N_D_Fighting_Irish
THE INSTIGATOR
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Tennessee has joined Texas' lawsuit and 16 other conservative states that signed the amicus briefs that argues that 80,000 voters' ballots in Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin should be invalidated. Tennessee's Attorney General said:
"The Tennessee Attorney General's Office has consistently taken the position that only a State's legislature has the authority to make and change election laws."
That is exactly what Pennsylvania's legislature did (noted above) with the leaders of both houses of their legislature applauding the bipartisan bill when it was signed into law.
Further, Michigan voters passed a Resolution with almost 67% of voters in favor in November 2018 on voting changes, which became part of their Constitution. Only part of that change to their Constitution was absentee voting.
So these eighteen states will argue other state legislature's laws and also part of one state's Constitution overwhelmingly passed are illegal and invalid. If Michigan or Pennsylvania brought a lawsuit on Texas to invalidate their voters choices, Texas would throw a fit.
How are any of these eighteen states injured or aggrieved and have any standing in any court?
Certainly, Georgia and the other three states deserve redress for their costs in defending their state's results from this frivolous lawsuit. Georgia's Sec of State Jordan Fuchs responded “Texas alleges that there are 80,000 forged signatures on absentee ballots in Georgia, but they don’t bring forward a single person who this happened to. That’s because it didn’t happen.” and that the conspiracy theories in the lawsuit “are false and irresponsible.”
Hmmm. Those who pushed the change in Pennsylvania election laws probably knew that they would need to amend their state constitution, and yet they chose not to. In Georgia, the Secretary of State signed a consent agreement with the Democrats to weaken the validation process of absentee/mail in votes. Which, like Pennsylvania, ignored its own state laws that required the such change to be approved by the legislature. What is the point of statutes/constitutions if they can be ignored?