Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s campaign is seeking to raise funds to fight Trump campaign lawsuits in battleground states that challenge the credibility of election results.
“We are confident in our victory, and Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are eager to get to work for the American people, but Trump’s lawsuits will bring this fight to court, and we need to be able to afford the legal battles ahead,” the email states.
“This much litigation is expensive, but we need to be prepared to fight these lawsuits regardless and ensure Trump doesn’t win them just because we don’t have the funds to fight back.”
President Donald Trump and his campaign have started legal challenges in multiple states, asking courts to protect the integrity of the voting and counting process.
Trump and his campaign have been vocal about the need to protect the sanctity of the ballot box, arguing that only “legal votes” should be counted. They argue that mail-in ballots postmarked by Nov. 3 but received after Election Day shouldn’t be counted and that votes that were counted without Republican observers present in the ballot-counting centers should also be considered “illegal votes.”
There were “tremendous irregularities with absentee ballots,” including “multiple ballots being run through the machines multiple times,” Trump campaign counsel Thor Hearne said.
That lawsuit also alleges that Republican observers were prevented from having adequate access to the counting process and seeks to determine the accuracy of tabulating equipment or software used in the state due to reports of malfunctioning software.
The Republican Party of Pennsylvania argues that the extension of the deadline violates federal law that sets Election Day as the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, and that only the state legislature can decide to extend the deadline, not the courts.
In October, some members of the U.S. Supreme Court indicated that the court was interested in granting a request to review that decision.