We'll see...Common phrase of an unknown.
Don't see the big deal.
Larceny: The True Story of How the Deep State Stole the Election from Trump | New American Journal
In this instance it is a very big deal. We the people of the United States of America are witness, at least those of us who open our eyes, to the greatest conspiracy of theft in our history; the 2020 presidential election.
Those who are Republican and voted their conscience have been robbed! And our vote being stolen and thrown away, or perverted at the voting booth to be logged as having given our trust not to our president, as we chose to do in that booth, but was machine altered to be credited to a corrupt serial unprosecuted felon and enemy of America.
And this criminal act, this mass collusion to commit Larceny against millions of American citizens and voters, promises to be a big deal for not only our country but the entire free world.
What is its remedy?
I can understand how SCOTUS would deny the petition by Texas on behalf of other states and their election procedures. Texas, nor any state, is able to take issue with any other state and their procedures that follow the Constitution. And these elections did in their coarse. It is the tabulation by a contracted entity who provided the machines and those interests that tabulated the votes, that are the culprits. And are rightly to be identified as the defendants in an action.
So what now, given the Texas SCOTUS decision?
Are we the people able to bring class action lawsuits across all 50 states and Puerto Rico? Can we, as citizens, bring a class action lawsuit to address our Constitutional rights being usurped in that we are denied a fair and free election due to fraud, Larceny?
Is it too late to gather a class action? And file suit against those who "certify" fraudulant election results in those states where fraud can be proven to have occurred?
Election results certification dates, 2020 - Ballotpedia
I mentioned a class action suit after I was first made aware of The Steal in November. My inaction to that end is my responsibility. I should have, and woulda, shoulda, coulda, are there of the biggest wastes of breath after the fact (any fact), and yet, done something. Contact Sekulow and ask about such a pursuit. Something!
That's why I say now, pray! PRAY PEOPLE! PRAY!
Election results certification dates, 2020 - Ballotpedia
(sic)"...As of December 11, 2020, all 50 states and the District of Columbia had certified their 2020 general election results."
(sic)"...Additional key dates for the presidential election: Under
3 U.S.C. § 5, a state must settle any presidential election disputes and determine its electors six days before the
Electoral College meets.
This safe harbor provision deadline fell on December 8, 2020.
The Electoral College cast its votes for president and vice president on December 14, 2020."
What happens after the Electoral College?
Congress has to certify.
This article is informative and is from December of this year. (As you read you'll also learn why the 2018 mid-term election that showed corruption on 5 known states, afforded the Democrats (illegal) majority in the House. It was a foretelling of the coming presidential election in November two years later. The mid-term I suspect was a test to see if it would work, unopposed.

It did!)
*(Except)
What to expect after the Electoral College votes next week | PolitiFact
[sic]"...
What are “faithless” electors?
The number of electoral votes earned by each candidate could vary from what they seemed to have won in the election, if “faithless” electors decide to vote for someone other than the candidate voters chose. This has happened occasionally, in small numbers, in recent decades. As recently as 2016,
two Texas electors didn’t vote for Donald Trump and a
Hawaii elector and four Washington state electors didn’t vote for Hillary Clinton. But it has never been enough to shift the result.
This year, the
Supreme Court allowed states greater leverage in requiring electors to cast their assigned votes.
When do the electoral results truly become official?
Congress officially counts the electoral votes in a joint session at 1 p.m. on Jan. 6.
The president of the Senate — a position held by the sitting vice president — presides. If the vice president is absent, the Senate president pro tempore, Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, presides, not the House speaker.
Four “tellers” — two from the House, two from the Senate — read the certificates from the states and the District of Columbia and count the electoral votes. The electoral certificates are unsealed and counted in alphabetical order by state. The presiding officer announces the result. If there are no interruptions, this takes 20 to 25 minutes.
When the process is complete, the vice president declares a winner. At this point, the election is officially decided and simply awaits the inauguration.
What could be done to upset this process?
The statute governing electoral vote counting in Congress prohibits debate and most motions, but supporters of Trump have one longshot chance to object.
“During the reading of the certificates, an objection may be made in writing, but must be signed by at least one member of each house,” said Steven Smith, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis.
Because the statute that governs the process says that electoral votes that are “regularly given” and “lawfully certified” must be counted, the objections would likely seek to attack the meaning of these terms, Smith said. The presiding officer would determine whether these objections are in order or not.
If the objection is ruled in order, the joint session is suspended so that the House and Senate can separately debate and vote on it. Each chamber decides on its own by a simple majority, said Gregory Koger, a University of Miami political scientist.
The statute sets a debate limit of two hours on each chamber for considering objections, Smith said. “Done repeatedly over several states, this process can consume a great deal of time,” he said.
Is any of this a realistic way of securing a second term for Trump?
Not really, thanks mainly to the Democrats’ majority in the House. Because both chambers must agree to an objection, it would fail if only one agrees to it. And if the objection fails, the challenged votes are counted.
“Objections are easily raised, but there is no realistic chance that House Democrats would approve of Republican-sponsored objections,” Smith said.
Koger agreed, saying, “There is zero chance a challenge will succeed if the voting falls along party lines.”
It may not even get to this point, of course. “At present, some House members have signaled their willingness to support a challenge, but no senator has confirmed that he or she will do so,” Koger said.
Recent history is against House members finding a willing senator. “In 2000, 2004, and 2016, we saw multiple objections from House Democrats, but no senator objected, so the objections were not considered,” said John Fortier, director of governmental studies at the Bipartisan Policy Center.
If House Republicans did manage to get a senator to co-sign an objection, it would remain a heavy lift for the objectors to get all Senate Republicans to support their cause. Senate Democrats would need to pick off only a couple of institutional-minded Republicans to side with them to make sure that the objection fails. These could include GOP Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania. All four have
already said that Biden is the duly chosen president-elect.
“I am not sure if a senator will go along with the objection,” Fortier said. And even if one did, he said, “I am not sure I believe that the Senate would actually reject the votes or slate of electors.”
Once the count is gaveled to a close, experts said they can’t imagine any other last-ditch scenarios being available to Trump and his supporters.
“As a practical matter, I don’t think there’s any realistic expectation that Biden’s inauguration is vulnerable to what will happen in Congress on Jan. 6,” Foley said.
When is the inauguration?
At noon on Jan. 20, the outgoing president’s term expires, and the winning candidate is sworn in. With that, the 2020 presidential election will finally be over.
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