Donald Trump demands 'STOP THE COUNT!' as his campaign launches barrage of lawsuits with the latest in Nevada - but if he succeeded in freezing the results NOW Joe Biden would WIN
- President Donald Trump is launching a lawsuit in Nevada as the state prepares to announce its final election results
- Nevada could hand Joe Biden the presidency should he win it
- 'STOP THE COUNT!,' Trump tweeted Thursday morning
- Trump taking action in Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia
- If the vote counting stopped now, Biden would win based on current tallies
- Nevada expected to announce additional vote totals today
- As is Arizona and Georgia
- Associated Press has awarded Arizona to Biden but Trump contesting
- Trump struggling to make up votes there as Biden leads
- Vote gap narrowing in Pennsylvania and Georgia
- Trump supporters, some of them armed, descended on counting center to demand every ballot be counted
President Donald Trump demanded the nation stop counting votes in the presidential election as his campaign launches a lawsuit in Nevada, which could hand Joe Biden the presidency should he win its six electoral votes.
Former Director of National Intelligence Ric Grenell is holding a pres conference for the Trump campaign in Nevada later today where he will announce the lawsuit.
The Nevada lawsuit matches legal action the Trump campaign is launching in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia as Biden approaches the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency. In Wisconsin, a state called for Biden, the campaign has requested a recount.
'STOP THE COUNT!,' the president tweeted Thursday morning. He has spent the past few days holed up in the White House, speaking to advisers about the race.
If state officials stop counting now and the election were called on the current tallies - Biden would win. The president needs to make up vote gaps in Arizona and Nevada in order to win the election - in other words he needs officials there to keep counting the ballots.
The Associated Press has awarded Biden 264 electoral votes - including in Arizona, a state not all news organizations have called and that the Trump campaign is arguing they can win when all votes are counted.
President Trump's campaign is taking action in Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia as Joe Biden approaches the 270 electoral votes he needs to win the presidency
Nevada's six electoral votes would put Biden exactly at 270 in the AP's count - handing him the presidency.
Nevada, where Biden leads by less than 8,000 votes, is expected to release another tranche of votes later Thursday. Georgia and Pennsylvania are also expected to release additional vote counts today.
As President Trump offers unsubstantiated charges of election fraud, pro-Trump demonstrators have showed up at vote counting centers in Nevada, Arizona, and Detroit demanding that all votes be counted.
The results of the election remain unclear but Biden is inches towards victory as mail-in ballots are tallied.
Trump has falsely claimed these votes are illegitimate because they are being counted after the election. The votes were legally cast before Election Day but the process to count mail-in ballots takes longer as they have to be checked against voter rolls to confirm it’s a legal ballot from a registered voter – just as when someone who votes in person has to confirm their identity with a poll worker before receiving a ballot.
In Arizona, after 62,000 votes in Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, were added to the tally early Thursday morning, Biden led Trump in the state by 68,400 votes, or less than three points. But Trump faces a tough slog in making up the gap as most outstanding votes are from Democratic areas in the state: Pima, Coconino and Santa Cruz counties.
Trump launched legal action in Michigan and Wisconsin, on Wednesday - two states that have been awarded to Biden.
The Trump campaign is also suing in Pennsylvania, where Biden is creeping toward victory. in an attempt to stop vote counting and reverse the results - which had been going his way until mail-in ballots were tallied.
Trump has also launched legal action in Georgia, another state that showed him with an early lead but where Biden now hopes to win. Counting is also ongoing in North Carolina, with the outcome far from certain.
While officials count ballots, tensions have flared across the country.
In Arizona overnight, armed pro-Trump protesters descended on a counting center in Maricopa County, after Biden's commanding 200,000-vote lead was slashed to just 68,000 as ballots continued being tallied.
They faced off with police and security outside the counting center, chanting that every vote should be counted with the result in the balance. At least one person made it inside, forcing the center to close with staff locked in.
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Chaos hit the election count center in a crucial Arizona county on Wednesday night after a large group of Trump supporters gathered outside to protest, some carrying weapons as the chanted for the vote to continue
NEVADA: President Trump supporters protest the Nevada vote in Clark County
MICHIGAN: Supporters of President Donald Trump chant slogans as they gather outside the room where absentee ballots for the 2020 general election are being counted
Video from outside the count center showed the angered crowd as they shouted that the vote was being suppressed
Amid the ongoing uncertainty;
- Trump protesters descended on counting centers in both Michigan and Arizona - demanding that the vote count be stopped in the former state, and demanding it continue in the latter
- Trump also launched a series of lawsuits to try and shift the result in his favor, while make unsubstantiated claims of electoral fraud on Twitter
- In Wisconsin, Trump is suing for a recount - which is expected to go ahead because the result is within 1 per cent of votes cast, but is not expected to overturn Biden's 20,000-vote margin
- In Michigan, he claims his poll observers have not been given proper access to the count, and is suing to have the count stopped until they are given access
- In Pennsylvania, Trump is claiming that the Senator has given Biden back-door votes to try to push him out
- Rudy Giuliani, Trump's personal lawyer, and Trump's son, Eric, held a rally in Pennsylvania as they spearheaded the president's legal action there
- In Georgia, he alleges that a GOP poll observer witnessed 53 late absentee ballots added to a pile
Video footage from outside the Maricopa count center on Wednesday showed the angered crowd as they shouted and chanted that the vote was being suppressed and that the election was unfair.
Some fumed about a rumor that was circulating from right-wing social media accounts throughout the day that claimed that the ballots of some Trump supporters were being disregarded because they were filled out using a Sharpie.
On Thursday morning, Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs said she didn't understand what the protesters were trying to achieve.
'I don't understand what these protesters are interested in. We're going to keep counting ballots.
'If they're supporting the president they should want us to continue counting. I just don't know what their goal is.
'Absolutely they are not disrupting what we're doing,' she said during an interview with Good Morning America.
There is no evidence that any of the votes cast are not being counted in the county or in the state.
Several members of the group AZ Patriots did successfully manage to make their way inside the building, one wearing a military vest, where they argued that the pens in the count had been changed to Sharpies, before they were kicked out of the building.
Media crews were escorted from the center at around 12.30am and some staff were also escorted from the building at the end of their shifts as the shouts of the crowd grew louder. There have been no reports of violence although several members of the press claimed they were threatened.
Inside, the count continued, with the center vowing that it would continue until the last update of the night.
Meanwhile in Michigan, Trump protesters also surrounded an election center in Detroit where they called on the count to be stopped as the state was declared for Biden.
Republicans have also filed a lawsuit in Michigan demanding that all vote counting stop because Trump's people weren't giving proper access to voting sites and couldn't oversee the counting process to ensure it was fair.
In Georgia, the lawsuit claims that a GOP poll observer witnessed 53 late absentee ballots added to a pile in Chatham County while two additional actions in Pennsylvania claim a Senator there has given Biden back-door votes to try to push Trump out.
And in Wisconsin, the campaign is demanding a recount, despite Biden winning by more than 20,000 votes which represents around 0.6 percent of the vote.
The figure falls within the state's recount rules which allows for anything within a one-point margin to qualify for a a recount.
In Pennsylvania, where a result is unlikely before Friday, Rudy Giuliani - Trump's personal lawyer - and Trump's son, Eric, arrived to spearhead 'critical legal actions' in the state.
The Trump campaign has announced that it will wade into a case currently before the Supreme Court which challenges state law that allows for mail-in ballots that arrive up to three days after election day.
Deputy Trump Campaign Manager Justin Clark said the campaign will be suing to stop 'Democrat election officials from hiding the ballot counting and processing' from GOP poll-watchers.
He claimed that Republican observers in Philadelphia were ordered to stand 25 meters away from counting staff, making it impossible to watch.
ARIZONA: The Maricopa County center in Phoenix was forced to close to the public, locking poll workers inside, when supporters of the president surrounded the building chanting 'count the vote'
NEW YORK: Anti-Trump protesters kneel in the street in Manhattan in the wake of an uncertain election on November 3
MINNESOTA: Demonstrators take to the streets of Minneapolis for an anti-Trump rally in the wake of the election
CALIFORNIA: A man raises his fist during a protest in Los Angeles as uncertainty continued over the result of the election
SEATTLE: A protester lights an American flag on fire during a demonstration in Seattle on Wednesday
ILLINOIS: Demonstrator Brittany Bysina holds a sign as demonstrators march through central Chicago on Wednesday night
PENNSYLVANIA: Demonstrators, including one carrying a Black Lives Matter flag, march past Independence Hall in Philadelphia to urge that all votes be counted on Wednesday
Joe Biden on Wednesday afternoon all but claimed election victory as he said he was 'confident' he would win the White House after taking Michigan and Wisconsin. He is pictured with his running mate Kamala Harris by his side
Donald Trump on Wednesday at 2.30am - the last time he was seen in public - declaring election victory despite many of the votes still being counted. He has vowed to go to the Supreme Court to challenge what he is calling a 'fraud' outcome so far
And like in Michigan, the Trump campaign is suing to halt vote counting until 'meaningful transparency' is guaranteed.
Trump has also accused Pennsylvania's Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar of unilaterally extending the deadline by which mail-in voters whose voter ID was missing to provide proof.
In a press conference held in Philadelphia on Wednesday afternoon Giuliani and Eric claimed the president won the state, despite roughly one million mail-in ballots still needing to be counted.
Like Trump himself, neither man offered a legal argument for a win or proof of any voter fraud, but nonetheless made claims of cheating.
'They're trying to cheat, they're trying to cheat,' Eric Trump said repeatedly of the Democrats.
Giuliani ranted for several minutes about mail-in ballots which he claimed - without proof - could be falsified.
'This is beyond anything I have ever seen before,' he said. 'Do you think we're stupid? Do you think we're fools?
'You know something, Democrats do think you're stupid,' Giuliani added. 'And they do think you're fools. That's why you get called 'deplorable' and 'chumps'.
U.S. President Trump supporters gather to protest the election results at the Maricopa County Elections Department office
The protesters claimed that the election is unfair after debunked rumors spread from right-wing social media accounts
Angered protesters descended on the center in Phoenix where the majority of the remaining votes are still to be counted
'We're going to stick with this. We're going to win this election. We've actually won it.
'It's just a matter of counting the votes fairly.'
Giuliani complained the mail-in ballots could have come from Mars or Canada – or could simply be one person who sent in 100,000 votes.
'Staff at the @maricopacounty Elections Department will continue our job, which is to administer elections in the second largest voting jurisdiction in the county,' the department tweeted.
'We will release results again tonight as planned. We thank the @mcsoaz for doing their job, so we can do ours.'
Among the protesters was local Congressman Paul Gosar who joined the crowd in complaining that votes were not being counted, blasting the Arizona Secretary of State as a 'joke' and praying, before demanding an update on the tally.
'Some shady things are happening in Arizona...' he tweeted earlier in the day.
Gosar made the claim after Fox News faced outrage for deciding to call the state's eleven electoral college seats for Biden before midnight on election night. The Associated Press has since also called a Biden victory but the New York Times and CNN are among the major news organization believing the race is still there for either candidate.
On Wednesday night, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis railed against the decision to call Arizona and said that Fox should immediate rescind the decision.
'Trump is gaining in Arizona. There are probably 500,000…' DeSantis said during an interview with Fox. 'Here's my thing, if you're quick on the trigger, then be quick on the trigger for both sides and stand by it. With Trump, they never want to call the state. Biden, they will do it right away. It's inconsistent and unacceptable. Look, North Carolina should be called for the president, for sure. Arizona — Fox should rescind that call.'
'We have to do this in a right way,' DeSantis continued. 'I thought it was really poor how it was done. Florida, we didn't even need the panhandle coming in. The president was up so much with the basis of Miami-Dade [county] early in mail voting that here was no way he would lose by Florida and won by 400,000 votes in the end.'
FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver, who has himself been criticized for wildly inaccurate polling data, also said that Fox and the Associated Press should retracted the projection.
The Arizona call from Fox was the first of the states that appeared to have flipped from red to blue, marking a major loss for the Trump campaign in this must-win state if it were accurate.
Yet the Trump campaign has argued that the voting is not yet over, dismissing the call and predicting that the president will eventually win by some 30,000 votes once all ballots are counted.
They have also said they are considering contesting the result but have not indicated what action they would take after calling for a recount in Wisconsin and filing lawsuits over vote counting in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia.
'@FoxNews is a complete outlier in calling Arizona, and other media outlets should not follow suit,' fumed Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller on Tuesday night.
'There are still 1M+ Election Day votes out there waiting to be counted - we pushed our people to vote on Election Day, but now Fox News is trying to invalidate their votes!
'We believe over 2/3 of those outstanding Election Day voters are going to be for Trump. Can't believe Fox was so anxious to pull the trigger here after taking so long to call Florida. Wow,' he continued.
'Retract AZ!' added Republican National Committee spokesperson Liz Harrington.
Arizona's governor Doug Ducey, a Republican, also pushed back at the Fox News result calling it 'far too early' to have declared Biden the winner in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
'Election Day votes are not fully reported, and we haven't even started to count early ballots dropped off at the polls. In AZ, we protected Election Day. Let's count the votes—all the votes—before making declarations.'
Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference on legal challenges to vote counting in Pennsylvania on Wednesday afternoon after the president filed a lawsuit despite one million votes remaining uncounted
Trump's daughter-in-law Lara listens as Giuliani and her husband Eric speak Wednesday
Giuliani claimed that Trump has won Pennsylvania despite votes still needing to be counted
Trump himself was enraged by the call and rang Rupert Murdoch in a fury on Tuesday night, according to reports.
A source told Vanity Fair that Trump phoned Murdoch, who owns Fox, 'to scream about the call and demand a retraction'.
The 89-year-old media mogul refused to order his staff to retract the Arizona call.
Even within Fox, the Arizona announcement allegedly angered staff, Vanity Fair reports.
'We called it long before MSNBC!' one outraged staffer on the opinion side told the magazine.
'We were so worried about being seen as pro-Trump that we bent over backwards.'
And on air, the hosts questioned the decision desk for the call.
'The Trump campaign is, how shall I put this, livid about the fact that Arizona was called,' Fox White House correspondent John Roberts reported around 12:20am Wednesday morning.
'Frankly, there have been public calls for Fox to pull back that call. I'll leave that to the decision desk, but that's what the Trump campaign is saying.'
Yet those behind the decision have defended the call and maintained they were right to call the race for Biden when they did.
'We're four standard deviations from being wrong,' Arnon Mishkin, director of the Fox News Decision Desk, said of the network's statistical model. 'And, I'm sorry, we're not wrong in this particular case.'
He also acknowledged that there were outstanding votes to be counted in the state but that they were mainly in areas in which Biden was performing well, according to Politico.
'I'm sorry, the president is not going to be able to take over and win enough votes to eliminate that seven point lead' Mishkin added.
President Donald Trump supporters gather to protest the election results at the Maricopa County Elections Department office
At one point the group began to pray for the outcome of the election
As it stands, Biden needs both Arizona and Nevada to win the presidency
Fox News politics editor Chris Stirewalt also defended the decision on-air stating that the remaining mail-in ballots would sway heavily in Biden's favor. '
The Associated Press stated they also made the call for this reasons. Trump took Arizona in 2016 by a margin of 3.5 percent.
A Biden victory in the state would make him the first Democrat to win Arizona since Bill Clinton in 1996.
Yet much of the Arizona result hangs on Maricopa County which Trump won the county four years ago, with 49 percent of the vote to Hillary Clinton's 46 percent.
Officials say that there are still between 428,000 and 446,000 ballots to count in the county, including 248,000 mail ballots that were returned in the last three days before the election.
They also include between 160,000 and 180,000 mail ballots returned on Election Day and 18,000 provisional ballots, according to the Maricopa County Recorder's Office.
Trump may contest the validity of the mail-in ballots as he has in other states.
Trump took Arizona in 2016 by a margin of 3.5 percent. A Biden victory in the state would make him the first Democrat to win Arizona since Bill Clinton in 1996.
Yet much of the Arizona result hangs on Maricopa County which Trump won the county four years ago, with 49 percent of the vote to Hillary Clinton's 46 percent.
Officials say that there are still between 428,000 and 446,000 ballots to count in the county, including 248,000 mail ballots that were returned in the last three days before the election.
They also include between 160,000 and 180,000 mail ballots returned on Election Day and 18,000 provisional ballots, according to the Maricopa County Recorder's Office.
Trump may contest the validity of the mail-in ballots as he has in other states.
On Tuesday, false stories were circulating among right-wing social media accounts that votes cast for Trump were not counted in Maricopa County because voters used Sharpie pens.
Dubbed 'Sharpiegate' by conservatives on social media, the allegations could be used to try to undermine election results in the historically Republican state.
County officials were trying to inform voters that Sharpies did not interfere with ballots.
Yet, a lawsuit was filed on behalf of several voters Wednesday alleging that the use of a Sharpie permanent marker at polling places across the county disenfranchised voters.
Attorney Alexander Kolodin is representing an Arizona woman named as Laurie Aguilera by 12 News as well as ten other unidentified voters in the state.
'Plaintiff completed her ballot with the provided Sharpie. While completing it, she noticed the ink was bleeding through,' the suit reads. It goes on to say that the machine failed to read Aguilera's ballot and those poll workers would not provide her with a second ballot nor a duplicate ballot when the ballot was not read. She believes her vote was not counted.
'I should just know that when I put my ballot into the machine and if I followed the instructions it gets counted, and it gets counted perfectly,' Kolodin said Wednesday night.
Elsewhere, the Republican party themselves have filled lawsuits in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia and called for a recount in Wisconsin, claiming that fake mail-in ballots for Biden were being created in order to hand him the win.
The claims of fraud led to protests in Detroit calling on the vote count to stop.
Back in Arizona, it was also revealed earlier Wednesday that a data feed informing media organizations of the voting tally in the state was incorrectly showing that 98 percent of its votes had been counted for a period on Wednesday morning, casting further skepticism on the early calls.
In fact, only 86 percent had been tallied at the time, leaving hundreds of thousands more votes still to be taken into account.
Edison Research data incorrectly displayed the percentage of votes counted for a brief period before being rectified, according to The Hill.
The error was noted by New York Times editor Patrick LaForge, whose publication has shown a Biden lead throughout Wednesday but do not believe that his victory is yet certain.
'An error was found in the data feed from Edison Research (used by @nytimes and other news organizations) for Arizona results -- 86 percent of ballots have been counted, not 98 percent,' LaForge wrote.
State officials have given no indication of when final results from Arizona will be available.
Trump files new lawsuits in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia after Biden wins in Wisconsin and Michigan to move to 264 electoral votes and says he's 'confident he will take the White House
Democrat Joe Biden edged closer to a potential upset in Georgia - and to a White House win - coming within 1 point of President Donald Trump in the traditionally red state Wednesday night.
As the race narrowed, Trump's campaign announced that they had filed a lawsuit in the state, alleging that a GOP poll observer witnessed 53 late absentee ballots added to a pile in Chatham County, where Savannah – a Democratic-leaning urban center - is located.
'We will not allow Democrat election officials to steal this election from President Trump with late, illegal ballots,' Deputy Campaign Manager Justin Clark said.
More totals from Georgia are expected Wednesday night. Trump held 49.9 per cent of the vote, while Biden had 48.9, with the president about 46,000 votes ahead.
The Georgia lawsuit was just the latest in a series of legal maneuvers Trump's campaign made Wednesday as his path to re-election got narrower - and as the president made unfounded claims on Twitter about fraud.
On Wednesday afternoon, Biden all but declared he'd win the election, as Wisconsin and Michigan were called in his favor.
With Michigan - and with Arizona called for Biden by some networks - the former vice president was just 6 electoral votes away from the 270 he needs to claim the White House.
Trump's campaign announced they had filed a lawsuit in the state, alleging that a GOP poll observer witnessed 53 late absentee ballots added to a pile in Chatham County, where Savannah – a Democratic-leaning urban center - is located. Pictured: Votes being counted in Chatham County
Election workers count Fulton County ballots at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia, on November 4
If he can get any one of the four remaining states to tilt his way - Nevada, North Carolina, Georgia or Pennsylvania - he will win.
Trump will only gain a second term if all four go his way. Trump has been up by around 76,000 votes in North Carolina.
Throughout the day, his lead in Pennsylvania has gotten smaller. It was at around 212,000 votes around 8 p.m. Wednesday night. Outstanding ballots in the Keystone State were coming from Democratic areas like Philadelphia and Pittsburgh and they were mail-in, which also favored Biden.
Biden has been leading in Nevada by a slim margin - 7,647 - but more votes need to be counted there.
Another drop is expected at 12 p.m. EST Thursday.
It means America is inching closer to an election result but still does not have one almost 24 hours after the first polls closed thanks to record voter turnout, which is slowing the counting process.
The President is demanding a recount in Wisconsin and he has filed lawsuits in Michigan and Pennsylvania to halt counting, claiming his people have not been allowed to oversee the process and ensure it is being carried out fairly.
Biden at a press conference on Wednesday, was unperturbed by Trump's last-ditch efforts to snatch back the likelihood of a second term.
'After a long night of counting it's clear we are winning enough states to win the presidency. I am not here to declare that we won but I am here to report that when the count is finished we believe we will be the winners.
'We have won Wisconsin by 20,000 votes. In Michigan, we lead by over 35,000 votes and its growing. We have a substantially bigger margin than Trump won Michigan in 2016.
'Michigan will complete its vote soon. I feel very good about Pennsylvania. Virtually all remaining ballots to be counted are cast by mail and we've been winning 78% of the votes by mail in PA.
'We flipped Arizona and the 2nd district in Nebraska. We won the majority of the American people and every indication is that the majority will grow.
'Senator Harris and I are on track to win more votes than any ticket in the history of this country - over 70million votes. I'm very proud of our campaign,' he said.
'Only three presidential campaigns in the past have defeated the incumbent president. When it's finished, God willing, we'll be the fourth. This is a major achievement.'
Biden said that after the election is resolved, he would help 'lower the temperature' and unite the country, though he said he wasn't naive to how 'deep and hard the opposing views are.'
'To make progress we have to stop treating our opponents as enemies, we are not enemies,' Biden said.
'What brings us together as Americans is so much stronger than anything that can tear us apart.'
At the end of his speech he stated, 'Now, every vote must be counted.'
'No one is going to take our democracy away from us - not now, not ever,' he added, a statement clearly aimed at Trump.
Trump supporters chanting 'Stop the Vote' storm Detroit counting hall as President sues Michigan for 'not providing meaningful access'
Donald Trump supporters chanting 'stop the vote' stormed a Detroit counting hall Wednesday afternoon as the president sued Michigan for not providing 'meaningful access' to counting locations and Joe Biden won the crucial swing state.
The TCF Center in downtown Detroit boarded up its windows and shuttered its doors after hundreds of poll watchers descended on the building while ballots were being tallied.
Angry Trump fans banged on the windows of the absentee ballot counting center and shouted 'stop the count' as anxious security guards refused any more poll watchers entry to the counting room.
Democratic counterprotesters banners also showed up waving 'count every vote' banners and insisting every vote in the state be tallied.
Hundreds of challengers had shown up at the center in response to the president's claims earlier Wednesday that the GOP should have 'access' to counting locations.
Democratic poll watchers also showed up as both sides eyed Michigan as one of the states where the White House may well be won or lost.
GOP poll challengers react after being asked to leave due to room capacity at the TCF Center in Detroit
Election challengers wait outside after an election official closed the door to the central counting board
Election challengers peer over the shoulders of volunteers as they observe absentee ballots being processed
Detroit police escort a poll challenger out after he refused to leave, due to room capacity, at the TCF Center
Protesters who want every vote counted from the 2020 presidential election march down Woodward Avenue on November 4
A protester who wants every vote counted from the 2020 presidential election, carries a sign as they march down Woodward Avenue on November
The scene grew increasingly heated and authorities halted any more poll watchers entering the counting center saying maximum capacity had been reached as Biden inched ahead in the afternoon with a 0.7 percent lead with 99 percent of votes tallied.
Trump's campaign filed a lawsuit to halt the counting of ballots in Michigan until they received 'meaningful access' to counting locations.
Soon after, the state was called in favor of Biden, marking a key win for the Democrat.
Election officials shuttered the doors Wednesday afternoon to anyone else seeking to monitor the ballot counting process as volunteers were counting the final tallies with dozens of voters peering over their shoulders.
More than 100 demonstrators had flocked to the center as Biden took the lead Wednesday afternoon joining the more than 200 already on the scene.
'We have exceeded the amount of challengers,' an election worker told more than two dozen people who showed up at 1 p.m. to monitor the process, reported Detroit Free Press.
'We are not allowing any more challengers in at this time.'
At one point, Detroit police escorted a poll challenger out of the center after he refused to leave due to room capacity.
Footage on social media also showed another fraught confrontation between police and a challenger.
Representative Rashida Talib (right) joins protesters who want every vote counted from the 2020 presidential election
Election challengers observe as ballots are counted at the central counting board in Detroit where tensions mounted
Challengers gathered inside the center Wednesday afternoon as the state counted the final votes
Challengers check in to observe absentee ballots as they are processed at the central counting board
Poll watchers had calmly checked in earlier in the day near the entrance to the convention center's hall and strolled among the tables where ballot processing was taking place.
But the civility later subsided when more people arrived and were told the room was at capacity.
Both Republicans and Democrats are allowed 134 challenges each to monitor the ballot counting process.
It is not clear how many challengers are currently present on each side.
Republican challenger Timothy Griffin, an attorney from Virginia, told the Free Press he had been at the TCF since Tuesday night because the voting system was 'not fair'.
'This whole thing is under suspicion,' he said. 'It's not equal. It's just not fair.'
On the other side, Democratic challenger Liz Linkewitz from Harrison Township said she was there to help ensure the rights of American people to vote was upheld.
'I just want to make sure that all Michigan votes are counted,' she said. 'This election is, as Joe Biden says, for the soul of our country.'
Outside the counting room, demonstrators carried 'Count every vote' banners and marched along Woodward Avenue.
Representative Rashida Talib - a Democrat and the first Muslim woman to ever serve in the Michigan Legislature - joined Democrats on the march calling for all votes to be counted in the state.
The Trump campaign said it was filing the lawsuit against Michigan claiming it had been denied access to the count.
The campaign didn't immediately make public a copy of the lawsuit and it wasn't clear what areas they argue they were denied access to.
Trafalgar Group chief pollster Robert Cahaly says polls are getting it wrong because people are scared they will be CANCELED if they admit to being conservative
Trafalgar Group chief pollster Robert Cahaly has insisted major polls are wrong because people are scared they will be canceled if they reveal they are voting for Donald Trump
Trafalgar Group chief pollster Robert Cahaly has insisted major polls are wrong because people are scared they will be canceled if they reveal they are voting for Donald Trump.
Cahaly, whose polling company correctly predicted a Republican victory in 2016, explained what happened after Sean Hannity listed polls that got it 'dead wrong'.
The pollster told the Fox News host: 'I think they haven't adjusted. They talked about how they adjusted the model but they really didn't.
'They haven't made accommodations for the fact that people just don't want to give their information out - that they are hesitant to say how they feel. And in this day and age, where people are shamed for their political opinions and canceled and all that nonsense, people just want to play their cards close to their chest.'
Tucker Carlson also addressed the issue of pollsters on his show and asked why experts who said there is no way that Trump can win in 2016 are still appearing on television.
'It's mainly because they attract an audience of people who feel the same way they do,' Hume shot back, to nods from Carlson.
He added: 'Bias makes people stupid. And if you don't acknowledge to yourself, an own your biases, then they will make you stupid over and over again.'
On the issue of pollsters, Hume added: 'Pollsters are associated in people's minds with the media, and people don't trust the media... and the effect of that is that people don't really talk to them.
'This fiasco with the polling last night... we're talking about catastrophic, colossal errors. The polling industry really needs to rethink its methods.'
Cahaly added: 'You have to figure out a way around that and to get to the real answers, and you have to build some trust and get some anonymity, and they just haven't figured it out.
'They said they adjusted. But we saw in Florida in 2018 they got it all wrong there too and we got it right. So I wasn't very surprised.'
In 2020, opinion pollsters have once again proved badly wrong in the US Presidential election, four years after Hillary Clinton was widely predicted to win and lost.
Polls held just before election day this time around gave Joe Biden an average lead of ten points nationally, and narrower leads in swing states, which all-but evaporated on the day itself.
Nationally, Biden was predicted to lead Donald Trump by 52 per cent to 42 per cent, according to polls.
In fact, Biden has taken around 50 per cent while Trump has taken 48 per cent, with many ballots still left to be counted.
Among the most inaccurate state polls were an ABC-Washington Post poll that gave Biden a 17-point lead in Wisconsin. In fact, Biden won the state with just 49.5 per cent to Trump's 48.9 per cent.
Meanwhile a Quinnipac poll gave Biden a five-point lead over Trump in Florida and four point lead in Ohio. In the end, Trump won both - by three and eight points, respectively.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMieGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtODkxNzc5Ny9Eb25hbGQtVHJ1bXAtZGVtYW5kcy1TVE9QLUNPVU5ULWNhbXBhaWduLWxhdW5jaGVzLWJhcnJhZ2UtbGF3c3VpdHMuaHRtbNIBfGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtODkxNzc5Ny9hbXAvRG9uYWxkLVRydW1wLWRlbWFuZHMtU1RPUC1DT1VOVC1jYW1wYWlnbi1sYXVuY2hlcy1iYXJyYWdlLWxhd3N1aXRzLmh0bWw?oc=5
2020-11-05 14:34:00Z
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