“I think that we’ll see the lion’s share here wrap up by early next week,” Gates said. When pressed, he wouldn’t promise that Maricopa County would be finished counting by
Monday. “Maybe,” he told the CNN reporter.
Former news anchor Kari Lake is locked in a close contest with Democrat Secretary of State Katie Hobbs (49.6 to 50.4 percent) while Republican senatorial nominee Blake Masters is trailing his Democrat opponent Senator Mark Kelly by five points (46.3 to 51.5). The race for the state’s attorney general is also neck and neck between Republican nominee, Abe Hamadeh (49.8 percent), and Democrat nominee Kris Mayes (50.2 percent). The remaining votes to be counted, however, are said to strongly favor the Republicans.
There are still 621,000 votes to be counted across the state, reportedly.
Heavily Republican Election Day voters in Maricopa County faced long lines as around 25 percent of their ballots were rejected due to printing issues. On Wednesday evening, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors released a joint statement acknowledged that 70 out of 223 voting locations were impacted by the printer issues on Election Day.
The printer settings for the Ballot-On-Demand printers at Vote Centers were the same ones we used in the August Primary. The paper was the same thickness. Prior to the General Election, the Elections Department test-printed and test-tabulated hundreds of ballots without issue.The supervisors said around 7 percent of ballots, or around 17,000, were impacted by the printer issues.
We are committed to finding out what factors changed that led to issues at 70 Vote Centers on Tuesday. We are grateful to county techs who found a fix to the problem by adjusting printer settings.
Voters were given the option to place their ballots in “Drop Box 3” to be counted later. Those 17,000 ballots—which are expected to lean heavily Republican—are now being counted, according to ABC15 reporter Nicole Grigg.
Pollster Rich Baris disputed the notion that only 17,000 votes were impacted by the tabulation issues, given how widespread the problem was on Election Day:
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