Trump admits it’s ‘hard to get to the Supreme Court’ as he battles to overturn key state election results

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

Donald Trump and his legal team have explored several legal avenues to overturn election results in several battleground states, specifically Pennsylvania.

One of the last resorts the campaign could turn to would be to bring one, or multiple, cases before the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land, to appeal past federal and state court rulings. But Mr Trump admitted in a phone interview on Fox News on Sunday that the likelihood of getting a case before the Supreme Court might be difficult.

“The problem is it’s hard to get into the Supreme Court,” he told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo.

“I’ve got the best Supreme Court advocates … lawyers that want to argue the case if it gets there. But they said it’s very hard to get a case up there,” he added.

Mr Trump expressed shock, though, that he might face hurdles to get any of his lawsuits before the Supreme Court despite being the president of the United States.

“Can you imagine? Donald Trump, president of the United States, files a case and I probably can’t get a case … and we have tremendous proof … we have hundreds of hundreds of affidavits, sworn affidavits. And it’s very hard to get a case to the Supreme Court,” he said.

Over and over again Mr Trump has complained of massive voter fraud in states that he lost during the 2020 election, with Pennsylvania a big focus of his complaints. But his team has yet to provide enough proof in court of voter fraud that would overturn the results.

President-elect Joe Biden was the projected winner of the commonwealth, which would give him 20 Electoral College votes, after he received more than 80,000 votes over the sitting president.

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