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Georgia officials certify election results showing Biden win

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger speaks during a news conference on Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2020, in Atlanta. Georgia election officials have announced an audit of presidential election results that will trigger a full hand recount. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

ATLANTA
(AP) — Georgia’s governor and top elections official on Friday
certified results showing Joe Biden won the presidential race over
Republican President Donald Trump, bringing the state one step closer to
wrapping up an election fraught with unfounded accusations of fraud by
Trump and his supporters.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger
certified results reported by the state’s 159 counties that show Biden
with 2.47 million votes, President Donald Trump with 2.46 million votes
and Libertarian Jo Jorgensen with 62,138. That leaves Biden leading by a
margin of 12,670 votes, or 0.25%.

Later Friday, Gov. Brian Kemp
certified the state’s slate of 16 presidential electors. In an
announcement streamed online, Kemp did not clearly endorse the results.
Instead he said the law requires him to “formalize the certification,
which paves the way for the Trump campaign to pursue other legal options
and a separate recount if they choose.”

The Republican governor
hasn’t stepped forward to defend the integrity of this year’s elections
amid attacks by Trump and other members of his own party, who claim
without evidence that the presidential vote in Georgia was tainted by
fraud. Kemp has neither endorsed Trump’s fraud claims nor backed
Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, in his assertion that the election
was conducted fairly.

Trump’s endorsement two years ago helped
Kemp win a heated Republican primary and eke out a narrow general
election victory over Democrat Stacey Abrams. Even after losing the
White House, Trump is expected to remain a powerful influence with GOP
voters in the upcoming Senate runoffs in Georgia as well as in 2022,
when Kemp will have to seek reelection.

The counties’ results
were affirmed by a hand count of the 5 million ballots cast in the race,
according to results released by the secretary of state’s office. The
tally resulted from an audit required by a new state law and wasn’t in
response to any suspected problems with the state’s results or an
official recount request. Raffensperger said the hand tally confirmed
Biden’s victory.

Kemp said Friday that he was concerned that the
audit looked only at ballots, not the signatures on the absentee ballot
applications or absentee ballot envelopes.

“As a former Secretary
of State, he is the first to know and confirm that a signature is
matched twice prior to an absentee ballot being counted,” Deputy
Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs said in a statement.

In fact, the
signatures on absentee ballot applications and envelopes are required to
be checked when they are received. The audit is only meant to ensure
that the voting machines counted the ballots correctly, Raffensperger’s
office has said.

Two years ago, when he was secretary of state,
Kemp pushed back forcefully against an outcry from Democrats who accused
him of suppressing voter turnout to improve his odds of winning the
gubernatorial election. At the time, he insisted that Georgia’s laws
“prevent elections from being stolen from anyone.”

At a news
conference at the state Capitol on Friday morning, before the results
were certified, Raffensperger reiterated his confidence in the 2020
elections.

“Working as an engineer throughout my life, I live by
the motto that numbers don’t lie,” he said. “As secretary of state, I
believe that the numbers that we have presented today are correct. The
numbers reflect the verdict of the people, not a decision by the
secretary of state’s office or of courts or of either campaign.”

Raffensperger’s
office stumbled earlier in the day when it prematurely announced the
certification while it was still unfinished. Forty minutes later, a
corrected news release was sent out saying that certification was still
to come. The momentary slip was yet another moment of drama in a race
that has been full of it.

Now that the results are certified,
Trump’s campaign will have two business days to request a recount since
the margin is within 0.5%. That recount would be done using scanning
machines that read and tally the votes and would be paid for by the
counties, the secretary of state’s office has said.

The hand count
for the audit produced some slight differences from the previous
machine tally, but no individual county showed a variation in margin
larger than 0.73%, and the variation in margin in 103 of the state’s 159
counties was less than 0.05%, the secretary of state’s office said.
During the audit, several counties discovered previously uncounted
ballots and had to recertify their results.

“It’s quite honestly
hard to believe that during the audit thousands of uncounted ballots
were found weeks after a razor-thin outcome in a presidential election,”
Kemp said. “This is simply unacceptable.”

Raffensperger said
Friday that he plans to propose legislative changes aimed at increasing
trust in the results, including allowing state officials to intervene in
counties that have systemic problems in administering elections,
requiring photo ID for absentee voting and adding stricter controls to
allow for challenges to voters who might not live where they say.

“These measures will improve the security of our elections, and that should lead to greater public trust,” he said.

Kemp said he also looked forward to working with lawmakers to address election concerns.

Raffensperger,
a self-described “passionate conservative,” has endured intense
criticism and insults from fellow Republicans — from the president to
the chair of the state Republican Party — over his handling of the
election. He acknowledged their feelings on Friday.

“Like other
Republicans, I’m disappointed our candidate didn’t win Georgia’s
electoral vote. Close elections sow distrust. People feel their side was
cheated,” he said.

Biden is the first Democratic presidential nominee to carry the state since 1992.

Associated Press reporters Ben Nadler and Sudhin Thanawala in Atlanta, and Russ Bynum in Savannah, Georgia, contributed to this report.