Tag Archives: Canvass

Post-Election Terminology

During the extended count and litigation, we are hearing a lot of terms tossed around that are usually the special reserve of election law geeks.  So here is a quick primer on some of these terms.

Audit — This term typically covers the process of double-checking the count.  While not every state does an audit, and the audit process differs from state to state, there are some aspects that are shared by several states.  First, the most simple audit is simply a check that the machines are functioning properly.  This typically involves a “test deck” with a known count to see the machine records the count correctly.  Second, several states do a hand count of random precincts and random races.  As with the test deck, the hand count is to make certain that the machines are roughly correct. Of course, a hand count will pick-up some ballots that the machine is unable to read.  If this part of the audit reveals a significant deviation from the machine count, it can be expanded to cover more precincts and more races.  Third, some states do other types of machine tests to verify the programming.  Fourth, depending on the state, an audit might include checks to make sure that the counts of ballots and voters match.

Canvass — This term is somewhat slippery as it is sometimes used to refer to local processes and state processes and often includes the certification process.  At it’s most simple, it refers to the local process of reviewing ballots — primarily absentee and provisional — and making sure that the vote totals from all precincts and voting centers are accurately recorded.    If there is time, the canvass can include an attempt to resolve any discrepancies in the counts of ballots and voters. Continue Reading...

Posted in 2020 General Election | Also tagged , , , , Comments Off on Post-Election Terminology

Where Things Stand

In part because of one sore loser, this year’s election seems to be the one that will not end.  And that means that almost any post based on current information is no longer accurate several days later.  As noted in previous posts, there are three big questions:  1) when are absentee ballots due; 2) when will the vote be certified; and 3) what states might be subject to recounts.  There is also the never-ending litigation being filed by the Trump campaign.

At the present time, California is probably the biggest state in which we are still waiting for late absentee ballots with a deadline of Friday.  At the time that I am writing this post, the margin in the Twenty-Fifth District is less than 100 votes; so late arriving ballots could be a key.  In addition, a recount is a real possibility.

The other big state in which there remains a significant number of ballots to be counted is New York.  At the present time, Democrats have apparently lost the Eleventh District (Staten Island).  There are three Democratic districts that have not been called, but Democrats now lead in two of the three.  There are also two Republican districts that have not been called, but the Republicans have significant leads in both.  Whether the remaining votes will actually swing the districts is unclear. Continue Reading...

Posted in 2020 General Election, Donald Trump | Also tagged , , , , , , , , Comments Off on Where Things Stand

What Comes Next?

We are entering uncharted territory in the U.S. Presidential election.  Moscow Mitch is technically correct that the President has the right to avail himself of all legal remedies related to challenging the election results.  But that’s not saying much.  Technically, I have the right to file an election contest in my state challenging the results of several issues that were on the ballot last Tuesday.   But I have no valid legal claims (or at least no evidence supporting any of those claim), and I would be facing sanctions for filing a frivolous case if I tried.  Apparently, the president of the United States is exempt from the rules requiring a good faith basis for filing a case.

The closest that we have been to this type of obstruction was 2000 in Florida.  Of course, in 2000, the election came down to one state, and that state was close enough to trigger an automatic recount.  And where things went off the rails was that the parties could not agree on the proper way to conduct that recount.  As a result, it is debatable whether there ever was a proper recount in Florida.

At least until Trump surrenders, there are two different lines by which things will progress.  The first involves the Presidential Transition Act.  Under the provisions of that act, there is a transition process which includes office space, the ability to employ staff, and access to government materials for the president-elect and vice-president elect.  The key part of the act for the current situation is the triggering language which relies upon the determination of the Administrator of the General Services Administration.  Under that language, those rights trigger upon the determination of the Administrator of the “apparent successful candidate” in the election.  The big problem with the act is that it does not define how the Administrator determines who is the “apparent successful candidate.”  And, in the past, this provision has not been an issue.  In the first fourteen elections held under the Act, the identity of the apparent successful candidate has been clear within forty-eight hours of the election in thirteen elections.   The only exception, as noted above, was 2000 in which it was clear that there was no apparent winner until Florida could complete its recount.  If, as appears to be the case, President Trump has made clear that the Administrator of the GSA should not recognize apparent President-elect Biden as the apparent President-elect, then this dispute may require a petition for writ of mandamus.  (A writ of mandamus compels an official to comply with a ministerial duty.)  The big issue in such a case would be the proper standard for the exercise of the duty and whether that standard is clear enough to give rise to a ministerial duty in this case.  Of course, the risk is that a court might decline to issue the writ because the law lacks any precise standard.   The Biden Transition Team will have to balance off the risk of a bad result in a case against the reality that President Trump and the Administrator of the GSA seem intent on ignoring both the language and the spirit of the Presidential Transition Act. Continue Reading...

Posted in 2020 General Election, Electoral College, Joe Biden | Also tagged , , , Comments Off on What Comes Next?