Election officials rebut claims in Republican-led Arizona review of
Trump's 2020 loss
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[January 06, 2022]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - Election officials in Arizona's
most populous county found nearly every conclusion in a partisan "audit"
of Donald Trump's loss in the 2020 presidential election to be
misleading or false, according to an official rebuttal released on
Wednesday.
The Maricopa County Elections Department's 93-page report is an attempt
to address dozens of claims made by Trump's allies in the Republican
Party in their so-called "full forensic audit" aimed at casting doubt on
his defeat in the battleground state.
While last year's Republican-led review had already been widely
discredited by election experts as biased and procedurally flawed, the
report, titled "Correcting The Record," marked the first detailed
response by county officials.
"We determined that nearly every finding included faulty analysis,
inaccurate claims, misleading conclusions and a lack of understanding of
federal and state election laws," the report says of the audit, which
Arizona Republican senators contracted out to a private company called
Cyber Ninjas.
According to the report, the county analysis identified 22 claims that
were misleading, 41 that included flawed or misstated analysis and 13
that were demonstrably false.
President Joe Biden, a Democrat, carried Maricopa County, which includes
Phoenix, by about 45,000 votes, making it critical to his narrow win
over Trump in November 2020. Biden's victory was confirmed by a hand
recount and multiple post-election tests for accuracy. No evidence has
emerged of the widespread fraud that Trump and his allies falsely
alleged.
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A protestor holds a placard as Arizona electors gather to cast their
votes for the U.S. presidential election, at the Arizona Capitol, in
Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., December 14, 2020. REUTERS/Cheney Orr/File
Photo
Led by Arizona Senate President
Karen Fann, Republicans nevertheless pushed for a comprehensive
review of the election, including a hand recount and examination of
tabulation equipment. They released a final report in September that
found a vote tally largely matching the official results, although
they made several claims of alleged anomalies.
For example, the Cyber Ninjas used information from a third-party
commercial database to claim that some 33,000 people may have voted
illegally because they moved prior to the election and no longer
lived at the address on file with the county.
According to the county's report, Cyber Ninjas flagged problems by
using "soft match" methods that relied on basic data points such as
first name, last name, and birth year, leading to the
misidentification of people as illegally casting votes.
"Our review did not find any voter ineligible to vote from their
residential address during the November 2020 General Election and
found no evidence of double voting," the report said.
The partisan audit in Arizona was part of a larger effort by
Republicans to undermine faith in the 2020 election and gain more
control over the voting process. Since the election, several
Republican-controlled state legislatures have passed laws curbing
ballot access or placing great power over election administration in
the hands of partisan officials.
Maricopa County election officials are scheduled to detail the
findings of their report at a public meeting on Wednesday of the
county Board of Supervisors.
(reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by
Cynthia Osterman)
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