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President Donald Trump declared Republican Brian Kemp the winner of the Georgia governor's race against Democrat Stacey Abrams on Friday, despite the fact that votes are still being counted.
NBC News has characterized the contest as too close to call. Kemp has 50.3 percent, or 1,979,913 votes, Abrams has 48.7 percent, or 1,910,853 votes, and a third-party Libertarian candidate has 0.9 percent, or 37,094 votes, according to NBC News.
If the margin is less than 1 percent between two candidates, a candidate may request a recount.
Abrams has not conceded and her campaign is vowing legal action to continue counting ballots.
Stacey Abrams: 'We're going to make sure every vote is counted'
Nov. 7, 201803:23Trump also sarcastically suggested the ongoing vote counts in Georgia and Florida is the work of the Russians.
"Let's blame the Russians and demand an immediate apology from President Putin!" Trump tweeted, two days after a boastful Wednesday press conference in which the president argued that he had personally staved off a blue wave and boosted his party's Senate gains.
In the close Georgia governor's race, the Abrams campaign said there is no way for Kemp to know how many outstanding ballots are left, because of incoming ballots from military overseas and provisional ballots.
Voters who cast a provisional ballot due to registration problems have until Friday afternoon to provide additional verification — like a marriage certificate to clear up a name change on a ballot, for instance — to get those ballots counted.
Kemp said Thursday that even if Abrams received "100 percent" of the remaining provisional ballots, she could not close the margin.
"The votes are not there for her," Kemp said. "I certainly respect the hard fought race that she ran. But that's a decision she's gonna have to make. But we've run the race, it's very clear now and we're moving forward with the transition."