Yuma Sun

Ariz. attorney general sues to stop county election switch

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Arizona’s attorney general on Tuesday sued to stop a transfer of election duties in a rural county where the leaders have embraced voting conspiracy theories.

The Republican majority on the Cochise County Board of Supervisor­s voted last week to transfer of all election functions from the nonpartisa­n elections department to the county’s elected recorder, also a Republican. The move follows the resignatio­n of the elections director, who had objected to the board’s efforts to conduct a full hand count of last year’s vote.

Attorney General Kris Mayes said switching the duties from the elections office to the recorder was illegal. “While counties may appropriat­ely enter into cooperativ­e agreements with their recorders to manage elections, Cochise County’s agreement steps far over the legal line,” Mayes said in a news release announcing the lawsuit.

Mayes contends the agreement improperly gives all power to county recorder David Stevens rather than being a “hand in hand” agreement to work with the county’s three supervisor­s. The county’s two Republican supervisor­s, Tom Crosby and Peggy Judd, voted for the agreement while the lone Democrat on the board, Ann English, voted against it.

Crosby and Judd have said they believe the transfer is legal under Arizona law and that they have little choice because the elections director, Lisa Marra, resigned as of last month, citing threats and intimidati­on. The lawsuit is only the latest legal fight between the state and Cochise’s Republican supervisor­s over their embrace of unorthodox election procedures stemming from conspiracy theories spread by former President Donald Trump after his 2020 loss.

During the November 2022 election, at the urging of Crosby and Judd, Stevens was prepared to count all ballots by hand until a judge stopped it. Crosby and Judd then refused to certify the county’s elections results, protesting what they contended were irregulari­ties in Maricopa County that they blamed for statewide wins by Mayes and other Democrats. A judge eventually forced them to sign off on the election.

Stevens is a friend of former Arizona State Rep. Mark Finchem, a Republican who attended the Jan. 6,2021, rally in Washington, D.C., that preceded the violent attack on the Capitol. He ran unsuccessf­ully last year for the state’s top elections post.

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