Lawyer: Swing state legislatures are key to Trump’s path to victory

Jenna Ellis, a lawyer for President Donald Trump‘s campaign, says legislatures in six swing states will be crucial to trump’s 2020 victory.

In an interview with The Era’s American Thought Leaders on December 16, Ellis said that In the case of Pennsylvania, for example, the state legislature had sided with Texas in its previous statewide election case before the Supreme Court.

“One of the great things about this case is that the leaders of the Senate and House of Representatives in Pennsylvania filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court, acknowledging and telling the Court that they agreed with Texas that their state did not abide by state law in the administration of the 2020 election.” She said.

“It gives them the basis, through their investigation, through their findings, through all the testimony and evidence that the Mayor [Giuliani] and I presented at that hearing, that the state of Pennsylvania may revoke the right to select the list of representatives under Article 2, Section 1, Section 2, of the Constitution.”

“Therefore, they themselves have every opportunity to reconvene the electoral conference to vote on the list of delegates to be sent. That is what should happen in every one of the six states by January 6th.”

On December 14, each state’s electoral College voted to choose the next president. In six swing states and New Mexico, Republican voters and Democratic electors cast ballots for President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden in a “electoral college showdown” not seen in decades.

Currently, state governors have certified Biden electors, but state legislatures can still call special legislative sessions to confirm Trump’s electors’ votes.

“I know Joe is watching this very closely,” Ellis said. And then there’s the Dominion Machine Audit report out of Michigan, and all of the things that are disclosed in the report, not just the violations, but the sheer error ratio, and all of the violations that are occurring in the state. So Michigan, Arizona and Wisconsin [have these problems].”

She also argues that “once a state does have an election convention, it’s willing to enforce a simple majority resolution and say, ‘We’re not going to allow corrupt, bogus certification to prevail over what we choose to represent’… If one state is willing to do so, I think others will follow.”