If SCOTUS Votes In Favor Of Plaintiff In This Case, Does Election Outcome Become Suspect?

Written By BlabberBuzz | Wednesday, 03 March 2021 07:30 PM
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Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich prompted the Supreme Court on March 2 to confirm that his state’s electoral integrity laws were constant with the federal Voting Rights Act and should be supported.

The case Arizona’s top prosecutor claimed is two consolidated cases: Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (DNC) and Arizona Republican Party v. DNC.

Even though the justices peppered counsel for Arizona and the state’s Republican Party with opposing questions, members of the Supreme Court appeared open to their claims. Except for the more liberal members, the justices did not look assured that Arizona’s election laws violated the Voting Rights Act.

The Supreme Court cast out a list of Republican-initiated legal claims on Feb. 22 to voting processes and results in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin that were remaining from the 2020 election cycle. And on March 1, the court rejected an election challenge from Arizona, In Re Tyler Bowyer, and one from Wisconsin, In Re William Feehan, that was brought on Dec. 15, 2020, by pro-Trump attorney Sidney Powell.

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The spoken reasons in Brnovich’s case before the Supreme Court came days after an Arizona judge ordered in a separate case that state lawmakers have the right to access 2.1 million ballots cast in the state’s most populous county, Maricopa County, and related electronic materials to inspect the Nov. 3, 2020, election results, as The Epoch Times previously reported.

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The Supreme Court allowed on Oct. 2, 2020, to hear the case at hand, which regards exercises that Republicans say would weaken electoral integrity measures and throw the Grand Canyon State open to ballot-harvesting and voting outside of the precinct.

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“I think we all should agree at this point that we want to have confidence in our election system,” Brnovich, the state’s Republican attorney general, said in an exclusive interview with The Epoch Times days before his Supreme Court display, in which he offered his stance about the upcoming oral argument at the high court and electoral integrity measures in general.

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“We want orderly elections,” he said, adding that he was optimistic that the court appearance would help to generate momentum for electoral integrity measures nationwide.

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More Americans should become active in preserving the nation’s founding and the institutions that came out of it, he said.

There is a certain number of establishments thinking out there “that just wants to go along to get along … [but] the stakes are so high right now in this country that we need champions that understand what the framers of our Constitution established here in this country.”

There is a “need to understand traditional notions of federalism and to understand that the Constitution is all about protecting rights, and that the government is supposed to be limited and its powers defined.”

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