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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsGA-07: Gwinnett County will not certify election today, but awaits provisional count
Gwinnett County will not certify its elections results Tuesday, and will take two more days to re-evaluate a few hundred absentee ballots that were rejected.
But the county elections board still plans to officially count provisional ballots, which could play a significant role in a the 7th Congressional District race as well as the governors contest.
Gwinnett began scanning provisional ballots around 1 p.m. and the elections board started its meeting shortly after 2 p.m. Less than five minutes later, they went into executive session to discuss pending litigation.
Gwinnett a longtime Republican stronghold where Democrats are starting to make waves has been in the spotlight throughout this election season. That spotlight doesnt appear likely to dim anytime soon.
When the board left for executive session, close to 100 people gathered inside their roughly 40-seat meeting room lingered to wait. Those gathered included a group decrying Democratic governor candidate Stacey Abrams decision not to concede, waving signs with the hashtag Stop the Steal. The other half of the room included voting rights advocates and representatives from the Democratic Party.
Things grew contentious and loud before the board returned and announced it would not be certifying the countys election results as scheduled.
Elections board chairman Stephen Day said it would take about two days to re-evaluate absentee ballots that were rejected due to missing birth year information, in accordance with a new order from U.S. District Court Judge Leigh Martin May. Officials said there were about 300 such ballots to be reconsidered, though other rejected absentee ballots filed under the nebulous insufficient oath information category would likely also be re-examined.
A new special meeting for certification was scheduled for 5 p.m. Thursday.
The elections board was still waiting Tuesday, meanwhile, for the final count of provisional ballots so it could submit a number to the state.
Officials have previously said the county received between 2,400 and 2,500 such ballots, including around 1,500 believed to be cast in the tightly contested race in the 7th Congressional District. The county has not revealed how many of those ballots might ultimately be accepted.
The 7th district race currently sits with incumbent Rep. Rob Woodall leading Democratic challenger Carolyn Bourdeaux by about 900 votes. Additional votes could also play a role in the governors race, which Democrat Stacey Abrams has refused to concede.
https://www.ajc.com/news/local-govt--politics/gwinnett-getting-ready-count-provisional-ballots/doLeXVB1mQjmwDMLxFXbBL/?fbclid=IwAR0pBW59_6FMGAFMg2Uw9shwEW-7nIwoaU2OVpZGoNUPpZgiP3k0aeLS1HA
Guppy
(444 posts)we have been working on this everyday. I think we will win.