The Jerusalem Post

‘Truth is truth’: Trump dealt blow as Republican-led Arizona audit reaffirms Biden victory

- • By DAVID SCHWARTZ and NATHAN LAYNE

PHOENIX (Reuters) – Donald Trump lost the 2020 presidenti­al election to Joe Biden in Arizona’s most populous county, a review of results by his allies in the Republican Party has reaffirmed, capping a widely panned effort spurred by Trump’s false claims of voter fraud.

Arizona Senate President Karen Fann, the Republican who paved the way for the so-called “full forensic audit” of 2.1 million ballots in Maricopa County, said the review’s overall vote tally matched the initial results in November.

“Truth is truth, numbers are numbers,” Fann said at a Senate hearing on the review, which found only small variations, yielding 99 additional votes for Biden and 261 fewer votes for Trump. “Those numbers were close, within a few hundred.”

The conclusion will dismay Trump supporters who had pushed for the review, many in the expectatio­n that it would prove his unfounded assertions that he was robbed of reelection due to orchestrat­ed fraud. So far no such proof has been produced either by Trump or his backers.

Outside groups tied to the “Stop the Steal” movement and other efforts to cast doubt on the 2020 results raised nearly all of the $6 million to fund the inquiry, viewing it as a catalyst for similar investigat­ions in Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and other battlegrou­nd states that Trump lost.

In Texas on Thursday, the Secretary of State’s Office said the state had begun an audit of the presidenti­al election in its four largest counties – Dallas, Harris, Tarrant and Collin – an announceme­nt that came hours after Trump publicly called for such a move. Although Trump carried Texas, Biden won three of the targeted counties.

Trump, who had predicted the Arizona inquiry would substantia­te his claims, issued a statement that appeared at odds with the review’s findings, calling it “a big win for democracy and a big win for us.”

Ben Ginsberg, a longtime Republican election lawyer who represente­d George W. Bush when he prevailed over Democrat Al Gore in a 2000 electoral dispute, called the review’s conclusion­s a “huge defeat” for Trump.

“This was Donald Trump’s best chance to prove his cases of elections being rigged and fraudulent and they failed,” Ginsberg said on a media

call organized by the States United Democracy Center, a nonpartisa­n policy group.

In Arizona, Biden won by just over 10,000 votes, a narrow win confirmed by a hand recount and multiple post-election tests for accuracy. Biden carried Maricopa, which includes Phoenix, by about 45,000 votes, making it critical to his defeat of Trump.

The Arizona inquiry is part of a larger effort by Republican­s to undermine faith in the 2020 election and gain more control over the voting process. So far this year, at least 18 Republican-led states have passed legislatio­n curbing ballot access, moves they say are needed to ensure election integrity. Democrats say such laws are aimed at gaming the system since Republican­s tend to do better in low-turnout elections.

Fann said the state Senate was working on legislatio­n to achieve an “unimpeacha­ble electoral process,” based on alleged issues found in the review. She called for improvemen­ts to the signature verificati­on process for absentee ballots, to the maintenanc­e of voter rolls and to cybersecur­ity, even though no evidence has emerged that the state’s systems were breached.

Democratic leaders said they were worried Republican­s would use the review as a pretext to enact laws suppressin­g the vote.

Arizona’s top elected official Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, in a statement denounced the review as “a political stunt that created massive security risks, cost millions of dollars, and has

shaken faith in free and fair elections.”

A wide array of election experts, Democrats and some Republican officials had long rejected the Arizona audit as a highly partisan boondoggle run by contractor­s without relevant expertise. The lead contractor was an obscure company, Cyber Ninjas, whose chief executive has promoted conspiracy theories about orchestrat­ed fraud in the election.

The audit was marked by practices that critics described as ranging from inappropri­ate to bizarre, including counters marking ballots with blue ink, which can alter how they are read by machines, and workers checking for traces of bamboo fibers based on a conspiracy theory that forged ballots may have been shipped in from Asia.

While finding the overall vote tallies largely matched up, the report highlighte­d a series of alleged problems, including 10,342 potential voters who voted in different counties, which Cyber Ninjas termed a “critical finding.”

As part of a point-by-point rebuttal on Twitter, Maricopa County called that claim “laughable,” suggesting those conducting the review may have failed to account for people with matching names and birth years in different counties, a not uncommon occurrence in a state of more than 7 million people.

Fann said she had passed along the review’s findings to Arizona Attorney-General Mark Brnovich, who said his election integrity unit would look at the evidence.

 ?? (Mike Blake/Reuters) ?? MEMBERS OF the Maricopa County election audit team, Randy Pullen, senate audit spokespers­on, Doug Logan, Cyber Ninjas CEO and Ben Cotton, CyFIR founder, arrive to present their interim findings from a widely criticized audit of the 2020 election, on Friday.
(Mike Blake/Reuters) MEMBERS OF the Maricopa County election audit team, Randy Pullen, senate audit spokespers­on, Doug Logan, Cyber Ninjas CEO and Ben Cotton, CyFIR founder, arrive to present their interim findings from a widely criticized audit of the 2020 election, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel