A drive by Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate, for recounts in
those states has brought in more than $5 million by midday Friday.
The Obama administration said Friday that despite Russian attempts to undermine the presidential election, it has concluded that the results “accurately reflect the will of the American people.”
The statement came as liberal opponents of Donald Trump,
some citing fears of vote hacking, are seeking recounts in three states
— Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania — where his margin of victory
was extremely thin.
A drive by Jill Stein,
the Green Party candidate, for recounts in those states had brought in
more than $5 million by midday Friday, her campaign said, and had
increased its goal to $7 million. She filed for a recount in Wisconsin
on Friday, about an hour before the deadline.
In its statement, the administration said, “The
Kremlin probably expected that publicity surrounding the disclosures
that followed the Russian government-directed compromises of emails from
U.S. persons and institutions, including from U.S. political
organizations, would raise questions about the integrity of the election
process that could have undermined the legitimacy of the
president-elect.”
That was a
reference to the breach of the Democratic National Committee’s email
system, and the leak of emails from figures like John D. Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman.
“Nevertheless, we stand behind our election results, which accurately reflect the will of the American people,” it added.
Supporters
of Clinton have enthusiastically backed the notion of challenging the
results in the three states as a last-ditch effort to reverse Trump’s
clear majority in the Electoral College.
They
have seized on suggestions by some computer scientists that the states,
which were crucial to Trump’s victory, need to manually review paper
ballots to ensure the election was not hacked.
The
campaign, uniting around the hashtag #AuditTheVote, has picked up
momentum among grass-roots activists still mourning Trump’s victory. But
the pleas for recounts have gained no support from the Clinton
campaign, which has concluded that it is highly unlikely to change the
outcome.
In Michigan, Stein must wait for
a Monday meeting of the state’s Board of Canvassers to certify the
results of the Nov. 8 balloting before filing for a recount. In Pennsylvania,
where paper ballots are used only in some areas, election officials
said that the deadline to petition for a recount had passed but that a
candidate could challenge the result in court before a Monday deadline.
The
recount efforts have generated pushback by experts who said it would be
enormously difficult to hack voting machines on a large scale. The
administration, in its statement, confirmed reports from the Department
of Homeland Security and intelligence officials that they did not see “any increased level of malicious cyberactivity aimed at disrupting our electoral process on Election Day.”
The administration said it remained “confident in the overall integrity of electoral infrastructure, a confidence that was borne out.” It added: “As a result, we believe our elections were free and fair from a cybersecurity perspective.”
However, intelligence officials are still investigating the impact of a broader Russian “information warfare”
campaign, in which fake news about Hillary Clinton, and about
U.S.-Russia relations, appeared intended to influence voters. Many of
those false reports originated from RT News and Sputnik, two
state-funded Russian sites.
Those
fake-news reports were widely circulated on social media, independent
studies, including one set for release soon, have shown, sometimes in an
organized fashion by groups that appear to have had common ownership.
Individuals, conservative talk-show hosts and activists recirculated
them, often not knowing, or apparently not caring, about the accuracy of
the reports.
A study published just
before the election on warontherocks.com, written by Andrew Weisburd,
Clinton Watts and J.M. Berger, documented efforts by “trolls” to attack
the reputations of those who challenged Russia’s activities in Syria,
and to spread rumors about Clinton’s health.
The study said that an effort to track 7,000 social media accounts over 2 1/2 years indicated that support for Trump “isn’t the end of Russia’s social media and hacking campaign in America, but merely the beginning.”
But
the misinformation effort is far from black-and-white. Many people who
spread false news have no connections to any foreign power, including a
man in Austin, Texas, who posted a Twitter message saying that paid
protesters were being bused to an anti-Trump demonstration there.
Although the report quickly went viral, the buses, it turned out, were
there for a corporate conference.
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