Courts have thus far rejected Republican demands in Pennsylvania and other battleground states to throw out ballots or stop vote counting.
All told, counties in Pennsylvania have tallied more than 6.7 million ballots, or about 74% turnout.
On Monday, Biden’s lead in the state stood at about 45,000 votes, fueled by big wins in Philadelphia, Allegheny County and Philadelphia’s four heavily populated suburban counties. That is larger than the 44,292-vote margin of Trump’s victory in Pennsylvania in 2016.
More than 2.6 million mail-in ballots were reported received by counties, and there has been no report by state or county election officials of fraud or any other problem with the accuracy of the count.
Republicans in the state Legislature and congressional delegation have echoed complaints about how the state managed the election, calling for the resignation of Wolf’s top elections official and an audit of the election.
On Monday, Trump tweeted, “Pennsylvania prevented us from watching much of the Ballot count. Unthinkable and illegal in this country.”
However, Republican lawyers acknowledged in court last week that they had certified observers watching mail-in ballots being processed in Philadelphia.
Some of the pending litigation filed by Republicans challenges a state court order to count mail-in ballots that arrived in a three-day period after polls closed. Ballots cannot be counted if there is proof they were mailed after polls closed.
On Monday, 10 Republican state attorneys general filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court to support a challenge to the state court order.
Pennsylvania election officials have not yet provided a statewide tally of the total of late-arriving ballots. Still, based on estimates from a number of counties, the total may not exceed 10,000.