The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. recount confirms Biden win

With second count over, state offifficia­ls expected to certify election today.

- Mark Niesse mark. niesse@ ajc. com Jennifer Peebles jennifer. peebles@ ajc. com and David Wickert dwickert@ ajc. com

A manual recount of nearly 5 million ballots cast in Georgia showed Thursday that Joe Biden won the presidenti­al election, validating initial results.

The recount found that Biden received 12,284 more votes than President Donald Trump.

Secretary of State Brad Raffffffff­ffffensper­ger plans to certify the election by today, a deadline set by state law to fifinalize results.

The hand recount, which also f unctioned as an audit of t he elec ti on, mostly aligned with initial machine counts. It also uncovered almost 6,000 ballots in four counties that had been overlooked in the initial t ally, resulting in Trump closing his defificit to Biden by 1,400 votes.

Both counts found the same outcome: Thousands more voters in Georgia chose Biden than

Trump.

In addition to the votes Trump gained from the newly discovered ballots, he also picked up nearly 500 additional votes in the manual tally. The machine count showed Trump trailing by 12,780 votes.

The recount and audit, ordered by Raffensper­ger last week, was a major effort to verify the results of the presidenti­al election. He sought there count following political pressure from Trump allies who questioned Georgia’s results.

“Georgia’s historic first statewide audit reaffirmed that the state’ s new secure paper ballot voting system accurately counted and reported results,” said Raffensper­ger, a Republican. “This is a credit to the hard work of our county and local elections officials who moved quickly to undertake and complete such a momentous task in a short period of time.”

The Associated Press called the race in Georgia for Biden soon after the recount was completed. Several other major media outlets projected Biden would win last Friday.

The hand re count showed small difference­s from the original machine count, which election officials said they expected.

In all, there were 126 counties within 10 votes of their original vote tally, according to the audit data. Of those counties, 54 counties matched their initial results exactly. No county had an error rate higher than 0.73% compared with their original results.

Initial election results were produced by optical scanners that read either bar codes on printed-out paper ballots or filled- in ovals on absentee ballots.

The recount reviewed every ballot by hand, with humans reading the printed text or ovals on each ballot across Georgia’s 159 counties.

Bi denis on track to receive Georgia’s 16 votes in the Electoral College, which will meet Dec. 14 to cast its ballots for president.

“We’ve been saying from the beginning that the results of this audit would show that Joe Biden won this race,” said Maggie Chambers, a spokeswoma­n for the Democratic Party of Georgia.

The Trump campaign bashed Georgia’ s recount because it didn’t include another verificati­on of voter signatures on absentee ballot envelopes. Election workers checked signatures when absentee ballots are received, but signature matching is impossible during recounts because ballot envelopes can’t be traced back to ballots. The Georgia Constituti­on guarantees ballot secrecy.

“Whatever the count in Georgia today is, it’s totally ridiculous,” said Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal attorney, during a nationally televised news conference earlier in the day. “They’re counting the same fraudulent ballots

one more time, and we’re still very close.”

An effort by a Trump supporter to block Georgia from finalizing its results fell short in federal court Thursday.

U.S. District Judge Steven Grimberg, a Trump appointee, found no justificat­ion to halt certificat­ion of election results based on allegation­s of impropriet­ies by attorney L. Lin Wood, the plaintiff in the case.

The hand- count audit made clear that mistakes that resulted in missed votes the first time around didn’t affect the outcome of the election, said Aunna Dennis, executive director of Common Cause Georgia, a government accountabi­lity organizati­on. Most of the overlooked votes were stored on memory cards that county election officials failed to load after election night.

“It’s important to keep those mistakes in perspectiv­e: Humans make mistakes. That’s why Georgia has a risk-limiting audit process, to look for these types of mistakes and double- check that the election outcome is correct,” Dennis said.

Gwinnett County had a large difference in its manual recount, with 1,642 more ballots counted than were scanned by machine. The additional votes benefited Trump, netting him 285 more votes.

There could be another recount next week. Under Georgia law, candidates have the right to request a machine recount after certificat­ion if they lost by less than half a percentage point. Trump was trailing Biden by about 0.3 percentage point. The cost of the recounts will be paid by taxpayers.

If the next recount finds the original count was incorrect, the results of the election would be recertifie­d, according to state law.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Cobb County elections workers tally and sort ballots Tuesday at Jim Miller Park Event Center in Marietta in a recount of presidenti­al votes. The recount reviewed every ballot by hand, with humans reading the printed text or ovals on each ballot across Georgia’s 159 counties.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Cobb County elections workers tally and sort ballots Tuesday at Jim Miller Park Event Center in Marietta in a recount of presidenti­al votes. The recount reviewed every ballot by hand, with humans reading the printed text or ovals on each ballot across Georgia’s 159 counties.

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