TEHRAN (Basirat)- A recount of presidential ballots in three US states where President-elect Donald Trump won by narrow margins is unlikely to alter the outcome because a recount could expose fraudulent votes by non-US citizens, according to conservative activist Gregg Phillips.

A recount of presidential ballots in three US states where President-elect Donald Trump won by narrow margins is unlikely to alter the outcome because a recount could expose fraudulent votes by non-US citizens, according to conservative activist Gregg Phillips.Phillips said that vote recounts unlikely to change the election outcome.
"Remember a recount is just that," Phillips said in a tweet on Friday.
"Findings go both ways. They are not changing any votes. Don't worry…
DJT [Donald J. Trump] won.
" Earlier this month, Phillips claimed in a series of tweets that his
organization, votefraud.org, had found at least 2 million and as many as
3 million non-US citizens by examining a database of 180 million voter
registrations.Phillips’ charges have circulated on a number of conservative news websites.
However, Phillips has yet to disclose the methodology behind his
conclusions, prompting skepticism among US corporate mainstream media,
which has not reported the allegations.
Mainstream news outlets are especially cautious amid charges by
Democratic Party activists that fake news reports on social-media sites
such as Facebook and Twitter may have contributed to Trump’s surprise
victory over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
However, numerous critics have pointed out that biased coverage by the
mainstream media during the 2016 election has been unprecedented in
scale and intensity, and has further prompted a significant portion of
the US public to seek news on alternative and independent sites.
Green Party Candidate Jill Stein is raising money to fund recounts
in three battleground US states — Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
At a press conference in the Wisconsin city of Milwaukee on Friday, the
Green Party announced that a recount in that state could begin as early
as Monday.