John Wisely

Detroit Free Press

Michigan's partial recount of the 2016 presidential election shows Democrat Hillary Clinton narrowed her loss to Republican Donald Trump by 102 votes after about 2.1 million votes were recounted.

Figures released today by the Michigan Secretary of State's office showed that 2,725 precincts were recounted before the effort was halted in federal court.

"Because the recount was halted before finishing, the results that were certified on Nov. 28 stand," Secretary of State Ruth Johnson said in a statement. "President-elect Donald J. Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by 10,704 votes in official results."

► Related:Jill Stein to visit Detroit on Saturday amid recount saga

The figures also show that of the 3,047 precincts that made it through the recount, 322 -- about 10.5% -- were not recountable under Michigan law. The most commonly cited reason for excluding a precinct from recount was a mismatch between the number of ballots in the ballot box and the number of voters listed in the poll book.

Results are available on the Michigan Secretary of State website.

Under Michigan law, those precincts cannot be recounted unless the county board of canvassers is satisfied with an explanation for the discrepancy.

With 2,725 precincts counted in the state, Stein will be responsible to pay for $125 per precinct or $340,625. She paid $973,250 for a recount for the entire state and will be due a $632,625 refund from the state. It’s still not known what the actual costs of the recount was for the 26 counties that had begun counting ballots this week.

Contact John Wisely: 313-222-6825 or jwisely@freepress.com. On Twitter @jwisely.