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  5. Trump complained about millions of ballots going uncounted on election night — but it was the GOP that banned some states from doing it

Trump complained about millions of ballots going uncounted on election night — but it was the GOP that banned some states from doing it

Haven Orecchio-Egresitz   

Trump complained about millions of ballots going uncounted on election night — but it was the GOP that banned some states from doing it
Politics2 min read
  • Trump said Wednesday morning that the time taken to count ballots this year is "a fraud on the American public."
  • While he is blaming democrats for the process, it was GOP-controlled legislatures that banned some states from having a head start on counting ballots.
  • Experts previously told Insider that making sure every vote is counted, even if it takes more time, is what ensures the integrity of the election.

On early Wednesday morning, hours after polls closed in most states, President Donald Trump stood on a podium in front of his supporters and called it "a fraud on the American people" that many ballots in some states remained uncounted.

He can blame the Republican-controlled state legislatures for that.

"Millions and millions of people voted for us today and a very sad group of people is trying to disenfranchise that group of people," Trump said. "And we won't stand for it."

Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania are three swing states that saw record levels of mail-in voting this year, and are potentially hotbeds for post-election legal cases, Insider's Grace Panetta previously reported.

All three of those states prohibited election officials from processing absentee ballots until the day of the election, or in Michigan's case, the day before, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Trump narrowly won these three states in 2016, and they were among the eight critical states that had not declared a winner as of 9 a.m. ET Wednesday.

While these states all have Democratic governors, their Republican-controlled state legislatures have clashed over election rules.

They resisted calls to give officials more time to process ballots, which was meant to help them report results as quickly as possible, Panetta reported last month.

In the Wednesday morning press conference, in which Trump claimed victory in the election, he said that he was prepared to celebrate on Tuesday night when "it was just called off," referring to the counting of ballots.

"We were getting ready to win this election, frankly, we did win this election. Our goal now is to ensure the integrity of the good of this nation," Trump said. "We don't want them to find any ballots at 4 o'clock in the morning and add them to the list."

But election officials around the country had been warning of the the likelihood of a drawn out process for months, and it's why some pushed back against the rules that limit counting ahead of time, also called pre-canvassing.

"A key reason to permit counties to conduct pre-canvassing is so that the county does not have its attention divided on Election Day," Forrest Lehman, the Director of Elections in Pennsylvania's Lycoming County, told reporters in an early September press briefing.

"Every county is responsible for an in-person voting operation where I think we can all reasonably expect pretty high turnout — any county would prefer that we not try to conduct canvassing of mail ballots at the same time."

Election experts previously told Insider that ensuring the integrity of voting in the US would mean giving election workers the time they need to count every ballot.

"It's more important to ensure that every vote counts than knowing the results on election night," Karen Hobert Flynn, the president of Common Cause, told Insider earlier this month.

"We do expect that part of [Trump]'s playbook is to question the integrity of mail-in voting, which we know can be done safely...we need to be giving time for those votes to be counted."

Insider's Grace Panetta contributed to this report

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