On Monday, the state of Texas sued other key battleground states, including Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin, over alleged violation of the Constitution during the 2020 Presidential elections.

In a lawsuit, the state urges the Supreme Court to reconsider the election laws that were implemented in the key battleground states. In fact, Texas challenged the election procedures in the three states, noting that the changes in the elections were made through courts or executive actions and not through the legislature. The state believed that these actions violated the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause.

According to the lawsuit, Texas blasted the three states for “ignoring” the laws on mail-in and absentee ballot voting. The state argued that by flooding residents with millions of mail-in ballot applications, they had violated laws that guide how the votes should be “received, evaluated, and counted.” As a result, the lawsuit read, “whether well-intentioned or not; these unconstitutional acts had the same uniform effect—they made the 2020 election less secure in the Defendant States.”

The state believed that Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin had clearly violated Article III of the Constitution, which guarantees the integrity of the election results. Overall, Texas declared that these violations had caused “voting irregularities.”

Monday’s lawsuit came after several states denied President Donald Trump’s allegation that systemic voter fraud had taken place. For example, in the case of Georgia, Republican and State Secretary Brad Raffensperger claimed that based on their investigation, they did not find any evidence that voter fraud had indeed taken place.

This is in spite of the fact that the President’s legal team had presented shocking video evidence in which an election officer was caught pulling a suitcase filled with absentee and military ballots after she instructed Republican observers and the press to leave the room.

`On the other hand, a Nevada judge also struck down the President’s lawsuit, in which they claimed that lawsuit to overturn the election results, noting that they did not find sufficient evidence to prove that such allegations took place. The judge dismissed the lawsuit, which claimed over 40,000 cases of double votes.

Currently, the President stood firm in his refusal to concede the dubious election results, despite mounting pressure from the media, the Democratic Party, and even key Republican figures to accept his opponent, former Vice-President Joe Biden’s electoral win.