Arizona
Arizona County Still Hasn’t Certified Its Midterm Results—Here’s Why It Could Cost Republicans A House Seat
Topline
Cochise County, Arizona, is now the one county within the U.S. that has to date refused to certify its midterm election outcomes, prompting lawsuits and doubtlessly threatening Republicans’ slender majority within the Home if officers don’t change their minds and approve the election tallies throughout a second vote on Friday.
Key Details
The board of supervisors in Cochise County voted closely for Republicans in statewide races, however refused to certify the county’s outcomes on Monday in a 2-1 vote, which one board member advised the New York Occasions was primarily an act of protest in opposition to purported voting points in Maricopa County, Arizona—these claims have been debunked.
Arizona Secretary of State and Governor-elect Katie Hobbs (D) sued the county on Monday in an effort to pressure certification, after Cochise County missed the state-mandated deadline for certifying the county’s outcomes and submitting them to the state.
The Arizona Alliance for Retired People and voters within the county have additionally sued over the refusal to certify, and a voter filed discover with the county Wednesday threatening a category motion lawsuit if mandatory.
The board plans to carry a second assembly to vote on certification at 10:00 a.m. native time Friday and talk about purported election points, and if it doesn’t voluntarily certify the outcomes at the moment, it’s probably the courts will pressure them to, as occurred in a separate New Mexico case through the midterm primaries.
If the county’s outcomes aren’t licensed by the point Hobbs has to certify the statewide outcomes—which is scheduled for Monday however should occur by December 8 on the newest— the official statewide vote totals is not going to embody Cochise County’s roughly 47,000 votes.
Excluding the county’s votes would flip the election outcomes for Arizona’s Sixth Congressional District from Republican to Democrat—GOP candidate Juan Ciscomani received by solely 5,232 votes—in addition to a race for state Superintendent of Public Instruction, Bloomberg notes.
Shocking Truth
The Cochise County board has struggled to discover a lawyer keen to signify the county within the lawsuits in opposition to its refusal to certify, native outlet 12 Information reported late Wednesday. Whereas the officers had chosen Bryan Blehm as their legal professional, who represented the group that carried out the controversial partisan election audit of Maricopa County’s 2020 outcomes, they had been then advised that Blehm had turned down the supply to signify them.
What We Don’t Know
If the Cochise County officers will face any punishments for refusing to certify. A former Arizona legal professional normal and Maricopa County legal professional despatched a letter to Arizona Lawyer Basic Mark Brnovich and Cochise County Lawyer Brian McIntyre, which urges them to convey legal expenses in opposition to the 2 Republican county officers who delayed the certification. The previous prosecutors argued that doing so violated state legal guidelines that mandate certifying election outcomes and prohibit interfering with following election legal guidelines, the latter of which is a felony offense. Brnovich, a Republican, has not but commented on whether or not the state would think about pursuing expenses.
Key Background
Election outcomes certification, whereas usually a routine process, has grow to be extra charged up to now two years, as former President Donald Trump pushed baseless voter fraud claims within the aftermath of the 2020 election which have taken maintain amongst his base and led to elevated mistrust over benign voting practices. Officers in Wayne County, Michigan, briefly refused to certify its leads to 2020 for a couple of hours earlier than reversing course, and Otero County, New Mexico, declined to certify its major outcomes earlier this yr earlier than being pressured to take action in courtroom. Cochise County is one in every of a number of counties the place certification has been a priority within the November elections, with Mohave County, Arizona, officers additionally contemplating not verifying the outcomes however finally licensed them. Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, was the one different county during which a state board declined to certify outcomes, as one board member abstained from voting after the nation ran out of paper ballots on Election Day. The board finally licensed the outcomes throughout a second vote on Wednesday. The Related Press stories another Pennsylvania counties have additionally been delayed in reporting their licensed outcomes to the states amid requires recounts from GOP voters, however boards in these counties haven’t explicitly refused to certify leads to the identical approach as Cochise County.
What To Watch For
Along with Cochise County’s objection to Maricopa County’s voting points—which didn’t stop that county from certifying its vote depend—GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake can be anticipated to file a lawsuit difficult the county’s election leads to an effort to overturn Hobbs’ win. Maricopa County gained consideration within the midterms for points with voting tabulators, which fueled allegations of purported fraud, however there isn’t any proof to help these claims and officers say it didn’t cease voters from casting ballots by way of different strategies. Lake’s lawsuit can’t be filed till after the state certifies its outcomes, and comes after Lake, who has repeatedly pushed baseless claims about voter fraud, misplaced to Hobbs by 17,116 votes. Based mostly on related lawsuits filed within the aftermath of the 2020 election difficult outcomes on the premise of purported voter fraud, which had been fully unsuccessful, it’s unlikely Lake’s efforts will change the outcomes.
Additional Studying
An Arizona County’s Refusal to Certify Election Outcomes May Price GOP a Home Seat (Bloomberg)
Election certification delays few, however a ‘check run’ for 2024 (Related Press)
Cochise County fails to seek out legal professional to defend itself from lawsuit over refusal to certify election (12 Information)
Cochise County Board of Supervisors votes to delay certification of election outcomes (Arizona Republic)
‘This craziness has to cease’: Ex-prosecutors suggest charging Cochise County supervisors (Arizona Republic)
Arizona
Harkins Theatres invites Sun Devil fans to watch Peach Bowl
Can’t make the trip to Atlanta for Arizona State football’s Peach Bowl matchup versus Texas? Harkins Theatres has you covered.
The Valley-owned theatre is inviting Sun Devil fans to watch the Peach Bowl live on the big screen at two locations: Harkins Tempe Marketplace and Camelview at Scottsdale Fashion Square.
Fans can show off their Sun Devil pride and experience the “ultimate gameday setting” with tickets for $22 that include a complimentary small popcorn.
Kickoff is at 11 a.m. on Jan. 1. A win over Texas would propel Arizona State into the College Football semifinals, where it’ll play the winner of Oregon-Ohio State.
Fans can get their tickets on Harkins’ website or in person at the Camelview at Scottsdale Fashion Square or Tempe Marketplace box offices.
Sun Devils grateful for support
Arizona State getting into the College Football Playoff, or even winning the Big 12 alone, was unprecedented.
The Sun Devils are the talk of the Valley right now, and whether it’s from those traveling across the country to watch in person or cheering from home in the Valley, the team is thankful for all the support they’re getting.
“I’m grateful and blessed to be in the corner that (Sun Devil fans) want to be supporting,” Arizona State running back Cam Skattebo said. “I know what it costs and what it takes to get there. It’s nice to have those people that try their hardest to get there and could be spending every dollar in their bank account to get there.”
Arizona
‘We are united’: how Arizona’s attorney general plans to manage border chaos
Kris Mayes, the attorney general of Arizona, has vowed to fight the incoming Trump administration over key aspects of its immigration policy, including any attempt to set up deportation camps on Arizonan soil or remove thousands of migrant “dreamers” who came to the US as children.
In an interview with the Guardian, Mayes said that any move by Donald Trump in his second presidential term to unpick the rights of dreamers to remain and work in the US would be a “bright red line for me. I will not stand for an attempt to deport them, or undermine them.”
Arizona, a critical border state that will be on the frontline of the struggle over Trump’s plans for mass deportations, has more than 30,000 dreamers, undocumented migrants who entered the US unlawfully as children but who were afforded rights under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca). The program was introduced by Barack Obama in 2012 but has been under relentless attack by Republicans ever since.
“I definitely will be fighting on behalf of dreamers,” Mayes said. “These folks are firefighters, police officers, teachers – they are part of the very fabric of our state and we will protect them.”
Trump tried to scrap Daca protections during his first presidency and was only stopped by a narrow ruling from the US supreme court. He recently softened his position, telling NBC News that he wanted to find a way to allow dreamers to stay in the country, though his apparent U-turn has left many skeptical of his intentions.
The Daca program is already being challenged by Republican states in a lawsuit that is currently before the ultra-conservative fifth circuit court of appeals. The case is almost certain to reach the supreme court, which has a six-to-three supermajority of rightwing justices.
Despite the hurdles facing dreamers, Mayes said she remains optimistic.
“I think the supreme court will ultimately see the merits of protecting them. We want to give the courts the opportunity to make the right decision here, and we’ll be making very strong arguments on that proposition,” she said.
Arizona’s attorney general also had strong words about any attempt by Trump to construct detention camps in her state as part of his plans to mass-deport millions of undocumented immigrants. She said her army of lawyers were also primed to push back on any move to renew family separation, the policy under which thousands of children were taken away from their parents at the Mexican border as part of a “zero tolerance” strategy.
“If Trump tries to engage in family separation, or build mass deportation camps, I will do everything I can legally to fight that. That is not happening in Arizona, not on our soil,” she said.
Mayes added that family separation – which has left up to 1,000 families still rent apart six years later – was “fundamentally anathema to who Arizonans are”.
Mayes and her team have been preparing for months for the anticipated whirlwind of activity as soon as Trump re-enters the White House on 20 January. They have “scoured”, as she put it, Project 2025, the rightwing playbook for a Trump second term compiled by the Heritage Foundation.
She has also been working closely with other Democratic state attorneys general, noting that between them they filed more than 100 lawsuits during Trump’s first presidency, winning 80% of them.
“One of our strengths is that we are doing this very much together, we are united and we are organized,” Mayes said.
The importance of cross-state cooperation is likely to be all the more critical over border issues.
Mayes said that she was working with her Democratic counterparts Rob Bonta of California and Raúl Torrez of New Mexico – with only the Republican attorney general of Texas, Ken Paxton, taking a very different, anti-immigrant approach.
“Three of the four border states have attorneys general in Democratic hands and we are going to fight for due process and for individual rights,” she explained.
A complicating factor is Proposition 314, the ballot measure passed in Arizona in November with a resounding 63% of the vote. It allows state police to arrest any undocumented person who crosses into the US other than at legal ports of entry.
Mayes said that the decision would not deter her from resisting Trump’s unconstitutional moves.
“Proposition 314 tells us that Arizonans are fed up with a dysfunctional border,” she said.
“We are facing a serious fentanyl crisis in our state, and there’s no doubt that Arizonans want our border addressed. But when Arizonans voted for Donald Trump they did not vote to shred the Arizona and US constitution – I strongly believe that.”
What was needed at the border was more federal resources to increase border patrol boots on the ground, boost the interception of fentanyl, and enhance prosecution of drug cartels. What was not needed, Mayes insisted, was Trump’s threatened plan to send in the national guard and even the US military to act as a souped-up deportation force.
“There’s nothing more unAmerican than using the military against Americans,” she said. “It’s clearly unconstitutional, and it’s not something Arizonans want to see.”
Since being elected to the position of Arizona’s top law enforcement officer in 2022, Mayes has established herself as a rising star in the Democratic party capable of negotiating the at times fraught politics of a border state. Her most high-profile act came in April when she indicted 18 people including Trump’s former lawyer Rudy Giuliani and former chief of staff Mark Meadows for participating in the 2020 “fake electors” conspiracy.
A similar prosecution of fake electors in Georgia was recently upended after an appeals court disqualified the Atlanta prosecutor in charge of the case, Fani Willis.
Mayes told the Guardian that despite Trump’s victory in November, she had no intention of dropping the fake electors case. “These indictments were handed down by a state grand jury, and you don’t do justice by popular vote. The case is in the courts now, and that’s where it’s going to stay until it’s over.”
Such a prominent prosecution could place her in the crosshairs of Kash Patel, Trump’s pick for director of the FBI. Should Patel be confirmed for the job by the US Senate, he has made it clear he will pursue revenge investigations against those deemed to be Trump’s enemies.
Mayes didn’t want to discuss Patel’s nomination. But she did say: “I’m not afraid of anyone. I’m going to do my job, uphold the law and protect Arizonans. I’m going to do it no matter who is at the helm of the FBI.”
Arizona
Miami Heat convert former Arizona forward Keshad Johnson to two-year contract
Christmas arrived a day early for Keshad Johnson.
The Arizona Wildcats alum has secured a two-year contract with the Miami Heat after beginning the season on a two-way contract. Shams Charania of ESPN was first to report the contract conversion.
Johnson made two appearances for the Heat this month but otherwise has played with the organization’s G League affiliate, the Sioux Falls Skyforce.
He averaged 21.2 points and 8.3 rebounds in the G League. Johnson helped lead the Skyforce to the G League Winter Showcase championship game over the weekend.
Johnson went undrafted after a standout redshirt senior season at Arizona where he averaged 11.5 points and 5.9 rebounds. Johnson played his first four collegiate seasons at San Diego State.
Johnson’s promotion to the Heat means he’ll be teaming up with Pelle Larsson. Miami is one of two NBA teams to feature a pair of Arizona players, joining the Indiana Pacers (Bennedict Mathurin and T.J. McConnell).
The last time two former Arizona teammates played together in the NBA was 2019-20, when Stanley Johnson and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson were on the Toronto Raptors.
Before that was the 2018-19 season, when Kadeem Allen and Allonzo Trier suited up for the Knicks.
Chase Budinger and Jordan Hill shared a front court with the Houston Rockets across parts of three seasons (2009-12).
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