Michigan attorney general petitions court to stop presidential recount

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, pictured here at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on July 18, petitioned the Michigan Supreme Court Friday to halt a recount of the state's votes in the 2016 presidential election. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI

LANSING, Mich., Dec. 2 (UPI) — Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette asked the state’s Supreme Court to halt a recount of ballots cast in the presidential election Friday.

The action comes as Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein seeks ballot recounts in three states, including Michigan, and lawyers for President-elect Donald Trump filed an objection to the recount request, calling the demand “lawless and “insulting.”

Schuette’s court petition argues that Stein, who received only one percent of the presidential vote in Michigan, is not an “aggrieved” candidate eligible for a recount, and that time constraints could not permit a recount.

“Even though Stein could have petitioned for the recount weeks ago, she waited until the last possible moment under state law to do so…If allowed to proceed, the statewide hand recount could cost Michigan taxpayers millions of dollars and would put Michigan voters at risk of being disenfranchised in the Electoral College,” Schuette’s appeal to the court said.

The state’s Board of Canvassers, meeting Friday to consider Trump’s objection to Stein’s request, instead went into a closed session to consider Schuette’s action.

Schuette is a Republican who supported the presidential run of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush before switching his allegiance to Trump, and is expected to run for Michigan governor in 2018. Mark Brewer, former Michigan Democratic party chairman, noted Schuette’s ambition to run for governor and said he is merely “trying to please his Republican constituency.”

Lisa Lyons, chair of the Michigan House of Representatives’ Elections Committee, introduced a bill Thursday requiring candidates more than five percent behind a contest’s winner to incur all expenses of a statewide recount vote. Under current law, any candidate can file for a recount, paying a fee between $25 and $125 per precinct, depending on the closeness of the results.

In the November election, Trump defeated Democratic Party challenger Hillary Clinton in Michigan by fewer than 10,000 votes.

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