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AZ ELECTION TRIAL

ITS NOT OVER!!
You are correct... there's one more appeal to the SCOTUS if I'm understanding the process completely. I suspect that she will lose there as well, since as far as I can tell, there's no evidence that will stand up in court that there was fraud. But don't worry. After the appeal to the SCOTUS fails (I doubt they will even look at it), you can still post some TGP crap to tell us how despite no evidence, this is all Deep State driven and how she got cheated.
 

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Rasmussen Reports lead pollster Mark Mitchell joined Bannon’s War Room this morning following the release of a new bombshell 2022 election exit poll, which shows Arizona has lost faith in elections and overwhelmingly voted for the candidates whose races were stolen.

The Gateway Pundit reported this morning on Rasmussen’s new poll of likely Arizona voters. This poll shows that Kari Lake won by a landslide 8 points against corrupt Democrat Katie Hobbs. Abe Hamadeh had 49% of votes to Kris Mayes’ 43%, and Mark Finchem, who supposedly lost by 120,000 votes, had 46% of support among all voters
 

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Rasmussen Reports lead pollster Mark Mitchell joined Bannon’s War Room this morning following the release of a new bombshell 2022 election exit poll, which shows Arizona has lost faith in elections and overwhelmingly voted for the candidates whose races were stolen.

The Gateway Pundit reported this morning on Rasmussen’s new poll of likely Arizona voters. This poll shows that Kari Lake won by a landslide 8 points against corrupt Democrat Katie Hobbs. Abe Hamadeh had 49% of votes to Kris Mayes’ 43%, and Mark Finchem, who supposedly lost by 120,000 votes, had 46% of support among all voters
I read in the National Enquirer that the lizard people didn't like Keri Lake so they made sure she lost. What can you do....it is what it is.....
 

Most Arizona Voters Believe Election ‘Irregularities’ Affected Outcome​

Friday, March 17, 2023
The razor-thin outcome of last year’s Arizona gubernatorial election has made most voters in the state suspicious of the result.
A new telephone and online survey by Rasmussen Reports and College Republicans United finds that 55% of Likely Arizona Voters believe it is likely that problems with the 2022 election in Maricopa County affected the outcome, including 35% who think it’s Very Likely.
Forty percent (40%) say it’s not likely that the problems in Maricopa County affected the election outcome, including 29% who believe it is Not At All Likely. (To see survey question wording, click here.)
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Republican candidate Kari Lake officially lost to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs by a margin of about 17,000 of more than 2.5 million votes cast. Lake filed a lawsuit challenging the result, and the state Supreme Court will hear her appeal next week.

Of the 92% of Arizona voters who say they voted in the 2022 election, the new survey found 51% voted for Lake and 43% voted for Hobbs, while five percent (5%) say they voted for some other candidate.
“This survey of actual Arizona voters, with a 3% margin of error, indicates that 8% more of them voted for Lake than voted for Katie Hobbs,” said Richard Thomas, National Chairman of Republicans United.


“That's almost three times the poll margin of error. This raises serious questions about the certified ballot totals in light of the host of reported procedural irregularities.”
(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it’s in the news, it’s in our polls). Rasmussen Reports updates are also available on Twitter or Facebook.
The survey of 1,001 Arizona Likely Voters was conducted on March 13-14, 2023 by Rasmussen Reports and College Republicans United. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.
After reports of Election Day problems with vote tabulation in Maricopa County, Lake called the election “botched” and declared: “This isn't about Republicans or Democrats. This is about our sacred right to vote, a right that many voters were, sadly, deprived of on November 8th.”

Fifty-sevent percent (57%) of Arizona voters agree with Lake’s statement, including 36% who Strongly Agree. Thirty-four percent (34%) disagree, including 25% who Strongly Disagree.
Seventy-two percent (72%) of Republican voters in Arizona agree with Lake’s quote about the “sacred right to vote,” as do 37% of Democrats and 60% of voters not affiliated with either major party.
Among other findings of the Rasmussen Reports/College Republicans United survey:
– Lake remains more popular than Hobbs with Arizona voters. Forty-four percent (47%) of Likely Arizona Voters view Hobbs favorably, including 25% who have a Very Favorable impression of the Democratic governor, while 46% view her unfavorably, including 34% who have a Very Unfavorable opinion of Hobbs. Fifty-one percent (51%) view Lake favorably, including 30% who have a Very Favorable impression of the Republican candidate. Forty-two percent (42%) view Lake unfavorably, including 33% who have a Very Unfavorable impression.
 
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The new explosive poll just hit the airwaves, and with 95% confidence and a 3% margin of error, the results show that the election was rigged and stolen from the Trump-Endorsed candidates for Arizona’s statewide positions.

Rasmussen asked voters who they chose in the 2022 Election and discovered that Kari Lake likely had 51% of support to Katie Hobbs’ 43%, Abe Hamadeh had 49% to Kris Mayes’ 43%, and Mark Finchem, who supposedly lost by 120,000 votes, had 46% of support among all voters to Adrian Fontes’ 43%.


The results are as follows:

Asked of those who voted in November 2022:

For Governor, did you vote for Republican Kari Lake or Democrat Katie Hobbs?


51% Kari Lake
43% Katie Hobbs
5% someone else
2% not sure

For Secretary of State, did you vote for Republican Mark Finchem or Democrat Adrian Fontes?

46% Mark Finchem
43% Adrian Fontes
5% someone else
6% not sure

For Attorney General, did you vote for Democrat Kris Mayes or Republican Abe Hamadeh?


43% Kris Mayes
49% Abe Hamadeh
4% someone else
5% not sure
The Gateway Pundit has reported on the ongoing legal challenges by Lake and Hamadeh. Mark Finchem was recently hit with sanctions by a corrupt RINO Doug Ducey-appointed judge for challenging his race.

Kari Lake gave the following statement to The Gateway Pundit ahead of this major release:

Kari Lake: When the race was called for Katie Hobbs, I tweeted, “Arizonans know BS when they see it.”
 
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The new explosive poll just hit the airwaves, and with 95% confidence and a 3% margin of error, the results show that the election was rigged and stolen from the Trump-Endorsed candidates for Arizona’s statewide positions.

Rasmussen asked voters who they chose in the 2022 Election and discovered that Kari Lake likely had 51% of support to Katie Hobbs’ 43%, Abe Hamadeh had 49% to Kris Mayes’ 43%, and Mark Finchem, who supposedly lost by 120,000 votes, had 46% of support among all voters to Adrian Fontes’ 43%.


The results are as follows:

Asked of those who voted in November 2022:

For Governor, did you vote for Republican Kari Lake or Democrat Katie Hobbs?


51% Kari Lake
43% Katie Hobbs
5% someone else
2% not sure

For Secretary of State, did you vote for Republican Mark Finchem or Democrat Adrian Fontes?

46% Mark Finchem
43% Adrian Fontes
5% someone else
6% not sure

For Attorney General, did you vote for Democrat Kris Mayes or Republican Abe Hamadeh?



The Gateway Pundit has reported on the ongoing legal challenges by Lake and Hamadeh. Mark Finchem was recently hit with sanctions by a corrupt RINO Doug Ducey-appointed judge for challenging his race.

Kari Lake gave the following statement to The Gateway Pundit ahead of this major release:
Biden Approval rating
Mar. 5-91,500LV
0.9650%49%50%45%Approve+5
 
No comment but glad that you value Rasmussen.
Glad that you agree Biden is polling ahead of Trump and has a +5 approval rating, since you value Rasmussen's polling so highly. Mark Mitchell said they called landlines to gather the AZ data. What demographic is most likely to still have a landline? Older voters who skew conservative, that's who. LOL
 

The Arizona Supreme Court issued a new order on Wednesday, sending a key piece of Kari Lake’s Election lawsuit back to the trial court for further review.

“IT IS ORDERED denying review of issues one through five and seven. The Court of Appeals aptly resolved these issues, most of which were the subject of evidentiary proceedings in the trial court, and Petitioner’s challenges on these grounds are insufficient to warrant the requested relief under Arizona or federal law,” states the order.

“IT IS FURTHER ORDERED granting review of issue number six to the extent count three of the complaint challenges the Maricopa County Recorder’s application of signature-verification policies during the election. Issue number six asks, “Did the panel err in dismissing the signature-verification claim on laches[,] mischaracterizing Lake’s claim as a challenge to existing signature verification policies, when Lake in fact alleged that Maricopa failed to follow these”

As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, Kari Lake’s lawsuit went to trial in the Maricopa County Superior Court on the issues of missing ballot chain of custody and Election Day machine failures. The issues regarding fraudulent mail-in ballots and signature verification were tossed and were not considered in trial.
 

The Arizona Supreme Court issued a new order on Wednesday, sending a key piece of Kari Lake’s Election lawsuit back to the trial court for further review.

“IT IS ORDERED denying review of issues one through five and seven. The Court of Appeals aptly resolved these issues, most of which were the subject of evidentiary proceedings in the trial court, and Petitioner’s challenges on these grounds are insufficient to warrant the requested relief under Arizona or federal law,” states the order.

“IT IS FURTHER ORDERED granting review of issue number six to the extent count three of the complaint challenges the Maricopa County Recorder’s application of signature-verification policies during the election. Issue number six asks, “Did the panel err in dismissing the signature-verification claim on laches[,] mischaracterizing Lake’s claim as a challenge to existing signature verification policies, when Lake in fact alleged that Maricopa failed to follow these”

As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, Kari Lake’s lawsuit went to trial in the Maricopa County Superior Court on the issues of missing ballot chain of custody and Election Day machine failures. The issues regarding fraudulent mail-in ballots and signature verification were tossed and were not considered in trial.
I guess that's one way to look at it... Another way is that they threw out 6/7 of Lake's complaints and sent one back for consideration. I've said it once in this thread, and I'll say it again. Get back with us when something happens. Fortunately @LaniKaiTiger has been holding <insert pronoun here> breath this whole time!

Also, one question. If you have 7 things that you are complaining about, do you put the ESSENTIAL one at number 6? Asking for a friend...
 
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The signature verification process in Maricopa County is a house of cards,” said Lake. “Thanks to this ruling my team will get the chance to topple it.”

“On Wednesday, the Arizona Supreme Court found that the trial court had erred in their dismissal of Kari Lake’s bombshell signature verification evidence, and has ordered that the lower court rectify that error,” said Lake and her team.

Kari’s lawsuit alleges that “Maricopa County officials also permitted the counting of tens of thousands of mail-in and drop box ballots that did not satisfy signature verification requirements.

The Gateway Pundit reported on an investigation and presentation in the Arizona Senate Elections Committee, after the Maricopa County Superior Court dismissed Lake’s lawsuit, which estimated that nearly 300,000 ballots failed signature verification standards in the 2022 Election.

If proven true, this will draw into question every election in the state and across our country.
 
Do not see how anyone is not concerned that signature verification that has historically been used always up until 2020 has basically been discontinued in these particular swing states.
 
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Do not see how anyone is not concerned that signature verification that has historically been used always up until 2020 has basically been discontinued in these particular swing states.

Well, probably because it's not true.

 
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NEW: “Election Officials Brazenly HIDING EVIDENCE From Us” – Kari Lake Speaks Out After Maricopa County Denies Lawful Public Records Request – Request and Response INCLUDED​

By Jordan Conradson Mar. 31, 2023 5:15 pm
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Kari Lake took to Twitter earlier to sound the alarm on Maricopa County’s refusal to provide her legal team with public records pursuant to Arizona Statute.
Lake tweeted earlier, “Maricopa County has confirmed what we all knew to be true: Ballot signatures DO NOT MATCH.
“This is the smoking gun!"
 
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So Maricopa County considers a 10% signature match to be high confidence? We know the fix is in.


Signature verification software used by Maricopa County says 10% is 'high-confidence' match​


By Natalia Mittelstadt

Updated: April 1, 2023 - 12:05am
With Kari Lake's legal complaint alleging systematic signature verification failures in Maricopa County remanded by the Arizona Supreme Court to trial court, closer examination of the signature verification software used by the county reveals a strikingly low threshold for signatures to qualify as "high-confidence" matches.

Since falling about 17,000 votes short in the 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election to Democrat Gov. Katie Hobbs, Lake has continued to contest the election results in court, arguing that there were ballot chain of custody and signature verification issues in addition to thousands of Republican voters disproportionately disenfranchised on Election Day, when voting machine errors occurred in nearly 60% of the voting centers in Maricopa County. Lake has requested that the election results be invalidated or that she be declared the winner.
Last week, the Arizona Supreme Court remanded Lake's claim alleging massive signature verification failure to the trial court, ruling that because Lake is challenging the failure to adhere to current policy rather than the policy itself, her suit was not filed too late, as the lower court had found in dismissing her case. The former candidate must "establish that 'votes [were] affected "in sufficient numbers to alter the outcome of the election"' based on a 'competent mathematical basis to conclude that the outcome would plausibly have been different, not simply an untethered assertion of uncertainty,'" the state's high court ruled.
According to 2020 emails between Maricopa County officials and an employee of the county's election technology vendor, Runbeck Election Services, the election firm's Verus Pro application for signature verification ranks signature matches on a scale of 0 to 100. However, only scores "lower than 10" are "not marked as Accepted by Verus Pro," according to an email from a Maricopa County official, which the county provided to then-Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich after a public records request.
When Maricopa County was testing Verus Pro for the 2020 general election, county election official Rey Valenzuela called the rollout of the software a "sh-t show" in an October email to Runbeck.

A July 2022 contract extension between Maricopa County and Runbeck explains how the signature verification program scores signature matches.
File
OPS - County Contracts - 220121 - PRINTING AND DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTION BALLOTS-013123.pdf
Signatures sent to Runbeck "are assigned a score," reads the contract, "based on the verification; signatures with a score of 10 or higher are routed to a high-confidence manual signature verification queue, and signatures with a lower score are routed to a low-confidence signature verification queue."
The contract was obtained through a public records request and given to former Arizona Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Wright after she left office. Wright shared it with Just the News.
Maricopa County "won't admit to using the software," but the contracts show it does, Wright said.

Some additions in the 2022 contract, which extends a 2020 agreement, include "the ability to turn Signature Verification on or off."
Under the performance criteria stipulated in the extension, Verus Pro was bound to process "at least 3,600 signatures/hour" and "correctly assess if a signature is present on at least 80% of inbound images" of early ballot envelopes.
Signature verification applies to early ballots, when voters' signatures on the ballot envelopes are checked against signatures in voters' files to ensure they match. There were more than 1.3 million early ballots cast in Maricopa County's 2022 general election.
Under Arizona law, the "county recorder or other officer in charge of elections shall compare the signatures thereon with the signature of the elector on the elector's registration record."

Duly authorized election officials are responsible for resolving any discrepancies. "If the signature is inconsistent with the elector's signature on the elector's registration record," reads Arizona statute 16-550, "the county recorder or other officer in charge of elections shall make reasonable efforts to contact the voter, advise the voter of the inconsistent signature and allow the voter to correct or the county to confirm the inconsistent signature."
The statute doesn't mention using third parties to complete signature verification or curing, Wright told Just the News Friday.
Runbeck used to have Verus Pro listed on its website, but it doesn't appear to anymore, at least when using the search tool. Runbeck told Just the News that a website update may have caused a previous website link to Verus Pro to no longer work. Runbeck has yet to provide Just the News with a new link to Verus Pro on its website.
According to a 2020 contract and video posted by Maricopa County, the county used Verus Pro in that election. In the video, the bottom of an election worker's screen reads "low confidence" for a signature.

When early ballot envelopes signatures don't match voters' files, Maricopa County must contact the voters about the inconsistent signatures.
Maricopa County told Just the News on Thursday, "Signatures are cured by calling, mailing, texting and emailing the voters."
When asked about using Verus Pro for signature verification, the county told Just the News, "Maricopa County does not use Verus Pro for signature verification."
Maricopa County has yet to respond to follow-up questions about what voters must do to confirm or cure their signature or what the county uses Verus Pro for since its current contract with Runbeck says it's for signature verification.

Lake's lawsuit is being held up by the state Supreme Court as it considers whether she should face sanctions for bringing her case. The trial court judge, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson, had set a schedule to reexamine the signature verification issue after the Arizona Supreme Court remanded the case to him, but he rescinded his order after the high court set its schedule for considering sanctions.
On Friday, Lake tweeted that Maricopa County election officials wouldn't allow her legal team to inspect ballot signatures.
"Maricopa County has confirmed what we all knew to be true: Ballot signatures DO NOT MATCH," Lake wrote on Twitter. "Election Officials brazenly HIDING EVIDENCE from us. This is the smoking gun. Unfortunately for them, I'm not giving up — even if that means legally forcing them to hand over evidence."
Maricopa County didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.

Wright told Just the News on Friday that if Lake was asking to examine ballot affidavit envelopes, then those are public record and there "should be no reason" for her legal team to be denied access to them, especially since Maricopa County has electronic copies that are easily accessible.
Shelby Busch, the cofounder of We the People AZ, told Just the News on Wednesday that how Maricopa County uses software for signature verification is "absolutely pertinent" to Lake's case.
"The county leans on signature verification as the last line of defense," viewing it as a "failsafe" that assures "the election is safe," Busch said.
"But policy violations of signature verification" by involving "a third-party contractor" and providing them "access to [Personal Identifiable Information] and signatures on file of these voters … is huge," she added. Noting that it was "something the courts tried to prevent people from seeing," she said she is "absolutely thrilled that it's going to see its day in court."
 
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What's hilarious is that this is the easiest conspiracy theory to disprove, but election deniers still lean-in hard. Keep pushing that lie.



 
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Legal argument by Dem election superlawyer will aid GOP challenge, 'upend' Arizona AG race: Hamadeh​

GOP nominee Abe Hamadeh fell just 280 votes short of winning, but at least 1,200 provisional ballots cast by high-propensity voters were "erroneously rejected," calculates state's former assistant attorney general.

By Natalia Mittelstadt
Updated: April 12, 2023 - 11:08pm
Alegal argument by Democrats' go-to election superlawyer Marc Elias may boomerang to "upend the Arizona Attorney General race," according to defeated GOP nominee Abe Hamadeh, who is challenging the election in court.
Hamadeh is suing his opponent, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, to ensure all votes were counted in their midterm election contest, which Hamadeh lost by just 280 votes, according to an automatic statewide recount.
In a legal challenge to an Arizona election integrity law pending before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Elias' law firm argues that the cancellation of multiple voter registrations for a single voter across different counties could result in voter suppression of populations that frequently move.
"Elias is unintentionally going to get disenfranchised votes from the November 2022 election counted which will upend the Arizona Attorney General race," Hamadeh tweeted on Wednesday. "I look forward to working with ⁦[Marc Elias]⁩ and the team to ensure that democracy is honored."
Meanwhile, the Democratic National Committee has parted ways with Elias, citing strategic disagreements, according to a report on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, Mohave County Superior Court scheduled oral arguments on May 16 for Hamadeh's motion for a new trial, which he filed after learning that vote total discrepancies in Pinal County were allegedly not brought to the attention of his legal team or the judge in his initial election challenge.
As Hamadeh's case moves forward, the Elias Law Group's separate lawsuit challenging an Arizona election integrity law could aid the GOP nominee's case.
In August 2022, Arizona Alliance for Retired Americans, Voto Latino, and Priorities USA first sued then-Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs and then-Attorney General Mark Brnovich with the help of Elias Law Group over Senate Bill 1260, which was enacted in June 2022. The Yuma County Republican Committee intervened in the lawsuit in defense of the new law.
The lawsuit argues that the bill "violate the First Amendment's rights to free speech and association and the First and 14th Amendments' protections against undue burdens on the right to vote," according to a summary by Elias' progressive elections news source, Democracy Docket.
S.B. 1260, according to Democracy Docket, "requires county recorders to cancel a voter's registration if they receive confirmation that the voter is registered to vote in another Arizona county, creates a process to remove voters from the state's permanent vote-by-mail list if the voter is registered in another county and makes it a felony to forward a mail-in ballot to a voter who may be registered in another state."
The lawsuit warns that the bill's provision for the cancellation of a person's voter registration does "not require county recorders to notify the voter or ask for their consent before canceling their voter registration," nor require "recorders to make any inquiry at all of the voter, including to find out where the voter currently resides and intends to vote."
As a result, the law "place an undue burden of affirmative cancellation on voters, particularly those who frequently move or change residences, because voters must cancel their other voter registrations if they want to prevent their current voter registration from being canceled," according to the lawsuit.
In September, the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona "temporarily halt[ed] the enforcement of the cancellation and felony provisions," which meant they weren't to take effect during the 2022 midterm elections.
The appeal of the order is scheduled to be heard by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on May 16.
Elias' legal argument against the cancellation of multiple voter registrations actually helps Hamadeh's case, former Arizona Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Wright told Just the News on Monday.
Wright, who served in the civil division of the AG's election integrity unit under Brnovich, joined Hamadeh's lawsuit in January.
While the district judge stopped the new law from canceling voter registrations in more than one county for a single voter, there are still policies and procedures remaining in effect that allow the cancellations, Wright explained.
The cancellation provision applies when someone registers to vote in a new county while they are already registered to vote in a different county. In such cases, the new registration replaces the original one, which is canceled.
The audit of the 2020 presidential election in Arizona found that there were voters who registered to vote in multiple counties and voted in more than one county, according to Wright, which is what led to the cancellation provision in Senate Bill 1260. But the issue that occurred in the 2022 midterm elections, she explained, is that high-propensity voters who were previously registered to vote had to cast provisional ballots when they learned at voting centers on Election Day that they weren't registered to vote.
While there were nearly 9,000 provisional ballots rejected statewide during the 2022 general election, Hamadeh's legal team estimates that, based on their research, at least 1,200 of them across roughly half of the state's counties were "erroneously rejected," Wright said, and there could be more in other counties.
Those 1,200 provisional ballots were cast by high-propensity voters, which is unusual, she explained, because typically provisional ballots are cast by first-time or low-propensity voters who aren't fully aware of all the requirements they must meet to vote.
Wright explained that it's common for Arizonans to have two properties and if they register a vehicle at their secondary property with the motor vehicles department, there is a pre-checked box on a form for that process that moves a person's voter registration to the new location.
She noted that provisions in Arizona's 2014 Elections Procedures Manual included safeguards that prevented voters from being erroneously removed without notifying them. However, those safeguards were removed in the 2019 Elections Procedures Manual, which Wright said she didn't initially realize when she was assisting the attorney general's office in defending the challenged election integrity law.
Given that Hamadeh was just 280 votes short of victory in the attorney general's race and there are at least 1,200 provisional ballots that were cast by high-propensity voters, it is possible that if those are counted, he could win, Wright argues.
While Wright said she disagrees with Elias on allowing voters to be registered to vote in multiple counties, she added that it is unfair to voters if their registration is changed without them realizing and consenting to it, and it also violates procedural due process.
Elias argued that the cancelation of voter registrations "would disenfranchise voters," Wright told the "Just the News, No Noise" TV show on Wednesday. "And under the safeguards that should be in place under the National Voter Registration Act," counties "shouldn't have been canceling valid registrations," she added, "but our campaign is finding they did."
"This is a violation of the NVRA and of people's civil rights," Wright concluded.
Elias' "doomsday argument," she told Just the News, "came to fruition but not in the way he thought it was gonna happen, and his exact arguments could now be used to get Abe into office."
Elias Law Group and Mayes didn't immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.
 

Provisional ballots may flip Arizona attorney general race for Hamadeh: analysis​

There is a 280-vote gap between Abe Hamadeh and Kris Mayes, with 8,000 provisional ballots still outstanding.

By Natalia Mittelstadt
Updated: April 18, 2023 - 3:59pm
An analysis of uncounted provisional ballots shows the 2022 Arizona attorney general's race may be called for GOP nominee Abe Hamadeh instead of the now-Democratic Attorney General Kris Mayes.
Hamadeh is challenging the election in court, suing Mayes to ensure all votes were counted in their midterm election contest, which Hamadeh lost by just 280 votes, according to an automatic statewide recount.
Last week, Mohave County Superior Court scheduled oral arguments on May 16 for Hamadeh's motion for a new trial, which he filed after learning that vote total discrepancies in Pinal County were allegedly not brought to the attention of his legal team or the judge in his initial election challenge.
Data from all Arizona counties shows that about 8,000 provisional ballots remain outstanding, AZ Free News reported, based on a collaborative analysis by Republican National Committee analysts, outside investigators, and Hamadeh's legal team. Hamadeh won an average of 70% of votes cast by voters on Election Day, and Election Day votes were 2-to-1 Republican.
While there were fewer voters casting ballots in Arizona for the November 2022 election compared to the November 2020 election, there were more provisional ballots cast and higher rejection rates last year than in 2020.
For example, Santa Cruz County had an increase of rejected provisional ballots cast from 1-in-117 ballots to 83 out of 139. While Pima County doubled in its rejection rate, Pinal's rate increased from 59% to 63%, despite having a comparable number of provisional ballots between the 2020 and 2022 elections.
Nearly 9,000 provisional ballots were rejected statewide during the 2022 general election, and Hamadeh's legal team estimates that, based on their research, at least 1,200 of them across roughly half of the state's counties were "erroneously rejected," former Arizona Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Wright previously told Just the News, and there could be more in other counties.
Those 1,200 provisional ballots were cast by high-propensity voters, which is unusual, she explained, because typically provisional ballots are cast by first-time or low-propensity voters who aren't fully aware of all the requirements they must meet to vote.
Hamadeh's legal team has over 250 affidavits from allegedly disenfranchised voters, according to AZ Free News.
There were also 269 voters who brought their mail-in ballots on Election Day and checked in, but their votes weren't counted. Of those voters, 149 were Republicans, 53 were Democrats and 67 we registered as "other."
Many of those voters told Hamadeh's legal team that their votes weren't counted.
"This is not simply a case of voter error with these provisional ballots," Hamadeh said in a statement Tuesday. "The disenfranchisement is even bigger than what we're arguing. We have more votes than Kris Mayes. It's up to the courts to decide to count them."
 

WATCH: Video Shows Fraudulent Mail-In Ballot Signatures Accepted by Maricopa County – Kari Lake Attorneys to EXPOSE Fraudulent 2022 Signatures in Trial Court​

 
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