Donald Trump says he is ‘so disappointed’ in Supreme Court after they refuse to hear Texas AG’s bid

Donald Trump said Sunday the election fight is ‘not over’ Sunday as he expressed his ‘disappointment’ in the Supreme Court refusing to hear the Texas lawsuit attempting to overturn Joe Biden’s victory.

The president told Fox News host Brian Kilmeade in an interview that aired Sunday morning: ‘It’s not over.’

He said he is worried about the U.S. ‘having an illegitimate president,’ likening alleged election fraud to elections in a ‘third world country.’

Trump said that local Democrats in swing states were able to ‘outsmart’ their Republican counterparts to rig the election for Biden.

‘We keep going and we’re going to continue to go forward. We have numerous local cases,’ he continued in his conversation with Kilmeade caught on camera at the Army-Navy football game on Saturday.

He assured that his legal team has adequately ‘proven’ fraud in the election.

‘We’ve proven it, but no judge has had the courage, including the Supreme Court, I am so disappointed in them,’ he chastised.

Trump’s comments to Kilmeade came two days after the Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, refused to hear the lawsuit spearheaded by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to overturn the election results.

The suit sought to invalidate the presidential election results in four other states.

As Trump complained of the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the case on Saturday, Twitter flagged and temporarily blocked people from liking and replying to the president’s tweets the same day.

‘We try to prevent a Tweet like this that otherwise breaks the Twitter Rules from reaching more people, so we have disabled most of the ways to engage with it,’ the social media platforms added in a note attached to the posts. 

Donald Trump told Fox’s Brian Kilmeade that his election fight is not over claiming he would keep working to make sure America doesn’t have an ‘illegitimate president’

The president told Fox and Friends he is 'so disappointed' in the Supreme Court deciding not to hear a Texas case seeking to overturn the election results

The president told Fox and Friends he is ‘so disappointed’ in the Supreme Court deciding not to hear a Texas case seeking to overturn the election results

Trump, second from the left, plays golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday. As Trump complained of the Supreme Court's decision not to hear the case on Saturday, Twitter flagged and temporarily blocked people from liking and replying to the president's tweets the same day

Trump, second from the left, plays golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday. As Trump complained of the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the case on Saturday, Twitter flagged and temporarily blocked people from liking and replying to the president’s tweets the same day

Trump said that local Democrats in swing states were able to 'outsmart' their Republican counterparts to rig the election for Biden. The president is pictured playing golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday

Trump said that local Democrats in swing states were able to ‘outsmart’ their Republican counterparts to rig the election for Biden. The president is pictured playing golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday

In his Twitter rant, he called the decision a ‘great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice’. Twitter later told The Hill the decision had been reversed, adding: ‘We inadvertently took action to limit engagements on the labeled Tweet.’

Also on Saturday, pro-Trump protesters descended on Washington, D.C., again demanding: ‘Stop the steal!’

The president continued to fume during his interview on Fox News over the Supreme Court’s decision – especially as an unprecedented three justices seated on the panel were nominated by Trump during his four years.

‘No judge, including in the Supreme Court of the United States, has had the courage to allow it to be heard,’ he said.

‘The Supreme Court, all they did is say we don’t have standing. So they’re saying essentially the president of the United States and Texas and these other states, great states, they don’t have standing,’ he continued.

The president also insisted the election fight is ‘not over’, adding: ‘We keep going and we’re going to continue to go forward. We have numerous local cases.’

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito said they would have heard the case but that they would have refused to overturn the election result. The other seven justices declined to hear the case, ending the legal bid.

‘This is a great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice. The people of the United States were cheated, and our Country disgraced. Never even given our day in Court!’ Trump tweeted on Saturday morning from the White House.

‘I WON THE ELECTION IN A LANDSLIDE, but remember, I only think in terms of legal votes, not all of the fake voters and fraud that miraculously floated in from everywhere! What a disgrace!’ he continued. 

Trump departs the White House on Sunday. In his Twitter rant, he called the decision a 'great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice'. Twitter later told The Hill the decision had been reversed, adding: 'We inadvertently took action to limit engagements on the labeled Tweet'

Trump departs the White House on Sunday. In his Twitter rant, he called the decision a ‘great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice’. Twitter later told The Hill the decision had been reversed, adding: ‘We inadvertently took action to limit engagements on the labeled Tweet’

The president is pictured playing golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday. The president continued to fume during his interview on Fox News over the Supreme Court's decision

The president is pictured playing golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va., Sunday. The president continued to fume during his interview on Fox News over the Supreme Court’s decision

Trump, pictured Sunday, has again insisted 'tens of thousands of ballots' were illegally submitted calling it 'a rigged election'

Trump, pictured Sunday, has again insisted ‘tens of thousands of ballots’ were illegally submitted calling it ‘a rigged election’

A demonstrator shows support for Trump as he arrives at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia on Sunday

A demonstrator shows support for Trump as he arrives at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia on Sunday 

Twitter on Saturday temporarily stopped people from liking and replying to the president's tweets, with a note that read: 'We try to prevent a Tweet like this that otherwise breaks the Twitter Rules from reaching more people, so we have disabled most of the ways to engage with it'

Twitter on Saturday temporarily stopped people from liking and replying to the president’s tweets, with a note that read: ‘We try to prevent a Tweet like this that otherwise breaks the Twitter Rules from reaching more people, so we have disabled most of the ways to engage with it’

On Sunday the president told Fox: ‘They give us very little time. But we caught them, as you know, as fraudulent, dropping ballots, doing so many things, nobody can even believe it.’

Trump again insisted ‘tens of thousands of ballots’ were illegally submitted calling it ‘a rigged election’. 

He added: ‘This wasn’t like a close election. You look at Georgia. We won Georgia big. We won Pennsylvania big. We won Wisconsin big. We won it big.’

Refusing to talk about whether he will attend Biden’s inauguration, Trump added: ‘What happened to this country is we were like a third world country.’ 

There are reports that instead of observing the peaceful transfer on January 20, the president will depart the White House from the South Lawn on Marine One and take one final Air Force One flight to Florida for a rally.

It’s expected that he could use that rally to immediately announce he is running for president in 2024 – setting him up for four years of campaigning during Biden’s term where Trump would surely be his biggest critic.

Supporters of US President Donald Trump participate in the Million MAGA March to protest the outcome of the 2020 presidential election in front of the US Supreme Court on Saturday

Supporters of US President Donald Trump participate in the Million MAGA March to protest the outcome of the 2020 presidential election in front of the US Supreme Court on Saturday 

Texas AG Ken Paxton said: 'It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court decided not to take this case and determine the constitutionality of these four states' failure to follow federal and state election law'

Texas AG Ken Paxton said: ‘It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court decided not to take this case and determine the constitutionality of these four states’ failure to follow federal and state election law’

More than 50 federal and state court rulings have upheld Biden´s victory. Trump has refused to concede defeat, alleging without evidence that he was denied victory by massive fraud.   

A disappointed Texas AG Ken Paxton responded to the result on Twitter, saying: ‘It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court decided not to take this case and determine the constitutionality of these four states’ failure to follow federal and state election law.’

Trump sought to intervene in the case – and 126 Republican House members followed suit, while 17 states signed a friend of the court brief supporting the Texas suit.  

The four states being sued, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Georgia, blasted the suit as ‘legally indefensible and is an affront to principles of constitutional democracy.’ 

And the Supreme Court majority found that Texas lacked ‘standing’ to even bring the case. It also had not demonstrated a ‘judiciably cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts elections.’ 

In other word, Texas failed to demonstrate how it had been harmed by the election procedures in the four states singled out in the suit. 

Trump’s attention on Sunday also turned to the coronavirus and the approval of the Pfizer vaccination. 

The president said: ‘If I wasn’t president – according to almost everybody, even the enemy – if I wasn’t president you wouldn’t have a vaccine for five years.

‘I pushed the FDA and companies and everybody else involved like nobody’s ever been pushed before, and now you have it rolling out.’  

D.C.: The Proud Boys' member was treated for a wound to the stomach before he was taken to hospital

D.C.: The Proud Boys’ member was treated for a wound to the stomach before he was taken to hospital

D.C.: A member of the Proud Boys is stabbed in a confrontation with a counter-protester at around 9.20pm

D.C.: A member of the Proud Boys is stabbed in a confrontation with a counter-protester at around 9.20pm 

D.C: Fireworks are let off in the nation's capital as protester and counter-protesters began to clash on Saturday night

D.C: Fireworks are let off in the nation’s capital as protester and counter-protesters began to clash on Saturday night 

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON: A supporter of Trump receives aid from law enforcement after clashing with counter-protesters

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON: A supporter of Trump receives aid from law enforcement after clashing with counter-protesters

At least four protesters were stabbed Saturday night after violence erupted between the Proud Boys and Black Lives Matter counter-protesters following the second Million MAGA March in Washington D.C. 

The 15,000-strong crowd chanted ‘destroy the GOP’ as they listened to speakers such as conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and Rudy Giuliani’s star fraud witness Melissa Carona, who claimed Trump is the ‘best president we’ve ever had’.

Jones was accused of inciting violence after declaring ‘Joe Biden will be removed, one way or another!’ 

Thousands of the president’s loyal followers had gathered outside the Supreme Court following their Friday decision. 

In Washington state a person was shot amid clashes between pro-Trump demonstrators and counter-protesters.