Trump Campaign Appeals Dismissal of Pennsylvania Lawsuit

Ivan Pentchoukov
By Ivan Pentchoukov
November 22, 20202020 Election
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Trump Campaign Appeals Dismissal of Pennsylvania Lawsuit
Election workers count ballots at the Philadelphia Convention Center in Philadelphia, Pa., on Nov. 6, 2020. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign on Sunday appealed the dismissal of its election lawsuit in Pennsylvania, according to a notice filed in federal court.

District Court Judge Matthew Brann dismissed the campaign’s lawsuit on Saturday, opining that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the claim, among other issues. The campaign said it has appealed the ruling to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Rudy Giuliani, the lead attorney representing Trump’s post-election legal effort, said on Saturday that Brann’s dismissal would help expedite the lawsuit’s progression to the Supreme Court.

President Donald Trump on Saturday said that he will likely appeal a lawsuit after it was dismissed in Pennsylvania.

“It’s all a continuation of the never ending Witch Hunt,” the president wrote. “Judge Brann, who would not even allow us to present our case or evidence, is a product of Senator Pat ‘No Tariffs’ Toomey of Pennsylvania, no friend of mine, & Obama – No wonder. 900,000 Fraudulent Votes!” Trump was referring to Sen. Toomey (R-Pa.) and Judge Matthew Brann.

The Trump campaign asked the court to block the certification of the election results in Pennsylvania, arguing that voters in Republican-controlled counties were treated unequally to those in Democrat-controlled counties. The voters in Democrat-controlled counties were given the chance to fix issues with their absentee ballots in contravention of state law, while officials in Republican counties followed the law and did not offer such an opportunity, the lawsuit claimed.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit included the Trump campaign and two individual voters whose mail ballots were rejected without an opportunity to cure the defects. The defendants are Michigan Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar and seven Pennsylvania counties.

In his memorandum opinion, Brann argued that the individual plaintiffs failed “to establish that it was defendants who caused these injuries and that their purported injury of vote-denial is adequately redressed by invalidating the votes of others.” The judge pointed out that the plaintiffs sued the counties which extended the opportunity to voters to cure their ballots and not those which did not offer an opportunity to do so.

“First, defendant counties, by plaintiffs’ own pleadings, had nothing to do with the denial of individual plaintiffs’ ability to vote. Individual plaintiffs’ ballots were rejected by Lancaster and Fayette Counties, neither of which is a party to this case,” Brann wrote.

“None of defendant counties received, reviewed, or discarded Individual Plaintiffs’ ballots. Even assuming that defendant counties unconstitutionally allowed other voters to cure their ballots, that alone cannot confer standing on plaintiffs who seek to challenge the denial of their votes.”

Brann’s dismissal of the lawsuit came before the stage of the proceedings where the Trump campaign would be able to present evidence. Since being filed on Nov. 9, the case featured a withdrawal by the attorneys representing Trump, a harassing voicemail left on a Trump campaign attorney’s phone by a lawyer from a firm representing the defendants, and a major revision to the Trump campaign’s original complaint.

Pennsylvania’s deadline to certify the results of the 2020 election is on Monday, Nov. 23. The unofficial results show Former Vice President Joe Biden ahead of Trump by 80,000 votes.

As part of the lawsuit, the Trump campaign alleged that more than 682,000 absentee ballots were processed without Republican observers present, among other issues.

More than 20,000 absentee ballots in Pennsylvania were marked with receipt dates prior to the date they were allegedly sent, according to a researcher’s analysis of the state’s voter database.

Jack Philips contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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