Times-Herald (Vallejo)

AP explains:

Presidenti­al election’s validity, integrity intact despite Trump’s claims to contrary

- By Nomaan Merchant

The U. S. presidenti­al election was not tainted by widespread voter fraud or irregulari­ties in how ballots were counted, despite a huge effort by President Donald Trump to prove otherwise.

In refusing to concede the election, Trump claims that he would have won were it not for “illegal” votes counted in several states that he lost or where he is currently trailing. But Trump and his allies haven’t offered any proof and their legal challenges have largely been rejected by the courts.

Nonpartisa­n investigat­ions of previous elections have found that voter fraud is exceedingl­y rare. State officials from both parties, as well as internatio­nal observers, have also stated that the 2020 election went well.

More than 150 million people voted in the presidenti­al election. As of Tuesday morning, one week after the election, Biden had received almost 5 million more votes than Trump.

Biden is projected to have 290 votes in the Electoral College to Trump’s 214, according to The Associated Press’ analysis of vote counts in all 50 states. The AP has not yet determined the winner in Alaska, Georgia or North Carolina.

Of the states Trump has most targeted as allegedly tainted by fraud, Biden holds small but significan­t leads in all of them. The Democrat leads in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin.

Several states successful­ly enacted voting measures during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The Democratic stronghold of California improved its mail-in balloting system, for example, and delivered as expected for Biden. But Trump easily won reliably Republican Nebraska, North Dakota and Montana, all states that also significan­tly expanded vote-by-mail this year.

Two decades after it was at the center of a disputed recount, Florida adopted early voting and allowed voters to cast absentee ballots without having an excuse. The AP called Florida for Trump at 12:35 a.m. Wednesday.

Vote counting was slow in three Midwestern states that went for Trump four years ago and flipped to Biden this time: the socalled “blue wall” of Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. That’s because of an increase in mail-in ballots, which the Biden campaign pushed its supporters to use as a safety measure due to the pandemic. Trump baselessly argued that mailin ballots were subject to fraud and encouraged his supporters to show up to vote in person on Election Day.

As a result, Trump led all three states in Election Day voting, but those leads were erased as mail-in votes were counted.

All three states largely ignored advice from nonpartisa­n observers to expand the window for counting mail-in ballots before Election Day. Michigan gave election officials one day, and Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin did not allow counting beforehand. All three states have Republican legislatur­es.

The Trump campaign has filed more than a dozen lawsuits in at least five states.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the campaign has challenged the state Supreme Court ruling allowing election officials to accept mail-in ballots up to three days after the election as long as they were postmarked on Election Day. Trump has also sued over campaign observers allegedly being blocked from witnessing vote tallying in Pennsylvan­ia. And he’s challenged the secretary of state instructin­g counties that voters whose absentee ballots were rejected could cast a provisiona­l ballot.

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