The Arizona Republic

Judge tosses Trump lawsuit on Maricopa County votes

Further action moot as outcome will not change

- Maria Polletta

An attempt by Republican officials to have more Maricopa County ballots reinspecte­d by hand, possibly changing final vote tallies, has failed.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Daniel Kiley on Friday dismissed claims filed on behalf of Donald Trump’s campaign, the Republican National Committee and the Arizona Republican Party as moot, meaning further legal proceeding­s are pointless.

The scope of the lawsuit had narrowed since Republican officials filed it Saturday, alleging “potentiall­y thousands” of Arizona voters had been disenfranc­hised on Election Day.

They claimed Maricopa County poll workers had systematic­ally overridden ballots with possible “overvotes” — which happen when voters mark more options than allowed in a particular race — instead of allowing voters to make that choice themselves.

The plaintiffs had asked election officials to go back and identify all ballots with overvotes cast in partisan races in Maricopa County on Election Day, to manually inspect those ballots and to discard votes only in cases when “it is impossible to positively determine the voter’s choice.”

But after a six-hour hearing Thurs

day, Trump attorney Kory Langhofer narrowed that ask significan­tly.

At that point, he said, plaintiffs sought only a reinspecti­on of overvoted ballots in cases where the number of overvotes was greater than the margin of the winning candidate’s victory.

The judge seemed amenable to considerin­g the request, saying he would take it under advisement. County officials had estimated just 960 or so ballots cast were at issue.

But lawyers for defendants argued there was nothing in state law authorizin­g such a review. They said the ballots in question had already been tabulated, and “counting ballots that have already been counted is a recount.”

Arizona does not allow recount requests and has strict criteria for automatic recounts.

By Friday morning, Langhofer had filed a motion acknowledg­ing the outcome of the lawsuit would have no impact on Arizona’s presidenti­al results.

During a brief afternoon hearing, the parties agreed the 432 ballots Maricopa County had left to record and upload were unlikely to change the outcomes of any results.

“The plaintiffs’ claims missed as moot,” Kiley said.

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