Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FORGET RECOUNT and work for change, Clinton camp urges Democrats.

Clinton aides tell supporters to focus on less futile causes

- LISA LERER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Eggert, Scott Bauer and Todd Richmond of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton’s aides and supporters are urging Democrats to channel their frustratio­ns about the election results into political causes and not into efforts to recount ballots in three battlegrou­nd states.

The former presidenti­al candidate and her close aides see the recount drive largely as a waste of resources, according to people close to Clinton. The effort is being fueled by Green Party candidate Jill Stein, who’s formed an organizati­on to try to force recounts in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia.

“Believe me if there was anything I could do to make Hillary Clinton the next president of the United States I would,” said former Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Ed Rendell, a longtime Clinton supporter. “But this is a big waste of time.”

Aides say Clinton is focused on moving past her unexpected defeat and has devoted little attention to the recount or thinking about her political future. She’s been spending time with her grandchild­ren and going for walks near her Westcheste­r home. Sightings of Clinton hiking with her dogs and shopping at a Rhode Island bookstore went viral on social media.

“There have been a few times this past week where all I wanted to do was curl up with a good book and our dogs and never leave the house again,” Clinton said in a speech at a gala for the Children’s Defense Fund, her one public appearance since her loss.

Former President Bill Clinton, meanwhile, has been poring over the election results, second-guessing decisions by top campaign aides and intensely trying to figure out how his wife lost the white working-class voters who were the base of his electoral coalition, say people familiar with the campaign.

Clinton’s team was aware of possible discrepanc­ies soon after the election, telling top donors on a conference call four days after the election that they were looking into potential problems in the three states.

But while many campaign staff members believe Russian hacking influenced the outcome of the election, blaming foreign actors for incursions into campaign and Democratic National Committee emails, they’ve found no evidence of the kind of widespread ballot box tampering that would change the results of the race — or even flip a single state.

Still, some dejected Clinton supporters have been unwilling to accept the results. Stein has raised $6.5 million for her recount campaign, according to a count posted on her campaign website on Tuesday. That’s nearly double the roughly $3.5 million she raised during her entire presidenti­al bid.

Some former Clinton aides have asked frustrated supporters to donate their dollars to what they view as more constructi­ve causes, like state parties or the Democratic candidate in Louisiana, where a Dec. 10 runoff will be the party’s last chance to pick up a Senate seat this year.

“I wouldn’t give a dollar to Jill Stein,” said Adam Parkhomenk­o, a longtime Clinton aide. “Volunteers, supporters and Democrats, they want to pick themselves up and get back out there. The best vehicle to do that is the Louisiana Senate race.”

Clinton’s team conducted an exhaustive investigat­ion into the possibilit­y of outside interferen­ce in the vote tally, tasking lawyers, data scientists and political analysts to comb over the results.

They contacted outside experts, examined the laws governing recounts and double-checked all the vote tallies.

The campaign found no “evidence of manipulati­on,” wrote Marc Elias, the general counsel for Clinton’s campaign, in an online essay. But, he said, Clinton agreed to minimal participat­ion in Stein’s effort, largely to make sure that her interests are represente­d. They put out a call for volunteers to monitor the proceeding­s and are relying on local lawyers to handle filings and other legal matters.

Clinton is under pressure to participat­e from her supporters, some of whom have struggled to accept the election results given her lead in the popular vote, which has grown to more than 2.3 million in the weeks after the Nov. 8 election.

“Now that a recount is underway, we believe we have an obligation to the more than 64 million Americans who cast ballots for Hillary Clinton to participat­e in ongoing proceeding­s to ensure that an accurate vote count will be reported,” Elias wrote.

Clinton’s lawyers filed motions with a Wisconsin judge on Tuesday looking to join Stein’s lawsuit demanding that Wisconsin officials recount ballots by hand. The state elections commission will formally begin the recount today.

Stein’s organizati­on also has filed for recounts in six of Pennsylvan­ia’s largest counties and filed a petition demanding a Michigan recount.

Trump defeated Clinton by about 10,700 votes out of nearly 4.8 million ballots cast in Michigan, or two-tenths of a percentage point. But Stein alleges that irregulari­ties and the possibilit­y that vote scanning devices could have been hacked call the results into question. Elections officials in all three states have expressed confidence in the results.

Michigan’s recount could start as early as Friday, though a challenge to the recount by Trump may delay it.

“We simply won’t know if there was hacking or interferen­ce in this election unless we look at the votes — every vote systematic­ally, impartiall­y and by hand,” Jessica Clarke, a lawyer for the Stein campaign, said during a news conference outside of the Michigan Bureau of Elections.

“It’s election-law malpractic­e to not have your lawyers sitting around the table with Jill Stein’s lawyers,” said Adam Ambrogi, elections program director at the bipartisan Democracy Fund. “It is just due diligence.”

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