Election certification is a traditionally routine duty that has become politicized in the Trump era

FILE - The affidavit in support of an arrest warrant for 16 fake Republican electors for Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election in Michigan is photographed Tuesday, July 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick, File)

For the outcome of this year's presidential race, it will be the vote count on election night and possibly in the days after that will grab the public's attention. But those numbers are unofficial until the election is formally certified — a once uneventful process that has become politicized since then-President Donald Trump tried to overturn his reelection loss four years ago.

Trump unsuccessfully on an evenly divided board that had to sign off on Michigan's vote not to certify his loss in the state. On Jan. 6, 2021, he to march to the Capitol and stop Congress from taking the final step to certify that Democrat Joe Biden had won the presidency.

This year, Trump's allies have set the table to should Trump lose to Democrat Kamala Harris.

The best way to think about certification is as a three-step process.

It starts with local governments, such as counties. It then moves to states, which add up all the local totals to certify the winner and appoint presidential electors. Congress then effectively certifies the votes of those electors.

The process may seem daunting, especially on the local level. Most of the country's thousands of individual election jurisdictions — many of which have been by Trump supporters — have to officially certify their vote tallies before a state can certify a winner. If refuses to certify, it could stop a state from signing off.

Legal experts say there is no actual legal risk of Trump's allies being able to reverse a loss by refusing to certify at the local level. Decades of case law hold that local officials but to certify election results. Any potential problem with the vote count can be challenged in court, but not on the boards and commissions that have the ceremonial task of certifying the ballot tallies and transmitting them to the state.

Trump supporters have tried to block election results in , and since 2020 by refusing to certify them, only to be forced to sign off by courts or to back down under legal pressure.

The notion that a lone board could hold up a state by refusing to certify is "this crazy fantasy that has merged the right and the left,” said Derek Muller, a University of Notre Dame law professor.

In 2020, Trump focused intensely on to refuse to certify his losses and send his to the Electoral College. That failed everywhere.

In 2024, four of the six swing states are led by Democratic governors. In the other two, the GOP governors don't seem likely to go along with a potential push by Trump to stop certification. Georgia's Brian Kemp defied Trump in 2020, and Nevada's Joe Lombardo was elected in 2022 with votes from Democrats.

The last step in the certification process is in Congress on Jan. 6. Once the states have certified their winners and selected their electors, and those electors cast their votes for president, the Constitution requires Congress to formally count those votes.

That's what Trump and his supporters seized on in 2020, arguing that Congress could choose to reject Electoral College votes from states where it didn't trust the vote count. Even after , a majority of House Republicans — 139 of them — and eight Republican senators voted to reject Biden's electors from Pennsylvania. That wasn't enough votes to change the outcome of the election, but it's a signal that should Harris win.

A bipartisan majority in Congress not only upheld but then that governs how Congress certifies a presidential election to make it much harder to reject Electoral College votes. If Harris wins, we'll see if that majority still holds on Jan. 6 to confirm her victory.

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