Arizona could wait a week to learn who
its next U.S. senator will be
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[November 08, 2018]
By Daniel Trotta
PHOENIX (Reuters) - Arizona voters may have
to wait a week or more to learn whether their U.S. senator is Republican
Martha McSally or Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, as some 600,000 ballots
remained uncounted as of Wednesday afternoon.
With one out of every four ballots remaining to be counted, McSally led
by about 15,000 votes, less than one percentage point. Neither candidate
was ready to concede, though the outcome was unlikely to tip the balance
of power in the U.S. Senate after Republicans flipped three seats in
their favor, extending their majority.
The delayed result is a familiar feature of Arizona politics, when
candidates can wait for days or weeks to learn final results.
That is because of a state law that gives voters the choice of mailing
in early ballots or dropping them off at polling places as late as
Election Day, requiring time to be hand-processed.
"I can relate. When I ran in 2016, I had to wait 10 days for my final
results," said Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes, who in his
elected position is responsible for overseeing the count of the nearly
500,000 ballots yet to processed in Arizona's largest county.
Hundreds of poll workers will hand-process the ballots in a county
warehouse, which could take eight or nine days, Fontes said in a
telephone interview.
The Secretary of State's office will certify the results on Dec. 3,
though the winner may become clear before then as the vote count gets
gradually updated.
"We don't think of it as quirky. We think of it as enabling as much
participation in the process as possible," Arizona Republican political
strategist Stan Barnes said. "Out west, we tend to take our time with
these things."
Only about 20 percent of Arizona voters actually went into the voting
booth on Tuesday, with 80 percent dropping off or mailing ballots, said
Matt Roberts, a spokesman for Arizona Secretary of State Michele Reagan.

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U.S. Representative from Arizona's 9th congressional district
Kyrsten Sinema poses for a photo in front of the Arizona State Sun
Devils student section prior to the game against the Utah Utes at
Sun Devil Stadium. Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo

In recent years, Arizona voters have waited later and later to drop
off their ballots, Roberts said.
"There's no law against them holding onto their ballot until the
last minute but it certainly causes a delay for close races,"
Roberts said.
McSally has been through the wait before. She won her House of
Representatives race in 2014 by a razor-thin margin more than a
month after the election.

That race also involved litigation, and a Superior Court judge
declared her the winner by 167 votes over incumbent Democrat Ron
Barber following a state-mandated recount.
Neither campaign responded to a request for comment on the wait.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Additional reporting by David Schwartz;
Editing by Scott Malone and Lisa Shumaker)
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