To be blunt… GAME OVER.
(twitter.com)
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It’s a bullshit case.
The remedy they’re asking for (SCOTUS to remove duly elected members of Congress) is something the SCOTUS is prohibited from doing according to your Constitution. Only the Congress itself, or the voters, can unseat elected members.
We should be happy that the SCOTUS aren’t allowed to remove senators, representatives or the POTUS/VP.
Trump wouldn’t have lasted 10 seconds in the WH if this was a possibility.
As I said, this case is bullshit because the remedy they’re asking for goes against the Constitution.
Well, I have seen a lot since 1/20/2021 that I never expected to see happen: a military funeral gun salute at a Presidential inauguration, a “President” arriving at Andrews in a dirty Suburban with the Secret Service wearing jeans, a fake White House set in the old Executive building, Biden showing a silicone mask tab on his ear at a 9/11 ceremony, not to mention a heck of a lot of other of not-easily explained happenings.
We are in uncharted territory. So maybe we will see something else that isn’t easily explained.
They aren’t prohibited. Fraud vitiates everything. Courts have ruled people were not duly elected before. They also ruled against corrupt politicians.
If the SCOTUS rules that members of Congress are not duly elected, the Congress itself will have to remove those members.
However this is not the remedy the B brothers is asking for, they want the SCOTUS to do the unseating themself.
Which is strictly prohibited.
The Brunson case is not about the cheating, it’s about not investigating the cheating, and breaking their oath not doing it.
This is a bullshit case that lacks standing, and even a 5 year old can see it.
The Brunson are grifters, and have made a fortune out of this case.
How did they make a fortune off this case? Show me some receipts.
Where is it prohibited?
In the Constitution.
Under Article I, Section 5, clause 2, of the Constitution, a Member of Congress may be removed from office before the normal expiration of his or her constitutional term by an “expulsion” from the Senate (if a Senator) or from the House of Representatives (if a Representative) upon a formal vote on a resolution agreed to by two-thirds of the Members of that body present and voting.
So a member of the Congress can be remove if he resigns, dies, is voted out by his constituents or an expulsion from office voted by his peers.
The SCOTUS can never remove an elected member.