
Presidential race official recount gets underway in Georgia
County election workers across Georgia on Tuesday began a machine recount of the roughly 5 million votes cast in the presidential race in the state, just days after completing a hand tally that confirmed President-elect Joe Biden’s lead.
The recount was requested by President Donald Trump after certified results showed him losing the state to Democrat Joe Biden by 12,670 votes, or 0.25%. Under state law, the losing candidate can request a recount when the margin is less than 0.5%. Trump’s campaign on Saturday formally requested the recount.
Counties were allowed to begin the machine recount at 9 a.m. Tuesday and they have until 11:59 p.m. on Dec. 2 to wrap it up.
Some counties only planned to get as far as testing the equipment Tuesday, with the actual counting to begin Wednesday. With interruptions for the Thanksgiving holiday expected, the secretary of state’s office instructed counties to publicly post when they would be testing so political party monitors and interested members of the public can make plans to observe.
Last Thursday, election officials announced the results of a hand tally in the presidential race that stemmed from an audit but was not considered an official recount under state law. The day after Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger announced that the tally confirmed Biden’s lead, he certified the election results. Republican Gov. Brian Kemp then certified the state’s slate of 16 presidential electors, a group of prominent Democrats.
Under state elections board rules, an official recount must be conducted by machine, specifically high-speed scanners that read and tabulate the votes.
Before beginning the recount, election workers must test the scanners to make sure they’re counting accurately. To do that, they create test decks of 100 ballots — 75 marked by touchscreen voting machines and 25 marked by hand — and count those ballots by hand before running them through a scanner. If the scanned tally matches the hand tally, it means the scanner is working correctly and they can begin rescanning every ballot.
State election officials have said that it’s possible the results of the recount could be slightly different from the original tally, but they’ve said it’s very unlikely it would be enough to change the overall outcome of the election.
Biden’s campaign echoed that in a call Tuesday with reporters.
“Georgia voters have selected Joe Biden to be their next president,” Biden campaign attorney Patrick Moore said. “We’re confident that this second recount, which is in fact a third time the votes have been counted, will simply reaffirm Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia.”

From immigration to health: Biden moves swiftly to unwind Trump policies

On Day 1, Biden sets the ball rolling on immigration, climate change, Covid-19

Ancestral village in Tamil Nadu celebrates Kamala Harris' feat

'Day of history, hope': US President Joe Biden

'We will be back in some form,' Trump vows at end of tumultuous presidency

Joe Biden takes the helm, appeals for unity to take on crises

'Going home': Joe Biden's surreal walk to the White House

Prez Joe Biden looks to galvanize Covid fight, vaccinations as he takes office

Kamala Harris' ancestral village rejoices with fervour as 'she scripts history'

US Prez Joe Biden says Donald Trump wrote him 'very generous letter'

Jill Biden: Profile of academic who will be the next US first lady

'...And if you still disagree': Joe Biden's message of democracy for detractors

Bomb threat at US Supreme Court ahead of Biden inaugural

Joe Biden plans sweeping executive orders to unwind Trump legacy on Day 1
