NOTE WELL: Evidence of unreliable vote results does not have to be at the level of convincing a court of law.
It has only to "suggest uncertainty." And in the presence of uncertainty, the Legislature decides, not a court.
REFERENCE (h/t westernjournal.com)
<><> Only the electoral college or the various state legislatures can declare a candidate the winner.
<><> Declaring the winner based on network vote totals and projections (MSM calling Biden the president-elect) is irresponsible.
<><> Recounts in Az, Ga, and other states will go heavily for Trump since likely errors and invalid votes took place on "found" mail-ins for Biden.
<><> We know Biden won upwards of 2/3's of mail-ins and absentees, ergo, it is likely that most of the discarded mail ballots will be subtracted from Bidens total.
====================================
Dates to remember:
Dec. 8th---States Certification of Votes, each state has their deadline.
Dec. 14th---Electors Announce their Votes.
Jan. 6th----Joint Session of Congress reads aloud the votes of the Electors.
==================================
(h/t Owen) Q. Can the Congress reject the Electoral votes? A. Congress can choose to do anything it wants.
<><> Electors are appointed by state legislatures----a course of action embedded in the Constitution.
<><> If Congress wants to refuse them, the USSC would decide which slate is valid (assuming states sent two electoral slates).
<><> Because the legislature selects the slate, the Court would have no choice. Constitutional law is clear.
Lucky for liberals most news reporters can't do math...