President Donald Trump calls it “the big one,” but the Texas lawsuit seeking to invalidate President-elect Joe Biden’s election victory at the U.S. Supreme Court has several problems that doom it, according to experts on election law.

To cite a glaring one, the lawsuit, which Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed Monday, calls on the court to delay the electoral vote in the four targeted states, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, to allow investigations of voting issues to continue. That would be unconstitutional, said Edward Foley of the Moritz College of Law at Ohio State University. He points out that Article II, Section 4, says Congress can choose the day the electors meet to vote but says that day “shall be the same throughout the United States.” This year, it’s Dec. 14, or five days from now.

Dec. 9, 202003:50

The second hurdle for the lawsuit is that Texas has no legal right to claim that officials elsewhere didn’t follow the rules set by their own legislatures. The United States doesn’t have a national election for president. It has a series of state elections, and one state has no legal standing to challenge how another state does it any more than Texas could challenge how Georgia elects its U.S. senators, legal experts said.

“This case is hopeless. Texas has no right to bring a lawsuit over election procedures in other states,” said Tom Goldstein, a Washington, D.C., lawyer who argues frequently before the court and publishes SCOTUSblog. “And in any event, the justices will think that this case, like the others, should be brought first in the lower courts and not just in front of them first.”

While it’s true that the Supreme Court is the place to go when one state wants to sue another, a state has to get permission to do that from the court first, and it has to show there’s no other place to resolve the issues. This Texas lawsuit is a compilation of legal claims that have already been chewed over in the lower courts.

The lawsuit asks the Supreme Court for an order invalidating something like 20 million votes, which Foley said is unthinkable.

The court filings also appear to have been prepared in haste. For example, the lawsuit says the four states Texas wants to sue have a combined total of 72 electoral votes. That total is actually 62.

Trump filed a motion Wednesday to intervene in the case, as did Republican attorneys general from 17 states.

Officials from both parties in the states named in the lawsuit ripped Paxton’s challenge as “a publicity stunt” loaded with “false and irresponsible” allegations.

Paxton, whom the Trump campaign named a co-chair of its “Lawyers for Trump” group in July, has had legal problems of his own. He was indicted in 2015 on still-pending securities fraud charges and was reportedly accused of other wrongdoing by his top aides earlier this year.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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