While the Electoral College begins voting on Monday, President Trump vowed he “will continue to press ahead” with a legal challenge to the election’s outcome.
In an appearance on Fox News Sunday morning, Trump said that even if the Supreme Court rejects Texas’s case against several swing states, he still has other legal challenges ahead. The interview was recorded on Saturday while Trump watched an Army and Navy game at West Point.
Trump told Fox and Friends that he was “very disappointed” by the Supreme Court’s decision to dismiss the Texas case.
Trump insisted widespread election fraud robbed him of a second term. “We have proven electoral fraud, but not a single judge has the courage, including the Supreme Court. I’m so disappointed in them.” “No judge, including the Supreme Court of the United States, has the courage to hear this case,” Trump said.
But Trump has said he will continue to challenge the election results. “No, it’s not over yet. We will move forward. We have a lot of cases at the local level. Trump says he has won Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia, and he has an ongoing case in Wisconsin.
Brian Kilmeade, a Fox News host, noted that the Electoral College will meet on Monday and then transmit the votes to Congress, which will officially confirm the results on January 6. When asked how the process would affect his chances of successfully challenging the outcome of the election, Trump admitted that his time is tight.
“We want to go as fast as we can, but you can only go so fast.” “They give us very little time,” Trump said. But we caught them, and as you know, they falsified, they threw away votes, they did a lot of things that people couldn’t even believe.
For example, Trump said “tens of thousands of votes” had been illegally submitted in the name of the deceased.
He said he feared the US had an “illegitimate president” because of alleged fraud.
“What’s going on in this country, we’re like a third world country.” Trump said.
Trump also blasted the Supreme Court for refusing to hear Texas v. Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Texas alleges that the four swing states violated the constitution by amending election laws by judicial or executive order rather than by legislative branch. But the Supreme Court said Texas had no right to Sue.
“The Supreme Court, what they’re doing is they’re disqualifying us.” “They basically said that the president of the United States and Texas and these other states, great states, they don’t qualify,” Trump said.
Trump is not a party to the case. The Supreme Court explained its decision, saying that “Texas has not demonstrated that it has a judicially recognized interest in the manner in which another state elects.”
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who filed the lawsuit, called the court’s ruling ‘unfortunate.’ He vowed to fight on.
“I will continue to work tirelessly to defend the integrity and security of our elections, and to hold accountable those who shirked established election laws for their own convenience,” he said in a statement.
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