Officials in Arizona on Dec. 5 certified the results of the 2022 midterms after coercing supervisors in at least one county to certify vote tallies.
Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, canvassed the election and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, oversaw the ceremony, which certified Hobbs as the winner of the gubernatorial race.
Hobbs, who refused to recuse herself from overseeing the election, cracked jokes and thanked voters during the brief ceremony, which Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, a Republican, and Arizona Supreme Court Justice Robert Brutinel also attended.
“These signed and sealed documents now constitute the official canvass and results of the Nov. 8, 2022, general election,” Hobbs said.
She and Ducey then signed the certificate finding Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) the winner in the U.S. Senate race over Republican Blake Masters.
“Because of your participation, our democratic institutions thrived,” Hobbs told voters. “Stay engaged and keep voting.”
Ducey said he was upholding the law by participating in the ceremony and that it recognized the votes that voters cast. He also said the certification means that Arizona can move forward.
Hobbs’s office just referred two supervisors in Cochise County to Brnovich’s office for allegedly committing crimes when they refused to certify the midterm results.
Recounts
Hobbs is now the governor-elect and Adrian Fontes, a Democrat who used to be Maricopa County’s recorder, is the secretary of state-elect.The margin in several races is so slim that a recount is expected to be ordered. The races are for attorney general, state superintendent, and one of the state legislative seats.
Arizona law requires recounts if the margin is within 0.5 percentage points.
‘Under Duress’
At least one county official said he was coerced to certify the results.Officials in Mohave County said they believed that their elections ran smoothly but pointed to widespread problems in Maricopa County, where tabulators stopped working properly at dozens of polling sites on Election Day, affecting an estimated 16,000 ballots.
Election officials said the county followed state and federal laws, responding to Brnovich’s office, which had asked for an explanation about the malfunctioning equipment and long lines.
Lawsuits
Both Kari Lake, the Republican who vied with Hobbs to succeed term-limited Ducey as Arizona governor, and Hamadeh have filed lawsuits over the election.Lake’s campaign stated that Obama-appointed U.S. Judge John Tuchi appeared to want “to send a message.”
“The message is if you lose shut up and don’t come to court. The message is not that you lost a case or acted in bad faith,” the campaign stated.
Lake has vowed to launch additional lawsuits.
Arizona law lets voters contest an election but states that such a challenge must be lodged “within five days after completion of the canvass of the election and declaration of the result thereof by the secretary of state or by the governor.”
Hobbs said on Dec. 5 that the election “was conducted with transparency, accuracy, and fairness, in accordance with Arizona’s election laws and procedures.”