Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge ties strings to Arizona’s vote audit

- BOB CHRISTIE

PHOENIX — A judge ruled Wednesday that an audit of Arizona ballots from November’s presidenti­al election will continue, but the private company hired by the Republican-led state Senate must make public its procedures for guaranteei­ng the privacy of voters and the secrecy of their choices.

The decision Wednesday by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Daniel Martin was both a loss and a win for the Arizona Democratic Party, which is challengin­g the recount in a state President Joe Biden won narrowly over former President Donald Trump.

The Democrats argued that the public had a right to know how the count of 2.1 million ballots in the state’s most populous county was being conducted. Their lawyers argued that voter privacy would be irreparabl­y harmed if the process proceeded, at least without knowing how the recount was being conducted.

Martin acknowledg­ed that when he ordered the Senate’s contractor — a company led by a Florida man who has shared conspiracy theories claiming the official 2020 presidenti­al election results are illegitima­te and that Trump won — to produce its recount plan. Biden’s victory in Arizona was the first for a Democrat since Bill Clinton’s 1996 win.

The Senate and its contractor, Cyber Ninjas, had claimed the policies and procedures for recounting the presidenti­al and U.S. Senate votes in Maricopa County were shielded under legislativ­e immunity and that the documents were trade secrets. Mark Kelly won the Senate seat, sending two Democratic Arizona senators to Washington for the first time since the 1952 election.

Martin batted away both arguments, although he gave the Senate until noon to ask an appeals court or the state Supreme Court to seek to review his ruling.

“The Senate defendants [argue] that Cyber Ninjas’ policies and procedures are protected by legislativ­e privilege. The court disagrees,” Martin said. “The court finds that Cyber Ninjas has failed to show that an overriding interest exists that supports filing its policies and procedures under seal and overcomes the right of public access to it.”

Wednesday’s court hearing is the latest in a series that began when the state Senate subpoenaed Maricopa County’s ballots and vote tabulation machines so it could audit the results that showed Biden winning in Arizona. Trump backers alleged that he lost in Arizona and other battlegrou­nd states because of fraud.

The county fought the request for the ballots. But Republican Senate President Karen Fann won the right to access them in February. They were delivered to the state fairground­s in Phoenix last week. Fann said she wants to prove one way or the other whether GOP claims of problems with the vote are valid and use the results of the audit to craft updated election laws.

Senate Democrats call the audit an effort to perpetuate “The Big Lie,” which is what they call Trump’s insistence that he lost only because of election fraud. The Republican-led county Board of Supervisor­s stands by the election results, which were certified by state officials, including Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, on Nov. 30.

The hand-recount started Friday, with Cyber Ninjas overseeing the process and former Republican Secretary of State Ken Bennett acting as the Senate’s liaison to the effort. Bennett said Tuesday night that voter secrecy was being protected and that fewer than 100,000 ballots had been counted in the previous four days. But he said the recount was on track to finish as scheduled by May 14.

“We are going to be able to tell every Arizonan in a few weeks that they can have complete integrity and trust in their elections, or we have some parts of the election that need to be improved,” Bennett said.

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