KEY POINTS
  • Seventeen states told the Supreme Court that they support an effort by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to sue to effectively reverse President-elect Joe Biden's projected win in the Electoral College.
  • The filing came a day after Paxton asked the Supreme Court for permission to sue Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin over their election results, which Biden won in all instances.
  • President Donald Trump filed a motion to intervene in the case "in his personal capacity" as a presidential candidate.
  • Trump defeated Biden in the popular vote of the states supporting Paxton's bid.
People hold campaign flags supporting U.S. President Donald Trump outside of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Dec. 9, 2020.

Seventeen states whose elections were won by President Donald Trump told the Supreme Court on Wednesday that they support Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's bid to file a lawsuit that could effectively reverse President-elect Joe Biden's projected Electoral College victory.

The filing backing Paxton by those states came a day after he asked the Supreme Court for permission to sue Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, all of which Biden won, over their voting processes.