After a scathing court setback in Pennsylvania, President Donald Trump faces increased pressure from his fellow Republicans to drop his effort to overturn the US presidential election and concede to Democrat Joe Biden.
Since Mr Biden was declared the winner two weeks ago, Mr Trump has launched a barrage of lawsuits and mounted a pressure campaign to prevent states from certifying their vote totals.
So far, attempts to thwart certification have failed in courts in Georgia, Michigan and Arizona.
On Saturday, Matthew Brann, a Republican federal judge nominated by former President Barack Obama, dismissed a similar effort in Pennsylvania, writing that the case amounted to “strained legal arguments without merit and speculative accusations”.
For Mr Trump to have any hope of remaining in the White House, he needs to eliminate Mr Biden’s 81,000-vote lead in Pennsylvania. The state is due to begin certifying its results on Monday.
Mr Trump’s lawyers vowed a quick appeal, but lawyers who opposed him in court say he is out of time.
“This should put the nail in the coffin on any further attempts by President Trump to use the federal courts to rewrite the outcome of the 2020 election,” said Kristen Clarke, president of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
Some of Mr Trump’s fellow Republicans in Congress are now breaking ranks.
Republican Senator Pat Toomey said the ruling closed off any chance for a legal victory in Pennsylvania and called on Trump to concede the election.
Liz Cheney, a member of the Republican leadership team in the House of Representatives, earlier called Mr Trump to respect “the sanctity of our electoral process” if he does not succeed in court.
Mr Trump refuses to concede
Mr Biden got 6 million more votes than Mr Trump in the 3 November election, and also prevailed 306-232 in the state-by-state Electoral College system that determines who will take the oath of office on 20 January.
He has spent the past several weeks preparing to take office, though Trump’s administration has refused to provide funding and security clearances to do so.
Critics say Mr Trump’s refusal to concede have serious implications for national security and the fight against the coronavirus, which has killed nearly 255,000 Americans.
In order to remain in office, Mr Trump would somehow need to overturn election results in at least three large states – an unprecedented feat in US history.
A recount in Georgia only affirmed Mr Biden’s win there, and officials certified the result on Friday. Mr Trump’s campaign said late on Saturday it would request another recount.
In Wisconsin, election officials have criticised Trump volunteers for slowing a partial recount that is not expected to overturn Mr Biden’s victory.
With recounts and lawsuits coming up short, Mr Trump is now pressuring Republican-led state legislatures to throw out the vote totals and declare him the winner.
“Hopefully the Courts and/or Legislatures will have … the COURAGE to do what has to be done to maintain the integrity of our Elections and the United States of America itself,” he wrote on Twitter after the Pennsylvania ruling.
Twitter flagged the tweet as containing claims of election fraud that are disputed.
On Friday, he summoned two top Republicans in Michigan’s legislature to the White House. After the meeting, they said they saw no evidence that would lead them to intervene. Mr Biden is leading Mr Trump in Michigan by 154,000 votes.
Election officials across the country say there is no evidence of significant voting fraud, and Mr Trump’s own administration has called the election the “most secure in American history:.
But Mr Trump’s accusations have continued to inflame his hard-core Republican base. Half of Republicans believe the election was stolen from Mr Trump, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling, and supporters have staged rallies across the country to protest the outcome.
Mr Biden, who has denounced Mr Trump’s attempt to reverse the election results as “totally irresponsible”, spent Sunday meeting with transition advisers and attending church.
Mr Trump took part in a virtual summit of the 20 biggest world economies and then went to play golf at his club in Sterling, Virginia.