Yuma Sun

Arizona legislator­s take look at state’s election deadlines

- BY HOWARD FISCHER

PHOENIX – A last-minute effort to fix state election deadlines could hang in part on whether Gov. Katie Hobbs and Democrats are willing to agree to enshrine more vigorous signature verificati­on on early ballots into Arizona law.

The issue isn’t new.

Supporters of Donald Trump made the same arguments in their bid to have him declared the winner of the 2020 Arizona presidenti­al race. And failed gubernator­ial hopeful Kari Lake built her so-far-unsuccessf­ul effort to overturn the 2022 race on claims that tens of thousands of ballots were not properly verified, a claim that a judge has rejected as unproven.

But now Republican­s are empowered by the fact that a 2022 change in state recount laws has left county election officials in a crunch.

More to the point, to get the big change the Republican­s say is necessary – moving up the state’s primary into late July – there has to be legislativ­e action by the end of this week. That’s because that simple change has a domino effect, altering everything else from printing ballots to when candidates have to submit their signatures.

That, in turn, requires bipartisan approval as it takes a two-thirds vote of both the House and Senate, plus the signature of the governor, to take effect immediatel­y.

Democrats, however, are balking, saying they want a “clean fix’’ to the problem. And that, they said, means not tinkering with other ideas on the GOP wish list.

But they are not without power. It would take a two-thirds vote of both the House and Senate to meet that Friday deadline to change the date of the primary. But Republican­s control only a bare majority, allowing Democrats to effectivel­y veto any plan they don’t like.

At the root of the problem is a change pushed through the Legislatur­e after the 2020 presidenti­al race in which Joe Biden outpolled Trump here by 10,457 votes. That wasn’t enough to force a mandatory recount under the then-existing laws which said the margin of difference had to be less than 0.1%, something that did not happen with more than 3.4 million votes cast.

Then-sen. Michelle Ugenti-rita pushed through a measure in 2022 changing the margin to 0.5% – something that would have triggered a recount. And it’s likely to require more recounts in the future.

Only thing is, recounts cannot take place until after the statewide results are certified.

Fontes said that could leave counties without the results they need after the primary to print general election ballots to be sent to overseas voters to get them back by Election Day. Hence the GOP plan for an earlier primary.

The potentiall­y bigger problem is that federal law now requires states to get their presidenti­al choices to Washington by Dec. 11. And if Arizona is still recounting the vote, the pick of voters here just won’t be in the final Electoral Vote tally.

Sen. Priya Sundaresha­n, D-tucson, said the simplest thing for the Republican­s in charge of the Legislatur­e would be “fixing a problem they created,’’ meaning the 0.5% recount margin.

That, however, ignores the fact that the 2022 measure gained bipartisan support. In fact, the legislatio­n was approved by the House on a 50-1 margin, with only Democratic Rep. Stephanie Stahl-hamilton opposed.

The political reality is that Republican­s are not going to support repeal.

So Democrats late Monday offered an alternativ­e: lower the recount threshold – but only to two-tenths of a percent, a margin that still would not have forced a recount in Trump’s loss.

But Republican­s want more. It starts with a provision in HB 2785 to move up the primary by a week, to July 30. That would help resolve the problem with preparing general election ballots.

That is a non-starter with the Democrats, whose HB 2816, also introduced Monday, does not include such a provision.

Then there’s fixing the deadline for approval final general election results to get them to Washington on time requires something else.

One quick fix would be to change the amount of time voters whose signatures on early ballots don’t match, have to “cure’’ the problem.

That is currently five business days. The GOP plan calls for changing that to five calendar days, buying two extra days.

Here, too, that is not in the Democrat proposal.

Rep. Laura Terech, D-phoenix, said that would require voters whose ballots are questioned to actually go to county election offices to verify that the signature on the ballot envelope actually is theirs.

“Some of the concerns that I’ve heard expressed about the lack of public transporta­tion on the weekends that might make it a little bit harder for some voters to get that cure,’’ she said.

And there’s another big sticking point.

The GOP measure includes an entirely new provisions in the Election Code spelling out the kind of signature verificati­on that would have to be done on early ballots. And it is quite detailed.

It would start with an evaluation of the “broad characteri­stics’’ of a signature. That includes the type and speed of writing, overall spacing, position of the signature, and spelling and punctuatio­n.

If those seem to match, the ballot would be counted. But if they don’t there would be a second check looking at the “local characteri­stics’’ of the signature, things like internal spacing, the presence or absence of pen lifts, beginning and ending strokes, and the curves, loops and cross points.

At that point if there are still doubts, a second person is asked to review. And all that ultimately could result in a declaratio­n of a mismatch and a need to cure.

Slater said that’s a non-starter for Hobbs.

“It’s unrelated to the issue that we’re facing,’’ he said. And there’s something else.

“It could lead to a massive increase in the number of early ballots rejected and increased litigation over those ballots,’’ Slater said, further delaying getting a final count to Washington.

Anyway, he noted, the governor vetoed identical language last year.

But Kolodin pointed out at the time that what he wants to put into statute – and what she vetoed – actually already is required under procedures approved by Hobbs in 2020 when she was secretary of state. He said that is insufficie­nt.

“That is non-binding and can be changed on a whim by a single person,’’ he said. “That is hardly democratic – or sober and responsibl­e governance.’’

Republican­s have been complainin­g about the signature review process for years.

In 2020 Kelli Ward, who at the time chaired the Arizona Republican Party, filed suit claiming it lacked sufficient safeguards to ensure that they actually came from the registered voters whose envelopes were submitted.

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Randall Warner dismissed the claim, pointing out that a forensic document examiner hired by Ward’s attorney reviewed 100 of those envelopes.

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