The Wisconsin Election Commission’s day 11 spreadsheet from December 11 shows that almost every ward in the state had now been fully recounted – except for the Democratic stronghold City of Milwaukee and a few others.

However, on December 12, the Election Commission said all counties were done:

All 72 WI counties have finished recounting ballots. 4 are in process to certify recount results today: Dane, Milwaukee, Outagamie & Rock. — Wisconsin Elections (@WI_Elections) December 12, 2016

The Commission said the final results would be certified and released at 3 p.m. December 12. No spreadsheet has been publicly released yet containing full Milwaukee returns.

(Update: Milwaukee returns were submitted on December 12, and final returns were certified, declaring Donald Trump the Wisconsin victor. When all was said and done, Trump’s margin actually grew. Read more here.)

Hillary Clinton has only reduced Donald Trump’s lead by several dozen votes in the days of recounting, nowhere near enough to alter the election. Trump won Wisconsin by more than 22,000 votes. Green Party nominee Jill Stein paid at least $3.5 million in donated money for the recount.

The Milwaukee County Clerk told the news media the recount was completed on Thursday, December 8, and only minor changes were found. However, the most recent spreadsheets still do not contain the full returns. That leaves Milwaukee as pretty much the last lingering mystery before Wisconsin can shut the lid on the 2016 presidential recount.

The Milwaukee County Clerk told Heavy on December 12, “Milwaukee County has finished recounting all ballots and is in the process of certifying the results to the Wisconsin Election Commission (WEC). This will be complete by the deadline of 8:00 PM today and results should be posted on the WEC web page thereafter.” On December 9, the spokesman for the Election Commission told Heavy, “Milwaukee may be done recounting, but they haven’t yet submitted their totals to us. When they do, we’ll mark them as complete.”

The December 11 update reads, “Numbers for the City of Milwaukee do not include absentee ballots, which have not yet been recounted. Milwaukee counts its absentee ballots centrally (not at the polling place) on Election Night. When those absentee ballots have been counted the numbers will be updated.”

Here’s a portion of the day 11 spreadsheet to show how city wards appear. They show deficits for each candidate because absentee ballots have not been reported to the state yet:

Some on Twitter were taking note of the missing Milwaukee returns.

Why do the #WIRecount results leave out Milwaukee absentee ballots? https://t.co/oV22GaYPRQ — Kat Capps (@KatCapps) December 11, 2016

Day 11 – WI Election recount totals & final estimate, inc. yet to be counted Milwaukee absentees #WIRecount #wisconsinrecount #Recount2016 pic.twitter.com/Cvc5YwYeWy — Homer Tabert (@HomerTabert) December 11, 2016

The state set a deadline of December 12 for counties to complete their recounts. The state must certify its returns by December 13. The Electoral College meets on December 19.

The December 11 spreadsheet shows that, in addition to the City of Milwaukee, only these precincts had not yet been reported to the state:

Clark County – ward 8 in the City of Stanley. (But this ward only listed 2 votes during the original count, one for Trump and one for Clinton).

Dane County – 5 wards in the City of Verona. (Trump received 371 and 563 votes in the first precinct and Clinton received 801 and 1,455 votes.) Dane County told local news stations that it had completed its recount, and the Election Commission retweeted one of those accounts. However, these wards are still not listed in the day 11 spreadsheet.

Milwaukee County – wards 3-9 in the City of Glendale. (Trump received 429 votes and Clinton received 852 in these wards in the original count).

City of Milwaukee – still not updated with absentee ballots, according to the Election Commission. The returns appear in the spreadsheet but they still show deficits because they are not complete.

Monroe County – City of Sparta and City of Tomah wards. (In City of Sparta wards 7-12, Trump had 700 votes and Clinton had 616 in the original count. In City of Tomah wards 1-6, Trump had 627 votes and Clinton had 465. In City of Tomah Wards 7-11, Trump had 759 votes and Clinton had 517. In City of Tomah wards 12-16, 18, Trump had 691 votes and Clinton had 507 in the original count.)

Portage County – Town of Carson. (Trump had 493 and Clinton had 292 votes in the original count.)

Racine County – City of Racine ward 36 (Trump had 164 votes and Clinton had 415 in the original vote count.)

Dane County completed its recounted returns late on Saturday evening, said WKOW-TV. WKOW-TV said only a few changes occurred in Dane, with Clinton gaining 172 votes.

Here is another way to look at it:

Day 11 – WI Election Recount – wards where Clinton gained 10 or more votes #WIRecount #wisconsinrecount #Recount2016 pic.twitter.com/dbVDUvNnWO — Homer Tabert (@HomerTabert) December 11, 2016

The most recent totals released by the Election Commission showed the following net gains and losses:

The net change was +1,442 votes: Trump/Pence +628, Clinton/Kaine +653, Castle/Bradley +17, Johnson/Weld +76, Stein/Baraka +68, Moorehead/Lilly +14, and De la Fuente/Steinberg -14.

However, those are not the final returns. As noted, those are expected to be released at 3 p.m. December 12.