Yuma Sun

Last Arizona county OKs election tally, assures Biden key victory

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PHOENIX – Elected leaders in the last Arizona county to certify its results from the Nov. 3 election signed off on their tally Monday, setting the stage for state leaders to formalize Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden’s historic win in the Grand Canyon State.

The five-member Mohave County Board of Supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved the county’s election results after balking last week because of lawsuits being pursued by backers of President Donald Trump in Phoenix. Judges in Maricopa County rejected those efforts, although appeals and additional legal efforts are possible.

Supervisor Ron Gould said he had no concerns about the election tally in the staunchly Republican northweste­rn Arizona county where 75% of voters backed Trump.

“I have grave concerns about the election in our own state and across the nation,” Gould said. “I think it’s really time that we take a hard look at ballot security and our voting process, because I think that nationwide people have lost faith in this process because of this election.

“But my vote here today is not to canvass the election for the state and it’s not to canvas the election for the United States, it’s to canvass the election for Mohave County,” Gould said. He and the other board members are Republican­s.

Gould had joined other supervisor­s in delaying the official canvass last week, saying he wanted the lawsuits to play out.

Biden won Arizona by more than 10,000 votes on the strength of the vote in Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix and where nearly two-thirds of the state’s residents live. Maricopa County voters backed Biden by more than 45,000 votes.

The lawsuits targeted Maricopa County’s vote tally, alleging that some voters’ ballots weren’t counted, and there were questions about the accuracy of the count. The GOP-dominated Maricopa County Board of Supervisor­s approved its canvass last Friday after the final lawsuit was dismissed.

Board members heard extensive reports from Maricopa County elections officials who said the vote count was correct and noted that all tests and handcount reviews showed the electronic ballot count was 100% accurate. Those tests and reviews are done with help from Democrats and Republican­s.

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