- If Earth would have a significant total charge, the "gravitational attraction" would depend on the charge of objects. It does not. In particular, ions with opposite charge should feel an opposite force - which is wrong.
- Contact two metallic objects. They are now uncharged or have the same type of charge (-> repulsive force). They will attract due to gravity.
- Earth and moon attract each other. If this would come from an electric charge, they would have opposite charge. In the same way, sun and Earth would need opposite charge, therefore moon and sun would have the same charge and a repulsive force between them. This is wrong, their force is attractive, too. You can do the same as lab experiment with 3 objects.And if you propose some new force just depending on the total amount of charges (which was actually discussed at some point in the past, but did not work):
- Objects with a different (total charge)/(total mass) ratio would fall with a different acceleration. They do not.
- General relativity would not work in this way. You would not get the same deflection / red shift of light and so on.