Chicago Sun-Times

Detroit-area county certifies vote after first blocking it

- BY ED WHITE

DETROIT — Michigan’s largest county reversed course and unanimousl­y certified its presidenti­al election results Tuesday night after Republican­s first blocked the move in a party-line vote that threatened to temporaril­y stall official approval of Democrat Joe Biden’s win in the state.

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers acted after the 2-2 tie was condemned by Democrats and election experts as a dangerous attempt to overthrow the will of voters.

The board met after days of unsuccessf­ul litigation filed by Republican poll challenger­s and President Donald Trump’s allies. They claimed fraud during absentee ballot counting at a Detroit convention center, but two judges found no evidence and refused to stop the canvassing process.

Biden crushed Trump in Wayne County, a Democratic stronghold, by more than a 2-1 margin and won the state by 146,000 votes, according to unofficial results.

The canvassers first rejected certificat­ion of the Detroit-area vote with a tie. Monica Palmer, a Republican on the board, said poll books in certain Detroit precincts were out of balance. In response, Jonathan Kinloch, a Democrat, said it was “reckless and irresponsi­ble” to not certify the results.

“It’s not based upon fraud. It’s absolutely human error,” Kinloch said of any discrepanc­ies. “Votes that are cast are tabulated.”

The board then listened to a parade of spectators blasting Palmer and fellow Republican William Hartmann during the meeting’s public comment period over Zoom.

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