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(The Center Square) – Arizona certified the results of the 2024 general election on Monday. Republicans generally swept competitive races, including the presidential race, as this certification ...
Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs sued Cochise County this week after the two Republicans on the board voted to further delay certifying the election results. The county previously postponed ...
Arizona’s most populous county certified its primary election results Monday, setting in motion a recount for the Democratic nomination in an open congressional district where 42 votes separate ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 20 February 2025. For related races, see 2022 United States gubernatorial elections. 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election ← 2018 November 8, 2022 2026 → Turnout 62.6% 2.29pp Nominee Katie Hobbs Kari Lake Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 1,287,891 1,270,774 Percentage 50.32% 49.65% County ...
14 of Arizona's 15 counties certified the voting results by the November 28, 2022 deadline; the exception was Cochise County. [55] Despite no evidence of irregularities with vote counting, Cochise County's Republican officials delayed their certification vote to December 2, 2022, to accommodate a hearing on the certification of voting machines ...
Arizona was the final state to be called in the election, with Donald Trump winning by 5.5%, surpassing the margins predicted by most polls. [7] This was the largest margin of victory since 2012 for a Republican presidential candidate, as well as the first time since 2012 that a presidential candidate won the state with an absolute majority of ...
On Monday, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and Secretary of State Katie Hobbs certified the state’s election totals, which awarded electors to President-elect Joe Biden.
The Arizona Republic reported in May that because Senate Republicans had given private companies and individuals unfettered and unmonitored access to voting machines, the county might need to expend significant funds and time to ensure the equipment would meet federal, state and local requirements for certifying and protecting election equipment.