When Audits and Recounts Distract from Election Integrity: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election in Georgia
Philip B. Stark

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the 2020 Georgia election recounts and audits, revealing significant procedural flaws and distrust in the process, which undermine the reliability of election outcomes despite multiple counts.
Contribution
It highlights the limitations of audits and recounts in ensuring election integrity when foundational process issues exist, emphasizing the need for trustworthy voting records.
Findings
Discrepancies between machine counts and manual audits.
Ballots included multiple times in counts.
Poor process controls undermine audit reliability.
Abstract
Georgia was central to efforts to overturn the 2020 Presidential election, including a call from then-president Trump to Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger asking Raffensperger to `find' 11,780 votes. Raffensperger has maintained that a `100% full-count risk-limiting audit' and a machine recount agreed with the initial machine-count results, which proved that the reported election results were accurate and that `no votes were flipped.' There is no indication of widespread fraud, but there is reason to distrust the election outcome: the two machine counts and the manual `audit' tallies disagree substantially, even about the number of ballots cast. Some ballots in Fulton County were included in the original count at least twice; some were included in the machine recount at least thrice. Audit results for some tally batches were omitted from the reported audit totals. The two machine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAmerican Constitutional Law and Politics · Legal and Constitutional Studies · Electoral Systems and Political Participation
