The Wayne County Board of Canvassers failed to certify the election results in Michigan’s largest county Thursday after the four-member panel deadlocked at 2-2 along partisan lines.

The decision, which was made amid a flood of Republican lawsuits in the Wolverine State, came after some absentee ballot poll books in Detroit, which is located in Wayne County, were found to be out of balance. A similar mismatch in the August primaries and general election in 2016 did not prevent the body from certifying those results. 

Both of the GOP members of the panel voted to not certify the results, while the Democratic members voted to certify.

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The deadlock will likely kick the responsibility of certifying the county’s results to the secretary of State's office and Board of State Canvassers, which will then have 10 days to canvas and certify the results.

The failure to certify is a public relations win – albeit likely a temporary one – for Republicans led by President Trump, who has waged a campaign to malign the election results in Michigan and other battlegrounds over baseless allegations of voter fraud.

Republicans have filed at least four lawsuits in Wayne County alone in an attempt to stop the count there, leaning on allegations of irregularities and that GOP poll watchers were unable to effectively monitor ballot-counting. Democrats have rebutted the claims, maintaining that the election was run smoothly and that any irregularities would not be sufficient to overturn nearly 150,000-vote lead in the state. Read more at The Hill