This small amount of difference is well within the expected margin of error for an audit of this size, and it is largely caused by human error during the hand counting process.Georgia law mandates that risk-limiting audits must be conducted following any election with statewide or federal contests. All counties participated in the required Risk-Limiting Audit that confirmed the original result as tabulated by the voting equipment. Notably, every audit of a race in Georgia, including the hand-count audit of the 2020 election results, have confirmed that the system functioned properly and that the result was correct.“Our county election directors are always going above and beyond,” said Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. “Their hard work secures our voting system, building trust in communities across the state.”As in November 2022, Georgia’s audit was supported by VotingWorks and their Arlo auditing software.CLICK HERE for a report with audit summary data.CLICK HERE for a zip file with all of the ballot manifests and machine batch tallies. This includes all batches statewide, including those that were audited. You can confirm that these were the same batch tallies that we started the audit with by performing a SHA256 hash of the file and matching it to the tweet from Gabriel Sterling (@GabrielSterling) from 03/19/2024 at 8:57PM Eastern Time. |
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