Not Optimistic: Trump Does Not Believe Supreme Court Will Ever Hear About Voter Fraud

Written By BlabberBuzz | Monday, 30 November 2020 04:30 PM
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Sunday, President Donald Trump claimed it might be difficult to get his election fraud allegations heard before the U.S. The Supreme Court, expressing doubt about his legal strategy as his hopes of overturning the Nov. 3 election dwindled.

"The problem is it's hard to get it to the Supreme Court," Trump said in a telephone interview with Fox News. "I’ve got the best Supreme Court advocates, lawyers that want to argue the case if it gets there."

Trump stated he would still continue to fight the results of the election, which was won by Democratic President-elect Joe Biden. "My mind will not change in six months," Trump told Fox News.

In his first full interview since the November election, the president slammed judges' decisions on his legal challenges to the 2020 election's results.

"We’re not allowed to put in our proof. They say you don’t have standing," Trump told "Sunday Morning Futures." "I would like to file one nice big beautiful lawsuit, talking about this and many other things, with tremendous proof. We have affidavits, we have hundreds and hundreds of affidavits.

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"You mean as president of the United States, I don't have standing? What kind of a court system is this?" Trump told host Maria Bartiromo.

Trump refuses to concede the 2020 election, while his rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, is announcing Cabinet members and plans for when he takes office in January. On Friday, Trump demanded that Biden must prove that the votes he received in the election were not “illegally obtained” in order to enter the White House.

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There have also been weeks of legal challenges from the Trump campaign in battleground states like Pennsylvania alleging voter fraud.

Biden crossed the 80 million-vote threshold on Friday with ballots still being counted, giving the former vice president a lead of more than 6 million votes.

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Case after case has been rejected by judges around the country.

Trump also complained that the Department of Justice and FBI were not helping him.

They are "missing in action," he lamented.

Trump’s legal team has shrugged off legal failures by saying it’s all part of a march to the Supreme Court. The court has a 6-3 conservative majority and three justices appointed by Trump -- the latest, Amy Coney Barrett, was confirmed by the Senate just weeks ago.

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But Trump has been pummeled in the lower courts, due to his campaign’s lawsuits refusing to back up his out-of-court claims of widespread fraud.

One of Trump’s legal advisers, Jenna Ellis, said as recently as Friday that they were headed to the top court after their latest setback in Pennsylvania.

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Trump also lashed out Sunday at various political enemies, including Georgia’s top two elections officials, both Republicans -- Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Governor Brian Kemp. The two men have certified Trump’s defeat in the state. “I’m ashamed that I endorsed him,” Trump said of Kemp.

After endorsing Raffensperger in 2018, on Thursday, the president called the man an “enemy of the people.”

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