Lodi News-Sentinel

Pennsylvan­ia certifies election results for Biden win

- By Jonathan Lai

PHILADELPH­IA — Pennsylvan­ia’s top elections official certified the state’s presidenti­al election results on Tuesday, officially declaring Joe Biden the winner and paving the way for him to receive the state’s 20 Electoral College votes next month.

Pennsylvan­ia Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar made the final vote counts official, three weeks after the Nov. 3 election: Biden received 3,458,229 votes, 80,555 more than President Donald Trump’s 3,377,674 votes.

Gov. Tom Wolf then signed the Certificat­e of Ascertainm­ent to name the 20 Biden electors who will meet in Harrisburg on Dec. 14.

“Today’s certificat­ion is a testament to the incredible efforts of our local and state election officials, who worked tirelessly to ensure Pennsylvan­ia had a free, fair and accurate process that reflects the will of the voters,” Wolf said in a statement.

The vote certificat­ion is a procedural step that normally goes unnoticed by the general public; by the time the final votes are made official, the winner has been known for weeks. This year, for example, The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons called Pennsylvan­ia for Biden on Saturday, Nov. 7. That made it clear Biden would win a majority in the Electoral College, making him the presidente­lect.

Still, race calls from news organizati­ons — and declaratio­ns of victory or concession­s from candidates — are unofficial. It’s a matter of norms that candidates and the public accept the unofficial results long before they are certified.

Those norms were shattered this year.

Trump has repeatedly falsely attacked the electoral system, especially in Pennsylvan­ia. (“Bad things happen in Philadelph­ia,” he said in the first presidenti­al debate, targeting the city.) He spent months making accusation­s of widespread fraud among mail ballots — before a single one had been cast — and raising absurd claims of election rigging. Hours after polls closed, with millions of votes still uncounted, he falsely declared he had won the presidency and had an insurmount­able lead in Pennsylvan­ia. He then falsely declared he had won Pennsylvan­ia.

Since then, Trump’s attacks on the results of the election have centered on a largely unsuccessf­ul and increasing­ly desperate legal fight, as well as escalating rhetorical attacks that have undermined public confidence.

That has brought new levels of attention to the generally mundane work of election administra­tion. In downtown Philadelph­ia, for example, hundreds of people protested, partied, and demonstrat­ed for days outside the Pennsylvan­ia Convention Center as officials quietly, carefully counted mail ballots. A livestream of the city’s vote count drew thousands of viewers at a time and was broadcast on national and internatio­nal news segments.

The certificat­ion of votes, in Pennsylvan­ia and elsewhere, has similarly drawn unusual levels of public scrutiny.

In Michigan, Republican elections officials in Detroit’s Wayne County initially refused to approve of the votes, deadlockin­g with Democratic officials before reversing course hours later. Trump afterward reportedly called the Republican­s directly, prompting them to unsuccessf­ully try to rescind their votes and block certificat­ion. Trump also met with top Republican state lawmakers from Michigan in what Democrats and others feared would lead to an effort to somehow overturn the state’s results. Michigan certified its results Monday.

Similar fears have surrounded Pennsylvan­ia’s election results.

Fears of some kind of Republican attempted coup have been high since The Atlantic published an article in September saying Republican­s have been quietly planning ways to seat electors regardless of the will of the voters.

The Republican­s quoted in that article have said their words were taken out of context, and the Republican leader of the state Senate says the electors are chosen by the people, but fears of the state legislatur­e making an end-run around the election results remain.

 ?? JEFF SWENSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Election officials proceed with the counting of ballots at the Allegheny County elections warehouse on Nov. 6 in Pittsburgh.
JEFF SWENSEN/GETTY IMAGES Election officials proceed with the counting of ballots at the Allegheny County elections warehouse on Nov. 6 in Pittsburgh.

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