The Denver Post

Voter certificat­ion is targeted by president in bid to block Biden

- By Zeke Miller, Christina A. Cassidy and Colleen Long

WASHINGTON » Getting nowhere in the courts, President Donald Trump’s scattersho­t effort to overturn President- elect Joe Biden’s victory is shifting toward obscure election boards that certify the vote as Trump and his allies seek to upend the electoral process, sow chaos and perpetuate unsubstant­iated doubts about the count.

The battle is centered in the battlegrou­nd states that sealed Biden’s win.

In Michigan, two Republican election officials in the state’s largest county initially refused to certify results despite no evidence of fraud.

In Arizona, officials are balking at signing off on vote tallies in a rural county.

The moves don’t reflect a coordinate­d effort across the battlegrou­nd states that broke for Biden, local election officials said. Instead, they seem to be inspired by Trump’s baseless, incendiary rhetoric about fraud and driven by Republican

acquiescen­ce to broadsides against the nation’s electoral system as state and federal courts push aside legal challenges filed by Trump and his allies.

Still what happened in Wayne County, Mich., on Tuesday was a jarring reminder of the disruption­s that can still be caused as the nation works through the process of affirming the outcome of the Nov. 3 election.

There is no precedent for the Trump team’s widespread effort to delay or undermine certificat­ion, according to University of Kentucky law professor Joshua Douglas.

“It would be the end of democracy as we know it,” Douglas said. “This is just not a thing that can happen.”

Certifying results is a routine yet important step after local election officials have tallied votes, reviewed procedures, checked to ensure votes were counted correctly and investigat­ed discrepanc­ies. Typically, this certificat­ion is done by a local board of elections and then, later, the results are certified at the state level.

But as Trump has refused to concede to Biden and continues to spread false claims of victory, this mundane process is taking on new significan­ce.

Among key battlegrou­nd states, counties in Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin have all made it through the initial step of certifying results. Except for Wayne County, this process largely has been smooth. Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia and Georgia still haven’t concluded their local certificat­ions.

Then all eyes turn to statewide certificat­ion.

In Wayne County, the two Republican canvassers at first balked at certifying the vote then reversed course after widespread condemnati­on — but not before Trump praised their actions. A person familiar with the matter said Trump reached out to the canvassers, Monica Palmer and William Hartmann, on Tuesday evening after the revised vote to express gratitude for their support.

Time is running short for Trump. Across the nation, recounts and court challenges must wrap up and election results be certified by Dec. 8. That’s the constituti­onal deadline before the Electoral College meeting the following week.

Matt Morgan, the Trump campaign’s general counsel, said last week the campaign was trying to halt certificat­ion in battlegrou­nd states until it could get a better handle on vote tallies and whether it would have the right to automatic recounts. But Trump does not meet any recount requiremen­ts.

Some in the president’s orbit have held out hope that by delaying certificat­ion, GOP- controlled legislatur­es will get a chance to select different electors, either overturnin­g Biden’s victory or sending it to the House, where he would almost surely win.

But most advisers to the president consider that a fever dream. Trump’s team has been incapable of organizing even basic legal activities since the election, let alone the wide- scale political and legal apparatus needed to convince state legislator­s to try to undermine the will of their states’ voters.

Lawsuits have been filed by Trump allies in Michigan and Nevada seeking to stop certificat­ion. Trump personal attorney Rudy Giuliani argued to stop vote certificat­ion in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday, the first time he had been in a courtroom in decades. And the same day, the Arizona Republican Party asked a judge to bar Maricopa County, the state’s most populous, from certifying until the court issues a decision about the party’s lawsuit seeking a new hand count of a sampling of ballots.

The party also is putting pressure on county officials across the state to delay certificat­ion, even though there hasn’t been any evidence of legitimate questions about the vote tally showing that Biden won Arizona.

“The party is pushing for not only the county supervisor­s but everyone responsibl­e for certifying and canvassing the election to make sure that all questions are answered so that voters will have confidence in the results of the election,” said Zach Henry, spokesman for the Arizona Republican Party.

While most counties in Arizona are pressing ahead with certificat­ion, officials in Mohave County decided to delay until Nov. 23, citing what they said was uncertaint­y about the fate of election challenges across the country.

“There are lawsuits all over the place on everything, and that’s part of the reason why I’m in no big hurry to canvass the election,” Mohave County Supervisor Ron Gould said Monday.

Officials in all of Georgia’s 159 counties were supposed to have certified their results by last Friday. But a few have yet to certify as the state works through a hand tally of some 5 million votes.

“They are overwhelme­d, and they are trying to get to everything,” said Gabriel Sterling, a top official with the Georgia secretary of state’s office. “Some of these are smaller, less-resourced counties, and there are only so many people who can do so many things.”

In addition, a few counties must recertify their results after previously uncounted votes were discovered during the audit.

Once counties have certified, the focus turns to officials at the state level who are charged with signing off on the election. This varies by state. For instance, a bipartisan panel in Michigan certifies elections, but in Georgia it’s the responsibi­lity of the elected secretary of state, who has faced calls by fellow Republican­s to resign.

In Nevada, Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske’s role in certificat­ion is largely ministeria­l, but she still got a batch of emails urging her not to certify “potentiall­y fraudulent election results.”

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