President Trump (R-Texas) attorney Rudy Giuliani said Saturday (Dec. 12) that his team is planning to file a new retooled lawsuit in the states that will incorporate Texas v. 4 States.
“Last night, the president made his decision.” Giuliani told former White House strategist Bannon’s “War Room” program Saturday.
“We’re going to move instantly and seamlessly to plan B, which is that every state now files a lawsuit.” Giuliani said, “We’re ready to go; they’re another version of filing a lawsuit in the Supreme Court.”
Texas filed a lawsuit earlier this week in the Supreme Court against four swing states for unconstitutional elections: Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin and Michigan. The Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit late Friday.
The Trump team will file lawsuits in each of those four states, as well as in Arizona and Nevada, some of which have already been filed. Those lawsuits will incorporate elements of the allegations in the complaint filed by Texas.
“If the states don’t have standing (to file a suit in the Supreme Court), the president of the United States certainly does. And, of course, the electors of the states have standing. So they will be filing these cases in those courts starting today.” Giuliani said, “Let’s see what excuse they can use to avoid having a hearing on this.”
Giuliani said the courts have been using the so-called “standing” issue to avoid cases and that “no one [the judges] wants to face the reality that this election was stolen.”
“What they’re doing is outrageous. Americans have a right to hear these facts. …… has been hiding these facts from them (Americans),” he added.
Giuliani said, “There hasn’t been a court decision that includes a hearing; they haven’t heard a single witness; they haven’t seen a single videotape; they haven’t listened to a recording that has thousands of these them.
“They haven’t even gone to the videotape from Atlanta, Georgia, that was decisive. The video showed an ongoing voter theft, the theft of 30,000 votes, and that was enough to change the election.”
Dozens of election-related lawsuits filed by Trump and others have been dismissed locally as well as by the Supreme Court. Some cases have been appealed, and others are still being decided.
Surveillance video from the State Farm stadium in Joe shows that supervisors were told that the vote count ended around 10:30 p.m. the night of the election. Instead, the video shows a handful of workers resuming the count unsupervised for 2-3 hours after the supervisors and media left.
Georgia officials claimed there were no irregularities in the video and said the supervisors “left on their own”.
Biden’s team did not respond to requests for comment.
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