The things they "can't" do and the things they won't do aren't necessarily mutually exclusive. Though, they should be.
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I think this opens a path to prompt judicial override if they refuse to certify.
Which would probably go poorly for us, see: Bush v Gore. A bunch of the lawyers from that case are now on the Supreme Court.
Good ruling and all, but I won't keep my hopes up until I know SCOTUS hasn't/can't change it. I don't for one second put it past them to say "actuallllllly they can if the results are bad for Trump." but in more legal bullshit language.
It's a state elections law, Supreme Court of Georgia is the ultimate authority on what it says. States have a lot of leeway to determine their own election laws, so it's hard to mount a federal law challenge to them in the first place. The RNC voter suppression consent decree was a rare exception.
IANAL, but it's hard to imagine an opposition to this where federal courts even have jurisdiction, much less a path to SCOTUS.
Thanks for the clarification! That's definitely a bit of a relief.
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