Chattanooga Times Free Press

Officials recommend state to OK Biden win

- BY ED WHITE

DETROIT — Michigan’s elections agency on Friday recommende­d that the Nov. 3 results be certified next week by state canvassers, a decision that would bless Joe Biden’s victory over President Donald Trump but likely not cool partisan strife over the vote.

The recommenda­tion was posted online with the formal Monday meeting notice of the Board of State Canvassers. The guidance came at the end of a stormy week in which Trump summoned Republican state lawmakers to the White House on Friday in an extraordin­ary effort to try to set aside Biden’s 154,000-vote victory.

On Tuesday, GOP canvassers in Michigan’s largest county, Wayne, refused to certify local results but then changed their position after hours of intense public criticism over Zoom. Then after talking to Trump, they said a day later they were rescinding their previous vote but it was too late.

The state Bureau of Elections said all of Michigan’s 83 counties have sent their certified results to Lansing.

“As in past elections, some jurisdicti­ons made errors in reporting unofficial results on election night,” the staff memo said. “These errors are all attributab­le to human error in the operation of tools used to report unofficial results, did not affect the actual tabulation of votes and were identified and corrected either prior to or during the county canvass.”

Biden defeated Trump by more than 150,000 votes, according to unofficial returns, while Democratic U. S. Sen. Gary Peters defeated Republican

John James by more than 90,000 votes.

At least 71.9% of Detroit precincts were balanced, meaning the number of ballots matched the number of names in a poll book, a “substantia­l improvemen­t” over the August primary, the Bureau of Elections said.

Trump gained a higher percentage of votes in Detroit compared to 2016. His performanc­e, as well as James’, undermines the “suggestion that irregulari­ties affecting the outcome of the election occurred on any significan­t scale,” the bureau said.

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