A federal judge on Friday dismissed a bid by Rep. Louie GohmertLouis (Louie) Buller GohmertPence asks judge to toss GOP lawmaker's bid to overturn election results Wall Street Journal editorial board knocks Trump's 'embarrassing Electoral College hustle' Here are the Republicans planning to challenge the Electoral College results MORE (Texas) and other Republicans that sought to endow Vice President Pence with the legal authority to effectively overturn President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenBidens honor frontline workers in NYE address: 'We owe them, we owe them, we owe them' Trump hotel in DC raises room rates for Biden inauguration Video shows long lines on last day of early voting in Georgia MORE’s electoral win.
In his ruling, Texas-based U.S. District Judge Jeremy Kernodle, a Trump appointee, said the GOP plaintiffs lacked standing. The judge found that Gohmert suffered no legally recognizable injury.
The other plaintiffs, a group of Arizona Republicans who self-identify as an alternate “slate” of pro-Trump electors, could not link their supposed injury to Pence, he reasoned.
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“Because neither Congressman Gohmert nor the nominee-electors have standing here, the court is without subject matter jurisdiction to address” their lawsuit, Kernodle wrote in his ruling. “The court therefore dismisses the case without prejudice.”
In an appearance on conservative media outlet Newsmax Friday evening, Gohmert said that his legal team is planning to appeal the decision to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, condemning the district court’s ruling that he lacks a legal right to sue in the case.
"I believe in using the court system for the same reason they were created ... to resolve disputes,” Gohmert said.
“I still believe in that system,” he said, adding that he hoped once lawmakers were presented with evidence on allegations of voter fraud, “people will come to the right conclusion.”
“If not, it will mean the end of our republic,” he asserted.
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Attorneys for Gohmert and his co-plaintiffs, which included Kelli Ward, the chairwoman of the Arizona GOP, did not respond to a request for further comment.
The suit’s dismissal had been expected: The consensus among election law experts was that the judge would toss the case without reaching the core substantive claims alleged by the Republican plaintiffs.
The far-fetched legal effort sought to permit Pence to sidestep federal election law when he presides over a joint session of Congress on Wednesday. Rather than carry out his statutory duty to finalize Biden’s win, Pence would be free to effectively grant himself and President TrumpDonald TrumpTrump hotel in DC raises room rates for Biden inauguration GOP lawmaker criticizes Trump, colleagues for 'trying to discredit' the election Video shows long lines on last day of early voting in Georgia MORE a second term.
The vice president’s role in presiding over the Jan. 6 meeting is usually a ceremonial one governed by an 1887 federal law known as the Electoral Count Act. But the Republican lawsuit asked the judge to invalidate the law, arguing that it places an unconstitutional constraint on the vice president's authority to choose among competing claims of victory when state-level election results are disputed.
The lawsuit was an outgrowth of GOP efforts in several key battleground states to overturn Biden’s win based on the unsubstantiated theory that his victory was tainted by widespread fraud. Republicans in several key swing states have disputed Biden's win and offered alternate "slates" of pro-Trump electors to be counted Wednesday, but experts say these efforts carry no legal weight.
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Pence, for his part, told the court Thursday that he was not a proper defendant to the suit. As vice president, he said, his legal interests are not "sufficiently adverse to plaintiffs" to clear the constitutional requirement that there be a "case or controversy" before a court weighs in.
"The Vice President—the only defendant in this case—is ironically the very person whose power they seek to promote," wrote a Department of Justice attorney representing Pence. “A suit to establish that the Vice President has discretion over the count, filed against the Vice President, is a walking legal contradiction.”
—Celine Castronuovo contributed. Updated at 10:34 p.m.
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