Arizona county certifies midterm election vote after court order
Send a link to a friend
[December 02, 2022]
By Ned Parker
(Reuters) - A conservative, rural Arizona county that had defied a state
deadline to certify its Nov. 8 midterm election results relented on
Thursday after a judge said state law required the approval.
Superior Court Judge Casey McGinley ruled at a hearing on Thursday that
the Cochise County board of supervisors did not have the right to block
certification.
“The board of supervisors has a nondiscretionary duty to canvas the
returns,” McGinley said during the livestreamed hearing, citing Arizona
law. He added “it has no authority to change vote totals or reject the
election results.”
The two Republicans on the county's three-member board of supervisors
had resisted the certification because they said they wanted to hear
more evidence from those who have argued, without evidence, that the
county’s voting machines were not properly certified. The state disputed
that claim.
Arizona’s Secretary of State's office filed a lawsuit against the board
on Monday after the county officials defied the state deadline for
certification. Arizona law requires counties to certify election results
by Nov. 28, ahead of the state's certification on Dec. 5.
Soon after the court hearing on Thursday, the board approved the
election results. Tom Crosby, one of the two Republicans who had opposed
certifying the vote, skipped the meeting, but said in an email to
Reuters he did so on the advice of the board's attorney. He did not
provide further details.
Peggy Judd, the other Republican member, said in the meeting she had no
choice after the court order but to approve the results.
"I can't say enough about how important this effort is that we made, and
I am not ashamed of anything I did," she said.
[to top of second column]
|
A woman walks to cast her ballot at the
register of voters during early voting in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.,
October 29, 2020. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido/
"People have lost their faith in elections," she added.
Arizona has been at the center of battles over election fraud
allegations since former President Donald Trump falsely claimed the
2020 election was stolen from him. Several recounts of the 2020
votes in Arizona and elsewhere confirmed Joe Biden's victory.
Arizona's Republican candidate for governor this year, Kari Lake,
embraced Trump’s stolen election claims and has refused to concede
after losing to her opponent, current Secretary of State Katie
Hobbs, by just over 17,000 votes in the Nov. 8 election.
The defeat of Lake and other election deniers was seen as a powerful
rebuke of candidates who echoed Trump’s myths of a stolen election,
but some activists who promote false theories of voter fraud have
refused to accept the results.
Voting rights expert Ryan Snow of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law said he was unaware of any other case where a local
board, whose role in the election process is limited to ratifying
the work of election officials, had refused to certify the vote "on
the basis of a thoroughly debunked conspiracy theory."
Last June in New Mexico, Otero County, which had objected to not
carrying out a hand count of their primary election, only certified
the results after a court ordered them to do so.
(Reporting By Ned Parker; Editing by Chris Reese)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|