of battles brewing. i m not going to detail every single lawsuit that has been filed thus far in florida. the show is only an hour-long, after all. but i am going to tell you the nelson campaign and outside democratic groups are asking judges to make county elections officials, counties election officials stop tossing out mailed in ballots because the signature doesn t match the one on file. they want officials to take a second look and reconsider those ballots. they want county officials to accept ballots that were mailed by election day but didn t reach elections officials by the mandated deadline. another lawsuit seeks to have rick scott as the governor of florida recuse himself from involvement with the recount process, and that is because this one makes sense rick scott, as his lead in the race has dwindled, has not only accused the broward county supervisor of elections of rampant fraud, he has not only
take a listen. all the votes that we have in, other than provisional ballots have been counted in our great state by the county elections officials. the only thing outstanding is about a little over 20,000 provisional ballots. those of us that live in the deep south, this isn t our first rodeo either, right? there has always been a constant onslaught, particularly for black voters in this country, which is why the voting rights act in the first place was passed. reporter: so ali, that last woman you heard the from, miss brown, she is one of five people who actually filed legal action against brian kemp, saying that he can t oversee this in an unbiased way. she was very relieved to know that in fact he had offered his resignation earlier this morning. but again, the kemp campaign saying that they expect this is already a victory for him. he s already claimed rights to the governors mansion and said he s going to begin his transition. but abrams said you simply cannot do that when
together. i didn t have separation. you didn t have separation? reporter: that s what she told me. sounds like something you d hear in second grade. uh-huh. reporter: cnn found walters and mcclellan and 593 other rejected absentee voters on a website where they keep a tally. not all of the voters we called knew their ballots had been tossed. right now, i m humid said carol hutchinson who wanted to make sure you knew she was republican. her ballot was thrown out because of her year of birth missing and one rejected because of insufficient oath information. she was not aware of this and said i have no idea why it would have been rejected. three others called by cnn say they were notified about mistakes on their ballots which they admitted to and were given new ballots. it s up to county elections officials to decide if absentee ballots are accepted and
the close of business tomorrow, wednesday, to return to your county elections office with your i.d. to prove you re a registered vote so your provisional ballot can be counted. county elections officials have until friday, three days from now, to verify and count remaining provisional ballots, all 324,000 of them. by friday. and they re counting them now at a rate of 18,000 a day. you guys need to pick up the pace to meet the deadline, aren t you? come on, arizona, this is ridiculous. you need to fix this.
provisional ballots have until the close of business tomorrow, wednesday, to return to your county elections office with your i.d. to prove you re a registered vote so your provisional voters so your provisional ballot can be counted. county elections officials have until friday, three days from now, to verify and count remaining provisional ballots, all 324,000 of them. by friday. and they re counting them now at a rate of 18,000 a day. you guys need to pick up the pace to meet the deadline, aren t you? come on, arizona, this is ridiculous. you need to fix this. capella university understands businesses are trying to come back from rough economic times. employees are being forced to do more with less. and the need for capable leaders is greater than ever. when you see these problems do you take a step back,