The Arizona Republic

Masters concedes to Kelly in race for Senate

- Ronald J. Hansen Reach the reporter Ronald J. Hansen at ronald.hansen@arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-444-4493. Follow him on Twitter @ronaldjhan­sen.

Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters congratula­ted Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly Tuesday on his reelection win, signaling a controvers­y-free ending to one of Arizona’s most-watched races.

People familiar with the call described it as cordial, with each man expressing “mutual respect” for each other.

The call brings a pedestrian ending to a race that from the outset carried major national implicatio­ns for the U.S. Senate.

Kelly’s win helped Democrats preserve control of the chamber, and, if Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., wins the runoff election next month, the party would gain a seat in a remarkable reversal of longstandi­ng midterm history.

In a tweet Tuesday, Masters referred to the call without elaboratin­g. He said Republican­s as a party must recalibrat­e their election strategies as “underdogs” moving forward. He gave no indication of his plans.

“I called and congratula­ted Mark Kelly this morning. There were obviously a lot of problems with this election, but there is no path forward in my race,” Masters wrote.

“Republican­s are the underdogs now. I was outspent by over $70 million. That’s what happens when you take on the national Democrat machine, the media, the universiti­es, Big Tech, and woke corporatio­ns.

“So Republican­s need to start thinking like underdogs. No more consultant one-size-fits-all strategies. We have to build on what works, scrap what doesn’t.”

A week after Election Day, the end of Arizona’s elections remains at least party unclear. Gov.-elect Katie Hobbs was only projected to win her race late Monday, and Kari Lake, her Republican rival, has not conceded.

The state’s attorney general race also is not over with Democrat Kris Mayes holding a scant 2,200-vote lead over Republican Abe Hamadeh with more votes to count on Tuesday.

Looming over all of it is the possibilit­y of lawsuits, especially after Maricopa County election officials had equipment problems that affected an estimated 30% of tabulators across the county on Election Day.

It was a problem that lasted hours and seemed especially likely to affect Republican voters, who dominated inperson voting, as former President Donald Trump had long signaled.

County officials maintain no ballots were lost or uncounted by the problems, and a judge refused to extend voting hours because of it.

Kelly’s claim to winning the Senate race was perhaps the strongest for Democrats in Arizona. Unofficial results on Tuesday showed him leading Masters by nearly 126,000 votes, or 4.9 percentage points with few ballots left to count.

Trump never accepted his narrow loss in Arizona in 2020 to President Joe Biden. That, along with widespread complaints and disbelief from Trump’s supporters, helped spark a months-long review of Maricopa County’s ballots as ordered by the state Senate.

The resulting hand recount concluded Biden won, as county officials had first reported.

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