   The Supreme Court’s reliance on standing as its excuse has had one positive 
result — provoking many to study the origins of that doctrine who may be 
surprised to learn that the word “standing” nowhere appears in the 
Constitution. There is compelling evidence to demonstrate it was birthed by 
big-government Justices during the FDR Administration to shield New Deal 
legislation, and to insulate the Administrative State from challenges by the 
People. Those who favored the Texas decision argue that standing is a 
conservative doctrine as it limits the power of the courts — but the true 
constitutionalist uses only tests grounded in its text. The true threshold 
constitutional test is whether a genuine and serious “controversy” exists 
between the States that could be resolved by a court.

   The only reason given by the Supreme Court was: “Texas has not demonstrated 
a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts 
its election.” In truth, Texas did make such a showing. When Pennsylvania 
violated the exclusive authority bestowed on state legislators in the 
Constitution’s Electors Clause, it opened the door to corruption and foreign 
intrigue to corrupt the electoral votes of Pennsylvania, and as Alexander 
Hamilton explained in Federalist 68, that is exactly why the Framers created 
the Electoral College. During the 2020 election cycle, changes to the election 
process in Pennsylvania were made by judges, state office holders and election 
officials which would never have been made by its state legislature.

   If the process by which Presidential Electors are chosen is corrupted in a 
few key states, like Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin by rigging 
the system in favor of one candidate, it becomes wholly irrelevant who the 
People of Texas support. That political reality presents a real “judicially 
cognizable interest” no matter what the Supreme Court decided. What happens in 
Pennsylvania does not stay in Pennsylvania, as electors from all States acting 
together select the President of the United States.

   In the Federalist Papers, both James Madison and Alexander Hamilton 
recognized the need to combat “the spirit of faction” and the tendency of each 
State to yield to its immediate interest at the expense of national unity. They 
reasoned that the Constitution provided a solution to this centrifugal pressure 
while reserving a measure of sovereignty to each State. When differences arise 
between States that threaten to lead to disunion, the Republic can be held 
together, as Hamilton observed, either “by the agency of the Courts or by 
military force.” A constitutional remedy to enable the States to resolve their 
differences peacefully is the provision that permits any State to invoke the 
original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to address and settle their 
differences.

   In the vernacular, the Supreme Court blew it, threatening the bonds that 
hold the union together.


   Round Two:  The United States Must Enter the Fray
   -------------------------------------------------

   Fortunately, that might have been only the first round in the fight to 
preserve the nation. A strategy exists to re-submit the Texas challenge under 
the Electors Clause to the Supreme Court in a way that even that Court could 
not dare refuse to consider. Just because Texas did not persuade the Justices 
that what happens in Pennsylvania hurts Texas does not mean that the United 
States of America could not persuade the justices that when Pennsylvania 
violates the U.S. Constitution, it harms the nation. Article III, § 2, cl. 2 
confers original jurisdiction on the Supreme Court in any case suit brought by 
the United States against a state. Thus, the United States can and should file 
suit against Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin. Like the Texas 
suit, that new suit would seek an order invalidating the appointment of the 
electors appointed by those four defendant States that refused to abide by the 
terms of the Presidential Electors Clause. That would leave it to the state 
legislatures in those four states to “appoint” electors — which is what the 
Constitution requires.

   When those four States violated the Constitution by allowing electors who 
had not been appointed in the manner prescribed by the state legislature, the 
United States suffered an injury. Indeed, there could hardly have been a more 
significant injury to the nation than that which corrupted its Presidential 
election.

   The United States has a vital interest and a responsibility to preserve the 
constitutional framework of the Republic, which was formed by a voluntary 
compact among the States. As with any contractual relationship of participants 
in an ongoing enterprise, no party is entitled to ignore or alter the essential 
terms of the contract by its unilateral action.

   The President who has sworn to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution 
has the right and the duty to order the U.S. Department of Justice bring such 
an action in the Supreme Court — and should do so quickly.


   Reasons for Great Hope at Christmas
   -----------------------------------

   In rejecting the invocation by the State of Texas of the original 
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to resolve the dispute between Texas and four 
other States that refused to abide by the terms of the Presidential Electors 
Clause, for now, a majority of the Justices foreclosed the use of that 
constitutional safeguard by Texas to provide a peaceful means of resolving the 
controversy that has deeply divided States and the citizens of this Republic as 
at no time since the 1860s.

   That consequence is too dangerous to be allowed to stand.

   If the same case previously brought by Texas were now brought by the United 
States of America, there is every reason to believe that the Supreme Court 
would be compelled to understand it must hear it and decide it favorably.

   Although outcomes are never certain, it is believed and hoped that a 
majority of the Supreme Court could never take the position that the United 
States has no business enforcing the process established in the Constitution by 
which we select the one government official who represents all the People — The 
President of the United States.

   This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
   https://www.westernjournal.com/

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