Arizona House Republicans moved to advance two election-related bills, including when recounts can be initiated and about how mismatched signatures should be handled.
The other bill that passed, Senate Bill 1083, would expand the circumstances in which a recount would be initiated after a close election. Arizona’s current law stipulates that the margin of victory as to be within one-tenth of the 1 percent of the vote total between the top two candidates, or between 10 and 200 votes.
Republican Rep. John Kavanagh, who sponsored the signature-match bill, said the measure would combat possible voter fraud. He noted that because nobody follows up on ballots with mismatching signatures, it needs to be addressed.
“That is almost the biggest yellow flag for voter fraud that I can think of—the signatures don’t match and you can’t contact the voter. There’s a chance there that that’s a fraudulent ballot. And that should be investigated,” he told the Arizona Mirror. “It’s easy to claim there’s no fraud in early ballots if you never look for fraud, even when it may be staring you right in the face.”
State House Democrats, who voted against both measures, alleged that Republicans are perpetuating what they described as myths about rampant fraud during elections.
“The assumption is going to be made that you were fraudulently casting that ballot and the attorney general is going to get involved,” said Rep. Kelli Butler, a Democrat, as reported by The Associated Press. “I believe that’s going to intimidate voters. I can’t imagine having a knock on my door from law enforcement related to my vote.”
Both election bills require the approval of the Senate, which is controlled by Republicans.