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I thought states needed to certify before it got to Congress? This would be not sending any results period so the VP isn't involved yet. Least that's my understanding.
Well there's nothing in the constitution or law that says "if the electoral college is too gunked up to work, we go to a single vote per state." The Electoral Count Act of 1887 lays out rules for how it's supposed to be done. The plan in 2020 was for Mike Pence to claim the ECA was unconstitutional and throw it to a 1 vote per state assembly, since the extra (fake) electors from some states were muddying the waters. He didn't do it because his lawyers and advisors convinced him that he didn't have that power under the law.
I'm no expert, but it seems like best they can do by refusing to certify at the state level is probably just to slow things down. There's really no viable way that gumming up the works will end with Trump in the White House without having actually won.
According to Wikipedia a candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win, if no one gets 270 votes then it goes to the other vote. All I'm saying is one avenue I've read about is they are trying to have enough people in place to ensure the Democratic candidate can't get the electoral votes to win to force the house to vote by not certifying their states's results.
I'm not saying it's likely or possible, that's beyond my knowledge of the process so I really have no clue, but that's slightly different than the VP not certifying the votes though it's the same end result.