Georgia elections recertified after presidential lawsuit dismissed

Georgia recount presidential race, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger

The latest lawsuit filed in Georgia over disputed presidential election results has been dismissed by a federal judge.

On Monday Judge Timothy Batten of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia in Atlanta ruled that the case lacked standing, among other issues.

His ruling came during a Monday morning hearing. The so-called “Kraken” lawsuit, filed by Sidney Powell, a lawyer formerly associated with President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign, claimed election fraud and sought to overturn the presidential results.

Batten ruled that the matter should be for the state courts and said that “the plaintiffs essentially asked the court for perhaps the most extraordinary relief ever sought in any federal court in connection with an election.”

More here from GPB; later on Monday Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger recertified the victory in Georgia of Democratic former vice president Joe Biden after a machine recount.

“Today is an important day for election integrity in Georgia and across the country,” Raffensperger said in a statement. “The claims in the Kraken lawsuit prove to be as mythological as the creature for which they’re named. Georgians can now move forward knowing that their votes, and only their legal votes, were counted accurately, fairly, and reliably.”

It’s the third time nearly 5 million Georgia votes for president have been counted. The initial certified results showed Biden won by around 12,000 votes statewide, and a hand recount ordered by Raffensperger slimmed that lead to around 10,000.

Officially Biden’s winning margin statewide was 11,779 votes, following the machine recount. Biden had 2,473,633 votes and Trump received 2,461,854 votes. Jo Jorgenson, the Libertarian Party nominee, got 62,229 votes.

Biden won Cobb County with 56 percent of the vote; only a few dozen votes changed during the recount, in Biden’s favor. Most East Cobb precincts favored Trump.

The Trump campaign requested a recount that was allowed since the margin was 0.5 percent or less, but the official recount didn’t differ all that much from the original results.

Powell, the Trump campaign and Lin Wood, an Atlanta libel attorney best known for representing former Atlanta Olympic bombing suspect Richard Jewell, have claimed widespread fraud in the presidential election.

But those claims have all been rejected in court, for failure to provide evidence. The Trump campaign also has wanted Georgia’s 16 Democratic electors to be dismissed and has demanded Gov. Brian Kemp call a special legislative session to replace them with Republicans.

The Electoral College will meet on Dec. 14; Kemp declined to intervene, saying it violates state law for the General Assembly to name electors. That, he said, is the duty of the governor once the results are certified by the Secretary of State.

Raffensperger has come under fire from Trump and Republican U.S. Senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who demanded he resign. They’re both in Jan. 5 runoffs that could determine party control of the Senate.

While Trump campaigned with Loeffler and Perdue in Valdosta over the weekend, Kemp did not appear with them. Trump, who has refused to concede, said he was embarrassed to have endorsed Kemp in his 2018 race for governor.

As the official recount wound down last week, Gabriel Sterling, a Georgia elections official, slammed Trump for not denouncing death threats made against Raffensperger and his wife and a 20-year-old elections contractor in Gwinnett County.

Sterling reiterated his concerns on “Meet the Press” on Sunday, saying Trump’s comments amount to disinformation: “They are stoking anger and fear among his supporters and, hell, I voted for him.”

Sterling, like Raffensperger, is a Republican who has supported Trump. In a piece for The Wall Street Journal on Sunday, Raffensperger said that Trump was using the “same playbook” as Stacey Abrams, a Democrat who lost to Kemp in 2018 but never conceded:

“Many media outlets have rightly highlighted that the Trump campaign has provided precious little proof of its voter-fraud allegations,” Raffensperger wrote. “Yet for two years, few asked the same of Stacey Abrams. Through all this, confidence in the integrity of American elections suffered.”

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