The Arizona Republic

Brnovich vows to fight vote tampering, just not as AG

- Laurie Roberts Columnist Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

Attorney General Mark Brnovich is pledging to stand for “election integrity” if only you will put him into the Senate next year.

“As Senator, I will fight to make sure your vote counts and is never at risk of being altered or tampered with,” he said, in a campaign tweet on Friday.

Pity he won’t take up the fight as the state’s attorney general.

It’s been a week now since evidence came to light suggesting that Trump and his allies mounted a pressure campaign on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisor­s, trying to get county officials to tamper with the county’s election results.

On July 2, The Arizona Republic’s Yvonne Wingett Sanchez laid out voicemails and text messages documentin­g a behind-the-scenes effort by Donald Trump, his attorney Rudy Giuliani and state GOP Chairwoman Kelli Ward to stop Joe Biden from being declared the winner of Arizona.

“We need you to stop the counting,” she wrote to then-Supervisor Chairman Clint Hickman on Nov. 7, as the votes were being tallied.

“You have all the power you need to make it happen,” she wrote on Nov. 13, while lobbying him to chase a baseless conspiracy theory that Dominion was fixing the vote.

And by that evening, after a ballot update showed Biden had won the county: “POTUS will probably be calling you.”

Ward’s entreaties became more pointed in the days that followed. By Nov. 20 — the day the supervisor­s were scheduled to certify Biden’s over Trump — she was asking Hickman and Supervisor Steve Chucri to delay the certificat­ion vote.

“Why not wait for 11/23,” she asked. “Seems you’re playing for the wrong team and people will remember. *WRONG team.”

Shortly before the supervisor­s certified Biden’s win, Ward made one last try.

But that is a path fraught with political peril for a Republican attorney general desperate to appeal to Republican­s in run for the Senate — one who already has drawn the wrath of Trump for his “lackluster” defense of the Arizona Senate’s election audit.

“Sounds like your fellow Repubs are throwing in the towel,” she wrote to Supervisor Bill Gates. “Very sad. And unAmerican.”

Giuliani, meanwhile, was calling all four Republican supervisor­s, claiming that it was at the president’s request and that he had informatio­n Trump wanted to pass along.

“I’d like to see if there’s a way that we can resolve this so that it comes out well for everyone,” Giuliani said, in a Dec. 24 voicemail to Supervisor Jack Sellers, presumably referring to the state-county dispute over Senate supboenas of the election results and machinery. “We’re all Republican­s, I think we have the same goal . ... Let’s see if we can get this done outside of the court, gosh.”

Gates, too, got a call.

“Maybe we can get this thing fixed up,” Giuliani said, in a voicemail. “You know, I really think it’s a shame that Republican­s sort of are both in this kind of situation. And I think there may be a nice way to resolve this for everybody.”

Speaking of getting this thing fixed up, Trump tried to call Hickman on New Year’s Eve and again at 9:22 p.m. (Arizona time) on Jan. 3, one day after he pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger to “find” enough votes to change the results of that state’s election.

To his credit, Hickman didn’t take the calls, likely saving Trump from himself in any criminal investigat­ion.

Election tampering, after all, is a felony.

Specifical­ly, “a person who at any election knowingly interferes in any manner with an officer of such election in the discharge of the officer’s duty, or who induces an officer of an election or officer whose duty it is to ascertain, announce or declare the result of such election, to violate or refuse to comply with the officer’s duty or any law regulating the election, is guilty of a Class 5 felony.”

That’s not me talking. That’s ARS 161004.

It shouldn’t have taken five minutes for Arizona’s attorney general to announce an investigat­ion.

But that is a path fraught with political peril for a Republican attorney general desperate to appeal to Republican­s in run for the Senate — one who already has drawn the wrath of Trump for his “lackluster” defense of the Arizona Senate’s election audit.

And so, eight days later, not a peep has been heard from Brnovich.

In fact, not a peep has been heard from anyone in the Republican Party.

Except for Ward, who actually had the chutzpah this week to suggest that it is Maricopa County’s elections officials who belong in jail.

To say what happened here is outrageous is obvious:

The tampering.

And the crickets from Arizona’s attorney general.

Oh, there was this:

“As Senator, I will fight to make sure your vote counts and is never at risk of being altered or tampered with.”

Just not, apparently, until then.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States