The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Recount integrity faces attack

Workers push tomeet Wednesday deadline

- By Alan Judd alan.judd@ajc.com

President Donald Trump and his allies spread false claims about Georgia’s election recount Saturday, attacking a process conducted bymembers of the president’s own party at his request.

Top Georgia Republican­s, including Gov. Brian Kemp, declined to rebut Trump’s allegation­s.

But other prominent Republican­s, such as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, advanced Trump’s claims, and right-wing media outlets amplified the message. A commentato­r on the conservati­ve website Newsmax described Georgia’s recount — a ballot-by-ballot review of nearly 5 million votes that entered its second day Saturday

— as “a sham and a hoax and a fix.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican who is Georgia’s chief election offifficer, acknowledg­ed what he called “misinforma­tion that has circulated in social media.” But in a statement released by his offiffice, Raffensper­ger did not mention Trump by name.

The attacks on the recount’s integrity came one day after national news organizati­ons called Georgia in favor of President-elect Joe Biden. He beat Trump by 14,122 votes, becoming the fifirst Democrat to carry the state since 1992.

Raffensper­ger ordered the unpreceden­ted recount a day after receiving a demand for a review from Trump’s campaign,

although he said he made the decision on his own.

No irregulari­ties or significan­t tabulation errors emerged during the first two days of the recount, officials said Saturday. And even if the Georgia outcome were reversed, Biden still would have enough electoral votes fromother states to capture the presidency.

Allegation­s of fraud

Trump launched his attack Saturday morning just as the recount got underway for a second day.

In Twitter posts accented by capital letters and exclamatio­n marks, Trump criticized Raffensper­ger’s settlement last spring of a lawsuit filed by the Democratic Party of Georgia, which tightened procedures for rejecting absentee ballots over the legitimacy of a voter’s signature. Trump claimed Kemp approved the settlement “at the urging” of Stacey Abrams, the 2018Democr­atic nominee for governor.

Neither Kempn or Abrams was a party to the lawsuit or signed the settlement agreement.

Neverthele­ss, Trump also alleged, without evidence, that the settlement “makes it impossible to check& match signatures on ballots and envelopes, etc.”

“They knew they were going to cheat,” Trump wrote. “Must expose real signatures.”

“What are they trying to hide,” he added in a second tweet. “They know, and so does everyone else. EXPOSE THE CRIME!”

The tweets mis represente­d the process for handling absentee ballots in Georgia and other states. Recounts

never attempt to match ballots to specific voters in the manner Trump appeared to advocate. State and federal laws guarantee ballot secrecy.

In Georgia, voters insert marked absentee ballots into an official envelope, to which they add their signature. Election workers verify the signature against voter-registrati­on records, then remove the ballot and segregate it from the envelope. If the signature does not appear to match, the ballot is set aside, although voters can take steps to prove their identities before the election results are certified.

The lawsuit’s settlement required an additional review before an election worker could reject a ballot.

Trump’s allies seized on his allegation of absentee-ballot fraud.

Gingrich, the former Georgia congressma­n, wrote on Twitter half an hour after Trump’s first tweets that

state legislator­s should not approve delegates to the Electoral College “until there is a full and clear recount that is honest and not rigged. The people of Georgia do not have to tolerate a flawed election.”

Gingrich offered no evidence of wrong doing. But he asserted that Raffensper­ger’s “continuing failure to protect citizens of Georgia’s right to (an) honest election” merited legislativ­e interventi­on.

Trump supporters who rallied outside the state Capitol on Saturday echoed the president’s contention that the election was rigged. Many carried signs denouncing Kemp and Raffensper­ger as “RINOs” — Republican­s in name only, an insult that Trump hurled against them Friday. Protesters said they would return weekly until Trump is declared the winner.

But at Piedmont Park in midtown Atlanta, a handful of people gathered to

encourage Trump to leave office immediatel­y.

“This is a rolling coup,” organizer Tee Smith said of Trump’s effort to change the election results. “That is why we have to come out and demandthat they leave now. They need to be stopped.”

‘It takes a lot’

Undeterred by the political turmoil, 130 two-person teams assembled inside the World Congress Center early Saturday to begin a manual recount of Fulton County’s presidenti­al votes.

Fulton Commission Chairman Robb Pitts came to deliver a pep talk that defended the work of the pollworker­s, county employees and volunteers conducting the recount.

“Unfortunat­e circumstan­ces in the 2020 election have brought us to this point,” Pitts, a Democrat, told election workers. “But as a result of your work today, I’m confident, once again, that Fulton County, Georgia, will continue to shine. I’ve been involved in audits, recounts, et cetera, through out my political career, and I do not anticipate any significan­t changes as a result of your work today.”

In an interview, Pitts said that although he had heard no credible reports of fraud, he recognized that the recount might identify a handful of ballots thatwere counted inaccurate­ly.

“But enough to change the outcome?” he said. “No.”

Rick Barron, Fulton’s election director, said signatures on absentee ballots had been carefully verified before votes were counted. “The process has already been done once ,” Barron said. “There’s no reason to do it again.”

He said Fulton might complete its recount today. Other metro Atlanta counties moved steadily through their ballots Saturday, facing a deadline of 11:59 p.m. Wednesday to complete their work. In each county, observers from both the Democratic and Republican parties watched from inside the counting rooms, as did monitors fromthe Carter Center — who nor mally keep tabs on elections in countries with more fragile democracie­s.

In DeKalb County, teams will work through theweekend and should finish the recount by Monday evening, election director Erica Hamilton said.

“It’s been a smooth process,” she said. “We just want tomake sure we have enough time to get it done.”

Gwinnett County’s election director, Kristi Royston, said no problems had surfaced so far.

“Everything seems to be going smoothly,” she said. “It’s a lot of paper to go through, and it takes a lot to get it done.”

Trump’s attacks, though, loomed over the recount, as officials tried to work with both speed and care.

Late Saturday afternoon, Trump wrote on Twitter that the Georgia’s recount “is a waste of time” and urged the count be suspended until observers are allowed to examine voters’ signatures.

Then, as several counties wrapped up the recount for the day, he tweeted again:

“There is tremendous evidence of wide spread voter fraud in that there is irrefutabl­e proof that our Republican poll watchers and observers were not allowed to be present in poll counting rooms,” hewrote. “Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia and others. Unconstitu­tional!”

Twitter, however, added a disclaimer: “This claim about election fraud is disputed.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC ?? DeKalb County electionwo­rkers in Stonecrest sort presidenti­al election ballots as part of the statewide recount by hand of the vote Saturday.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC DeKalb County electionwo­rkers in Stonecrest sort presidenti­al election ballots as part of the statewide recount by hand of the vote Saturday.
 ?? JOHN AMIS FOR THE AJC ?? An observer monitors the process as votes for president are recounted at theGwinnet­t County elections office Friday in Lawrencevi­lle.
JOHN AMIS FOR THE AJC An observer monitors the process as votes for president are recounted at theGwinnet­t County elections office Friday in Lawrencevi­lle.

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