Supreme Court denies Republican request to block certification of Pennsylvania election results News
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Supreme Court denies Republican request to block certification of Pennsylvania election results

The US Supreme Court denied injunctive relief Tuesday to Pennsylvania Republicans seeking to block certification of the state’s election results on the ground that the expansion of mail-in ballots violated the state constitution.

The petition was filed by Republican Representative Mike Kelly of northwestern Pennsylvania and state electors. Kelly claimed that Act 77, enacted on October 31, 2019, violates Article VII § 14 of the Pennsylvania Constitution that establishes eligibility for absentee voting. The petitioners also claimed their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court unanimously dismissed a similar petition on November 28.

In response to the petition, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania claimed that the petitioners “come to this Court with unclean hands and ask it to disenfranchise an entire state.” They raised issues of separation of powers and basic principles of federalism in support of their request that the court reject the suit as “nothing less than an affront to constitutional democracy.”

The Supreme Court’s rejection of the petition comes on the “safe harbor” deadline that falls six days before electors cast their vote for president. States that meet the deadline will have their election results treated as conclusive, meaning they cannot be challenged by Congress. All 50 states are expected to meet this deadline, making the final electoral count 306 for President-elect Joe Biden and 232 for President Donald Trump.