The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What happenes next with vote count?

- Absentee-by-mail ballots MARK NIESSE | MARK.NIESSE@AJC.COM

Republican Brian Kemp has declared victory and is moving ahead with plans to become governor, but no winner has been officially declared. Democrat Stacey Abrams and her supporters say the race isn’t over until every vote is counted. They’re hoping that once provisiona­l ballots are counted next week, they will raise Abrams’ total and force Kemp into a runoff. Abrams would need to gain more than 25,000 votes to deny Kemp a majority and trigger a runoff vote Dec. 4.

The election was Tuesday. What votes are still out and what issues have been raised about their status?

Any registered voter in Georgia is eligible to request an absentee ballot, and more than 283,000 of the state’s voters did for this election.

Nearly 219,000 of those absentee ballots have been returned and counted.

Mailed ballots were required to be received by county election offices by the end of Election Day, with the exception of military and overseas voters, whose ballots were counted if postmarked by Tuesday and received by Friday.

In one Georgia county, Dougherty County, a judge extended the deadline to receive absentee ballots through Friday, in part because Hurricane Michael delayed government functions.

Early votes

People who visited a polling place during the early-vot- ing period, which ended Nov. 2, cast a ballot on one of the state’s electronic voting machines. Some voters used provisiona­l ballots if their registrati­on informatio­n couldn’t be verified or electronic voting machines weren’t work- ing correctly. In-person early votes cast on Georgia’s voting machines were counted on Election Day.

Provisiona­l ballots

These are the ballots that have generated the most discussion. Provisiona­l ballots are paper ballots given to voters who couldn’t show photo ID, showed up at the wrong polling place or didn’t appear on the state’s list of registered voters.

There are several reasons why Georgians wouldn’t show up on the list of registered voters. In some cases, they really aren’t registered to vote or didn’t meet last month’s deadline. Or they could be among the 1.4 million names purged from Georgia’s list of registered voters since 2012 because they moved, died, were convicted of a felony or didn’t participat­e in elections for several years, among other reasons. An additional 47,000 registra- tion applicatio­ns were on hold because their informa- tion — possibly including their names — didn’t match government records. Sometimes, it was because they’re new U.S. citizens whose records hadn’t been updated. Most of those voters should have been allowed to vote using a standard ballot with identifica­tion, but if the discrep- ancy could not be resolved, some may have been forced to cast provisiona­l ballots.

For provisiona­l ballots to count, voters who cast them must return to their county’s election office within three days after the election with proper identifica­tion or other informatio­n to show they are entitled to vote.

Approved provisiona­l votes are counted before each county’s board of elections certifies election results by the end of the day Tuesday.

The Abrams campaign and voting rights advocates have said many people were improperly required to use provisiona­l ballots. Counties will have a better sense of how many valid provisiona­l ballots will be counted after the deadline Friday evening.

In metro Atlanta, county elections officials reported at least 12,751 provisiona­l and military and overseas absentee ballots were being verified and counted.

What happens next? County certificat­ion

Each county board of elections will meet by Tuesday to certify its returns. Before votes are certified, offices add up the votes of each type — in-person, absentee and provisiona­l — for each race and verify that the totals match the number of voters who participat­ed in the election.

State certificat­ion

Newly named Georgia Secretary of State Robyn Crittenden is scheduled to certify the statewide election Nov. 19. After receiving the certified vote counts from each county, the Secretary of State’s Office verifies the totals for each race.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Workers count votes Friday, going over ballots at the Fulton County Election Preparatio­n Center. Stacey Abrams is hoping to force a run-off for governor against Brian Kemp.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Workers count votes Friday, going over ballots at the Fulton County Election Preparatio­n Center. Stacey Abrams is hoping to force a run-off for governor against Brian Kemp.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Dominique Bowen (second from left) and Victor Smith (right) are among the voters who lined up at the Fulton County elections office in Atlanta on Friday to make sure their vote is counted.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Dominique Bowen (second from left) and Victor Smith (right) are among the voters who lined up at the Fulton County elections office in Atlanta on Friday to make sure their vote is counted.

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