Arizona Senate candidate Kari Lake’s campaign revealed Monday that she has raised more than $2 million in the past quarter.
The former television anchor, a Republican, launched her Senate bid in October, with her most recent fundraising total of $2.1 million occurring between mid-October and Dec. 31, 2023, her campaign told Politico.
“Kari Lake is outworking everyone, posting a very strong fundraising haul for her first quarter in the race. Arizona is the best pick up opportunity for Senate Republicans,” Garrett Ventry, a Lake senior adviser, told Politico about the fundraising.
After being endorsed by former President Donald Trump during her 2022 campaign for Arizona’s gubernatorial race, Ms. Lake threw her hat into the race to potentially unseat Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.), a onetime Democrat who still caucuses with her former party. Ms. Sinema has not officially launched her reelection campaign.
Ms. Lake, meanwhile, was once again backed by President Trump as well as several GOP senators such as John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.).
Other than the Senate campaign, she has continued to pursue election-related lawsuits, arguing that there were significant problems during the 2022 gubernatorial election in Maricopa County, the most populous area in Arizona, that swung the election out of her favor. She has not conceded that race, although Democrat Katie Hobbs was sworn in as governor last January.
‘I Continue to Fight Every Day’
She also told a local news outlet that “there is a war that’s happening against our republic. And I mean, I think that’s a fair assessment. I think there was a coup when they stole our election in Arizona.”“There was a coup and a takeover of our state government“ and that ”the people’s will …. was taken from them when they rigged an election and they installed people in our state government who were not duly elected,” Ms. Lake said.
“And this is why I continue to fight every day,” she added.
In November, an Arizona judge rejected the former Republican gubernatorial candidate’s request to view signed ballots of about 1.3 million early voters in the state.
In a ruling on Nov. 30, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge John Hannah denied her lawyers from gaining access to the ballot envelopes in connection to last year’s elections. He argued that releasing the ballot envelopes and signatures would imperil the verification process for future Arizona elections.
Their release, he said, would also “expose voters to harassment and potentially force them to defend the integrity of their own votes. Some number of voters would stop participating entirely, out of fear of identity theft or concern about privacy.”
And in October, a federal appeals court rejected her case that sought to revive an attempt to bar electronic voting machines from future elections.
On her X account and in interviews, Ms. Lake has made fewer statements about the 2022 election and has instead focused on targeting both Mr. Gallego and Ms. Sinema ahead of the 2024 election.