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Recount confirms Riggs victory in NC Supreme Court Race, as focus shifts to 60,000 challenged ballots

Recount confirms Riggs victory in NC Supreme Court Race, as focus shifts to 60,000 challenged ballots

The North Carolina State Board of Elections will hold a hearing on Wednesday to consider challenges to more than 60,000 votes the losing candidate Jefferson Griffin says should not have been counted. Most of those challenges are of voters who are missing some registration information, but there are many valid reasons those details could be missing, and the vast majority of voters disenfranchised by such a culling would be lawfully registered voters.

NC Supreme Court update: Riggs declares victory as her opponent challenges 60,000 votes

NC Supreme Court update: Riggs declares victory as her opponent challenges 60,000 votes

The margin between Riggs and Griffin is .02 percentage points, well below the threshold for being able to seek a recount. Griffin asked for and was granted the recount this week, a process which should be done by Nov. 27, election officials say. Griffin has also submitted some 300 pages of documents challenging the validity of more than 60,000 votes based on legal ideas courts have rejected in separate cases.

Voter fraud is rare. Intentional voter fraud that changes elections is non-existent.

Voter fraud is rare. Intentional voter fraud that changes elections is non-existent.

Several large studies show only a handful of voter fraud cases amid millions of votes cast, and some of those cases are innocent errors rather than dubious plots. But since we are still almost guaranteed to see claims from losing candidates in the coming days that the vote was rigged, here’s what to know about voter fraud in North Carolina and why the elections are in reality very secure.

Here’s why it could take some time to know who won the election

Here’s why it could take some time to know who won the election

The vote counting process in North Carolina moves relatively fast, but it’s still thorough. So cin close races it may take days to know who won. However long it takes, however, it is NOT evidence of election fraud or malfeasance. It’s proof of the opposite: that North Carolina’s elections are secure, fair, and accurate.