(Updated...)
Texas suing means no state courts. Texas wants Trump-electors or a do-over of the election.
What happened?
The State of Texas just filed a lawsuit against Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin.
Why is this relevant and how is it different from the other lawsuits?
The other lawsuits have mostly been filings made by or on behalf of the voters in each state with the claim that they have been disenfranchised. For instance, a Georgian voter or the Georgian Republican Party filing a lawsuit. The first court for these is the state-level courts, which are (as we know) infiltrated by leftist activist judges. The state-level judges have been throwing out the lawsuits claiming procedural issues like filing too late or that the person filing it has "no legal standing." These lawsuits thus have to be appealed to the Supreme Court on various points of law (mostly regarding constitutionality) and the states themselves will start arguing that the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction to hear some of these matters which should be left to state courts.
The new Texas lawsuit however is the State of Texas itself making a claim that if these phony results are certified and electors are selected on the basis of the phony results in these states, Texas' own electors are being disenfranchised. Since the State of Texas is the claimant, the only appropriate court is the Supreme Court.
What is the remedy Texas is asking for
Texas is asking for (in summary)
4. Essentially, Texas seems to be asking for a special election (a do-over) in each of these states. The legislature can appoint Trump-electors too of course but they would never have the balls to do that.
What are the grounds on which the lawsuit is brought?
This lawsuit provides a very helpful overview and summary of the cases which are being brought in each state:
Pennsylvania
1. Unlawful changes to voting rules (removing signature verificationGeorgia
Due to this, the rejection rate on mail in ballots was 0.37% in 2020 versus 6.42% in 2016!
Michigan
Wisconsin
1. Unlawful changes to voting rules... You don't even need me to repeat this first one do you...What are the merits / are we likely to be successful?
The answer is that the merits are there but the only obstacle is whether the SC thinks the remedy Texas is asking for is appropriate.
To explain briefly, it is almost beyond doubt that these states changed rules unlawfully, kicked vote watchers out etc. Like there is literally no way the Democrats/States can say that there was no fraud without calling every witness a liar, every video doctored and somehow justifying what the election officials literally declared.
The problem is the remedy. It is open for the judges to say that there was fraud afoot but not enough fraud to require a revote, or an injunction against certification/electors. This is why you see in every case/hearing, Rudy / Lin / Sidney emphasizes the number of illegal ballots. So the challenge for Texas is to prove that the harm done by the illegal ballots is enough for the SC to provide the remedy that it wants.