RE:RE:RE:Impact of the ElectionThe Constitution mandates that States choose their electors based on laws passed by the State Legislators. That did not happen in several States this year, as judges dictated changes to those laws very late in the game. Judges may advise that the laws need to be reviewed and updated by the legislatures, but not actually dictate the new rules. And so all of those cases will probably be under review, especially the ones that added 7 - 9 days to the counting process and those that dropped the requirements that the signatures on the votes must match the person who is voting (yes, that requirement was actually dropped in some States), or dropped other requirements that might allow votes to be disqualified, such as postmarks by election day (yes, some States changed the rules so that votes postmarked after election day should be counted). Some of those new rules had already been invalidated by court appeals, but some were implemented.
For States where the end vote is very close, State laws mandate recounts. Those will be subject to very close scrutiny and challenges, some of which could end up in court.
Any specific fraud situations that are discovered by Trump attorneys will result in legal actions. There are already many cases of votes from Republican areas being dumped, in one case a batch was found buried in the dessert (I think Arizona).
Virtually no votes came in for Trump after 3a.m. this morning. Hundreds of thousands came in for Biden in Michigan and Wisconsin.
One of Trump's many unfortunate comments related to Senator McCain during the 2016 primaries. It reflected badly on the perception of how he felt about service folks and came back at him in this campaign. As it relates to Arizona however, there was a large demographic movement in Arizona, probably more pronounced than any other State. Hispanics voted more heavily for Trump, but more than offset by larger numbers of progressives moving into the Phoenix area from California.