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Trump and Kamala Harris could be counted again in these states after tomorrow's race

Trump and Kamala Harris could be counted again in these states after tomorrow's race

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Topline

With polls showing a neck-and-neck race between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris in battleground states, it is possible that states will need to conduct recounts after Election Day if there is only a narrow vote margin between the two politicians – or the losing candidate could demand one.

Important facts

Arizona: Under state law, the state will order a mandatory recount if the difference between the candidates' vote shares is 0.5% or less (Trump currently has a 2.2-point lead, according to FiveThirtyEight polling averages, but President Joe Biden's margin of victory in 2020). was 0.3 points).

Georgia: Candidates can request a recount of results if there is a difference of 0.5% or less between the candidates' vote shares, and election officials and the Secretary of State can order a recount if there are suspected errors or irregularities in the vote count (Trump leads by one point , but lost around 0.2 points in 2020).

Michigan: Under new rules that took effect in August, candidates in Michigan can request a recount “if the candidate has a good faith belief that he or she would have done so but for an error in obtaining or returning votes.” reasonable chance of winning the election.”

Nevada: Unless there is a tie in the election, only the losing candidate in Nevada can request a recount. This must be done within three days of confirmation of the vote count, but does not require any specific margin between the candidates.

North Carolina: Under state law, candidates can request a recount if there is a difference of 1% or less between their share of the vote and the winning candidate (Trump has a one-point lead and won by 1.3 points in 2020).

Pennsylvania: The state orders mandatory recounts when there is a difference of 0.5% or less between candidates, and voters can also request recounts for certain precincts where there must be a specific allegation of fraud or error or, if there is no specific allegation of fraud, must be applied for in every single county where that particular race took place (the polls are exactly the same and Biden won in 2020 by 1.2 points).

Wisconsin: Candidates who lost by one percent or less can request a recount if they believe that “a specific defect, irregularity or illegality has occurred in the conduct of the election” – although if the losing candidate only counts in some Areas requesting a recount The state, but not others, can ask any opposing candidate in the race to request that the rest of the state also report its results.

Where are recounts most likely?

It remains to be seen what the final vote count will be and which states will conduct a recount, as polls in all seven major battleground states suggest the election results will be extremely close. Pennsylvania and Nevada have particularly small distances. Averages compiled by FiveThirtyEight show the two candidates within 0.5% of each other in these states based on recent polls.

Could recounts delay the certification of the election?

Recounts are ordered after states have certified their election results — meaning all votes are counted and final — so a recount does not stop a state from being called for either Trump or Harris. While specific deadlines for recounts vary by state, candidates must request recounts quickly, within days of the results being certified. That means recounts can be conducted and completed without affecting election deadlines, well before Congress certifies the final results on Jan. 6. In Georgia, for example, the state reaffirmed Biden's 2020 victory in early December 2020, after conducting both a machine recount and an audit of the state's results that included a manual recount.

Will recounts change the election results?

Although recounts can have an impact on the election result, in practice this rarely occurs. The nonpartisan group FairVote, which advocates for ranked-choice voting, conducted a review of all recounts between 2000 and 2023. She found that only 36 statewide general election recounts had taken place during that period – out of 6,929 total elections – with only three recounts actually reversing the election results. These reversals all occurred in races where the difference between candidates was less than 0.06%. FairVote found that recounts typically change an average of about 551 votes and often widen the gap between candidates rather than narrowing it.

Important background

Polls show Harris and Trump virtually tied heading into Election Day. A polling average compiled by FiveThirtyEight on Monday shows Harris up 48% to 46.8%. The race is widely expected not to be called on Election Day itself, and the results are likely to be similar to 2020, when it took several days for the race to be called for Biden due to wildly different results in battleground states . In 2020, recounts were conducted in Georgia and some counties in Wisconsin, and Biden's margin changed during the audit in Georgia, although none of the recounts ultimately affected the final results. In 2016, Green Party candidate Jill Stein called for recounts in three battleground states after Trump won the presidential election, but only Wisconsin actually conducted the recount. Stein later dropped her recount requests, which cost her nearly $5 million to file.

Further reading

ForbesTrump vs. Harris 2024 polls: Harris leads in the last two polls – as most polls show a razor-thin race

Forbes2024 Election Swing State Polls: Trump Leads Harris in 4 States, Tie in Georgia (Updated)
ForbesThese key swing states don't count mail-in ballots in advance — it could take days for results to come back

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