I'd be pissed off that my local officials fucked up and got my votes thrown out, and I'd move to vote them out at the next opportunity. If something passes through the judicial system and makes a good, legal argument for it I just shrug and keep moving ahead. Hence why I didn't flip any tables when the Supreme Court threw Texas' lawsuit into the dumpster on the grounds that it had no standing to dictate how another state runs its elections.
I don't like the ruling, I don't like the results, I don't like that we didn't get to see the arguments being presented in Texas' lawsuit making their way through the court, but it was a Constitutionally-sound ruling, so there's not much sense in bitching about it. The Supreme Court didn't fuck that up, Texas did, so I'm frustrated with Texas and not the Supreme Court. In this instance I'm frustrated with the court itself, because I think the ruling is ridiculous and it doesn't even attempt to make a legal argument, it just says that fraud or the potential for fraud is fine, so long as everyone believes it's not fraudulent.
That's a bit silly.