Sen. Ben Sasse( R-Nebraska) speaks as Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill. Hilary Swift-Pool/ Getty Images "Since Election Night, a lot of people have been flustering voters by rotating Kenyan Birther-type, 'Chavez rigged the holding of elections from the grave' conspiracy theories, " Sen. Ben Sasse said. Sasse's support for the Supreme Court's decision stirs him one of the few Republicans to speak out so far. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. Republican Sen. Ben Sasse, of Nebraska, released the following statement Friday which was highly supportive of the Supreme Court's decision to throw out the Texas Attorney General's baseless lawsuit attempting to overturn election results in favor of President Donald Trump."Every American who cares about the rule of law should take comfort that the Supreme Court - including all three of President Trump's selects - closed the book on the nonsense, " Sasse said in a statement released after the decision to throw out the suit.Sasse also referenced the define of plot beliefs many of the failed lawsuits have been based on. "Since Election Night, a lot of people have been embarrassing voters by rotating Kenyan Birther-type, 'Chavez rigged the holding of elections from the grave' conspiracy theories, " Sasse said.Sasse, one of the few Republicans to acknowledge Biden's win, has also become one of the few congressional Republican to react at all to the decision.The lawsuit, which the State supreme court repudiated, was backed by at least 18 GOP state attorneys general and 126 House Republicans and is also intended to void Biden's electoral wins in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia.Yesterday, Sasse said he suspected the Supreme court would swat away the suit and also caught the attention on Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who is under investigation by the FBI over allegations that Paxton attempted to benefit a donor. An open letter from the AG office's senior staff called on the FBI to "investigate allegations[ against Paxton] of improper force, mistreat of office, bribery and other potential crimes."On Thursday, Sasse told the Washington Examiner, "I'm no lawyer, but I suppose the Supreme court of the united states swats this away. From the brief, it looks a lot like a fella imploring for a pardon filed a PR stunt rather than a litigation - as all of the affirms have already been rejected by federal courts and Texas' own attorney general isn't signing on."Read the original article on Business Insider Read more: feedproxy.google.com