Voting machine problems in Arizona seized on by Trump, election deniers
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[November 09, 2022]
By Tim Reid
PHOENIX (Reuters) -Problems with dozens of
electronic vote-counting machines in the battleground state of Arizona
on Tuesday were seized upon by Republican former President Donald Trump
and his followers, who falsely claimed it was evidence of election fraud
by Democrats.
Just a few hours into Election Day, Maricopa County Recorder Stephen
Richer told reporters that about 20% of electronic vote tabulation
machines in the state's most populous county were malfunctioning, and
technicians were being deployed to fix them.
The problem was that ballots were not lining up properly inside the
machines and were not being read, Richer said, adding that despite the
problems all votes would be counted. Richer called the malfunctions
"disappointing" and correctly predicted that election deniers such as
Trump would "exploit" the issue.
Maricopa County officials said the problem affected about 60 machines at
a quarter of voting locations in Maricopa County, and that by 2 p.m. - 8
hours after voting started - 17 had been fixed by changing the printer
settings.
The state's Republican gubernatorial candidate, Kari Lake, also seized
on the machine problems, issuing a "voter alert" on her Twitter account.
Lake has echoed Trump's false claims that the 2020 presidential election
was stolen from him through widespread voting fraud.
Late in the day, a judge in Maricopa County rejected a Republican
request to keep polls open past their usual closing time of 7 p.m. The
judge said Republicans had provided no evidence that a voter was not
able to cast a ballot because of the machine problems.
Trump posted a video to his Truth Social platform urging people in
Arizona to "stay on line" if they were facing delays in voting.
Lake told reporters that she had encountered no issues when she voted in
what she described as a left-leaning area of the city.
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Voters arrive to cast their ballots in
the midterm elections in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., November 8, 2022.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Trump, Lake and others have been calling for Election Day-only
voting and for the end of electronic voting machines, promoting
instead the use of just paper ballots and hand counts a process that
is time-consuming, costly and far less accurate than machine
counting.
Democrat Joe Biden narrowly beat Trump in Arizona in 2020. The state
has been central in the false claims by Trump and his followers that
the presidential election was rigged against him. All of Arizona's
main Republican candidates this year are election deniers, including
Lake.
"Reports are coming in from Arizona that the Voting Machines are not
properly working in predominately Republican/Conservative areas,"
Trump said in a post on Truth Social, adding: "Here we go again? The
people will not stand for it!!"
Barbara Russell, 70, a volunteer Republican poll observer at a
voting location in Wickenburg, a town in rural Maricopa County, told
Reuters that both tabulation machines there had been malfunctioning
and rejecting ballots.
"This is the total disenfranchisement of rural voters," Russell told
Reuters.
Paul Penzone, the Maricopa County Sheriff, said additional deputies
had been deployed to polling locations. Barricades were erected
around the county's elections office in central Phoenix in
anticipation of potential protests.
(Reporting by Tim Reid in Phoenix; additional reporting by Andy
Sullivan, Tyler Clifford, Susan Heavey and Jacqueline Thomsen;
editing by Ross Colvin, Will Dunham, and Jonathan Oatis)
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