Green Party candidate Jill Stein will set up an 'election integrity' organization with leftover funds from her failed recount effort.

Stein, who netted one percent of the national popular vote, will receive a refund of $2 million, the Washington Free Beacon reports, after raising just over $7.3 million for recounts in three states.

Wisconsin has finished recounts in all but two of its 72 counties. A Pennsylvania called off ballot counting before it began. Ballots were counted in fewer than half of Michigan's precincts before a judge put an end to that effort, too.

Green Party candidate Jill Stein will set up an 'election integrity' organization with leftover funds from her failed recount effort

Election officials initially said the Wisconsin effort would cost $3.5 million but it expects to spend more than $2.1 million.

Costs are currently at $1.8 million and two remaining counties expect to bill Stein for an additional $368,000. Stein will be reimbursed for the difference.

The Green Party presidential candidate will receive a refund from Michigan, as well, in the amount of $592,000, the Free Beacon says.

Stein paid $125 a precinct for ballot counting in Michigan's 7,786 precincts. Election officials made it through 3,050 precincts before a judge stepped in.

The rest of the money Stein raised went to travel, staff and legal fees.

She told reporters in mid-December that $1.6 million of the money went to lawyers making her case in court.

A page on Stein’s website that's since been wiped said staff received $212,500 in payments and while consultants were paid $364,000, the Free Beacon reported.

Another line item was listed as administrative expenses and included travel costs was for $353,618.

Stein said at a Tuesday evening rally in Madison, Wisconsin, that she'd put the remaining funds toward the creation of a new voter integrity project, Count My Vote.

'It’s not the only instance in which we the voters were told if we the voters wanted to have a verified vote it was going to cost us an obscene amount of money,' Stein said. 'It seemed like this was part of a broader resistance to transparency and accountability in our vote.'

She said it took a 'bake sale on steroids' to get this far - and not all the votes were counted by hand.

Milwaukee did its recount with a machine. A sum total of 55 percent of Wisconsin's ballots were counted by hand, according to the Wisconsin State Journal.

Stein, who netted one percent of the national popular vote, will receive a refund of $2 million after raising just over $7.3 million for recounts in three states. She's pictured here in December in New York

The Green Party politician said the group would work toward getting rid of voting machines and push for automatic recounts when ballots are scanned electronically and in close races, Wisconsin Public Radio reported.

President-elect Donald Trump had called the Green Party recount effort 'ridiculous' and a 'scam'

'When we asked for a full recount we only got a hand recount in about half of the precincts, for about half of the voters,' she said at a Tuesday rally outside the Wisconsin state capitol. 'So essentially what we got was half a recount.'

Stein gained 66 votes in the recount effort in Wisconsin, where she netted roughly one percent of the total popular vote. Donald Trump expanded his lead over Hillary Clinton by 131 ballots.

The Wisconsin State Journal said dozens of people showed up to Stein's Madison event on Tuesday but many were reporters.

Count My Vote's first act will be a review of local recounts that it will sum up and release in a report.

'We also want to include in this ensuring we have a right to vote and that we put an end to voter ID laws to this interstate cross check that has taken millions of voters potentially off rolls, also ranked choice voting,' Stein said Tuesday.

Trump was certified as the winner of the presidential election on Friday, in the House of Representatives, after the Electoral College's vote's were formally registered. A protester is seen being led out

Vice President Joe Biden received a standing ovation from Republicans in Congress as he shut down the rancor with his gavel, telling members of his party, 'It is over'

Trump had called the Green Party recount effort 'ridiculous.' Allies of the president-elect were fighting Stein in court.

'This recount is just a way for Jill Stein, who received less than one percent of the vote overall and wasn’t even on the ballot in many states, to fill her coffers with money, most of which she will never even spend on this ridiculous recount,' he declared in November.

The president-elect said 'the results of this election should be respected instead of being challenged and abused, which is exactly what Jill Stein is doing.'

Trump was certified as the winner of the presidential election on Friday, in the House of Representatives, after the Electoral College's vote's were formally registered.

Clinton earned 2.9 million more votes than Trump across the nation but failed to secure a majority of votes in the states she needed to win the Electoral College.

Protesters hollered during the House session today and Democratic members lodged complaints about Russian hacking and voter suppression in the election.