"Similarly, on Dec. 12, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a long-shot lawsuit by the state of Texas and backed by Trump, which sought to throw out voting results in four states ( here ). In a brief order, the justices said Texas did not have legal standing to bring the case." -- Reuters. It was not just Texas either. "17 states and Trump join Texas' lawsuit. It's still a doomed Supreme Court stunt." -- NBC News.
The solemn duty of the Supreme Court was to examine the actual evidence. "2000 Mules" is just one example, but there was a lot of other evidence including what was done with the voting machines. However, the case was not organized properly and documented properly in detail (with the actual videos showing fraud) and that should have been a top priority for Trump and all those states. They all could have worked on this jointly to make a solid case, and if SCOTUS refused to examine that, they could have been published the full report for all to see. That would have embarressed SCOTUS.
The Supreme Court could have easily set up an independent commission to thoroughly investigate what happened. And the evidence would have proved the reality. If there was no evidence that too would have been reported. But for SCOTUS to claim that states had "no standing" was completely bogus, and they knew it.