Biden Wins Georgia Recount as Trump Setbacks Mount
US
President-elect Joe Biden's victory in Georgia has been confirmed by a recount,
as legal efforts by Donald Trump's allies to challenge his defeat were
dismissed in three states.
The Democrat
beat his Republican rival in Georgia by 12,284 votes, according to the audit
required by state law.
Mr Biden
said Mr Trump knew he was not going to win and had shown "incredible
irresponsibility" by not conceding.
The Democrat
is set to take office in January as the 46th US president.
Mr Biden's
victory margin in the public vote overall stands at more than 5.9 million. His
victory in the US Electoral College system, which determines who becomes president,
is projected to be 306 to 232 - far above the 270 he needs to win.
Mr Trump has
so far refused to concede and has made allegations of widespread electoral
fraud, without providing any evidence.
On Thursday,
Georgia's Secretary of State, Brad Raffensperger, said the hand audit of
ballots had not altered Mr Biden's victory in the state.
"Georgia's
historic first statewide audit reaffirmed that the state's new secure
paper ballot voting system accurately counted and reported results," Mr
Raffensberger, a Republican, said in a statement.
"This
is a credit to the hard work of our county and local elections officials who
moved quickly to undertake and complete such a momentous task in a short period
of time."
The
Democrats' victory is their first in a presidential race in Georgia since Bill
Clinton was elected in 1992.
The recount
found the error rate was no greater than 0.73% in any county and Mr Biden's
margin of victory over Mr Trump remained at under 0.5%. The results will be
certified on Friday.
Trump
campaign senior legal adviser Jenna Ellis said the audit had gone "exactly
as we expected" because, she said without evidence, the state had
recounted illegal ballots.
"It's
hard to fathom how this man thinks," he continued, adding: "It's just
outrageous what he's doing."
Of the
election result, the Democratic president-elect - who is due to take office in
January - said: "The vast majority of people believe it's
legitimate."
Republican
Senator Mitt Romney later echoed Mr Biden in a tweet.
"Having
failed to make even a plausible case of widespread fraud or conspiracy before
any court of law, the President has now resorted to overt pressure on state and
local officials to subvert the will of the people and overturn the
election," he wrote.
"It is
difficult to imagine a worse, more undemocratic action by a sitting American
Presiden
In a matter
of hours on Thursday, Mr Trump's allies were dealt legal setbacks in Georgia,
Arizona and Pennsylvania.
Republicans
lost their final lawsuit in Georgia as a court rejected their effort
to block the results' certification, which is due to happen on Friday. The
judge who dismissed the case was appointed by Mr Trump last year.
In Arizona,
a judge rejected a lawsuit filed last week by the state Republican Party
seeking a new audit of ballots in Maricopa County, home to Phoenix - the state
capital and largest city.
In Pennsylvania,
the Trump campaign lost their bid in state court to throw out more than 2,000
postal ballots.
At a
Thursday briefing, Mr Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani continued to lay out
unsubstantiated conspiracy theories and accusations of electoral fraud.
He railed
against the reporting of his team's legal challenges, saying the media had
shown an "irrational pathological hatred for the president".
Mr Giuliani
also said the campaign was withdrawing its last remaining lawsuit in Michigan.
He said it had achieved its aim of stopping the certification of the result in
one key county.
However, the
vice-chairman of Wayne County's canvassing board said an attempt by its two
Republican members to rescind their earlier certification of the result was
invalid, and the certification was binding.
One of the
Republicans said Mr Trump had called her personally after the vote had been
certified "to make sure I was safe".
Mr Biden won
the county by a huge margin, according to unofficial results, and prevailed in
Michigan by about 146,000 votes.
One
possibility that US media are speculating on is that he will try to get
Republican-friendly state legislatures in key states to override the choice of
voters and instead select members of the US Electoral College who would be
favourable to the president.
Mr Trump has
invited Michigan's Republican lawmakers to the White House on Friday, hinting
at a possible change in tactics.
Instead of
winning by direct popular vote, a US president must accumulate a majority of
"electors" that each state is designated according to its
congressional representation.
Most states
determine these based on who won the popular vote there.
But federal
law says statehouse legislators have the power to pick electors if the state
has "failed to make a choice".
This would
appear a long shot as no evidence of electoral fraud has been shown and to
potentially disenfranchise millions of voters would spark uproar.
Reuters news
agency quoted one source familiar with the Trump strategy as saying it was now
a "more targeted approach towards getting the legislators engaged".
But one of
the Michigan lawmakers going to the White House, Mike Shirkey, said earlier
this week that the legislature appointing electors was "not going to
happen".

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