You take specific lawsuits filed in your state that were rejected on standing. You amend the complaint and change it from Trump...or whatever law office that was representing Trump etc.
You enter your name. You file the same petition to the courts and select the defendant as both the Secretary of State of each of your states but also the legislators who certified the results.
The idea is to submit things the courts rejected on standing. Guess what. As a citizen of that jurisdiction you have standing. The idea is to inundate the courts.
Have people in those states file these individual petitions to the courts. It’ll eventually become a class action.
It would break the court systems. It would gain attention.
PEDES I HAVE AN IDEA.
You take specific lawsuits filed in your state that were rejected on standing. You amend the complaint and change it from Trump...or whatever law office that was representing Trump etc. You enter your name. You file the same petition to the courts and select the defendant as both the Secretary of State of each of your states but also the legislators who certified the results. The idea is to submit things the courts rejected on standing. Guess what. As a citizen of that jurisdiction you have standing. The idea is to inundate the courts. Have people in those states file these individual petitions to the courts. It’ll eventually become a class action. It would break the court systems. It would gain attention.
Lawfare, its about time we started playing the game.
Great idea. Do you ha e to be a licensed lawyer to file with the court?
You do not, but navigating the court can be tricky and opposing counsel--well-funded and with a directive to win--will bury you during disclosure.
ok, so it's tricky, BUUUUT, you can demand lawyers fees when you win. Just write down any 6 figure number like every other lawyer does
Nope you just have to pay a fee.
You do not, see Wood v. Raffensperger (Wood is a citizen of Georgia and the plaintiff in the suit).