There is no Constitutional prohibition to decertification of State Electors ... In fact, ALL POWERS not delegated to the Federal Government nor prohibited to the States are reserved to the States or the People. See: 10th Amendment - The Bill of Rights (weebly.com)
After some thought and research, it appears that the power to 'Decertify Electors' is a reserved power for the States and the People... The simple fact is that the States, not the people, or Congress, Elect the President. Our founders wanted the States to control the election of the President. Thus, they placed a check on the potential abuse of Federal Power by creating the Electoral College, and a system of checks and balances, that gave the States control over the election of a President. The State Electors belong to the State and must act per the State's governing body and law... not Congress or Federal Power.
Hence, whenever the Electoral vote is corrupted and no candidate for President receives the requisite number of Electoral votes... the election of the President falls to the STATE DELIGATIONS in the House of Representatives... one vote per STATE. The State's congressional delegation is the expression of the State's Constitutional power to Elect the President. See:12th Amendment | U.S. Constitution | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute (cornell.edu)
The Congress's failure to hear all of the challenges to the seating of Fraudulent Electors is grounds to DECERTIFY the Election... and to reconvene a Joint Session of Congress, to tabulate the legal Electoral vote... not the Fraudulent vote. This of course is Constitutional theory, as the Constitution doesn't provide SPECIFIC provisions for such an argument or event. The Courts would probably need to decide on the Constitutional issues for such an argument... which means, we would likely lose the legal argument, as the courts have proven to be biased and protective of FEDERAL POWER... not necessarily Constitutional intent.
We need to press the several States, where fraud turned the election... too, decertify their elections and their Electoral Vote... sending the election of our President to the House of Representatives where the STATE's DELIGATION get to cast one vote for President. The candidate receiving a majority vote becomes the next President.
The first four Presidents of the United States were elected by state delegations in the House... It is one of the constitutional checks and balances for defeating FRAUDULENT elections and limiting Federal Power. The election of presidents was to be the primary prerogative of the States. This power along with the election and or appointment of US Senators by States was to be a primary check on the balance of power between the States and the Federal Government ... with the States holding the supreme power in our Republic. We must restore those powers starting with honoring a state's right to decertify its electors, WHENEVER Fraud determines the outcome of elections.
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