on Friday filed a lawsuit asking the courts to set aside her electoral loss to Democrat Katie Hobbs and declare her the winner instead.
If a judge won’t declare her the winner, Lake wants an order requiring Maricopa County to re-do the gubernatorial election.
Lake, a former television news anchor and first-time candidate for office, has signaled for weeks she would file a legal challenge over the election, which saw her fall 0.7 percentage points — or about 17,000 votes — short of Hobbs, who is Arizona’s secretary of state.
That filing came Friday, within a five-day window from certification of the election result that is set in Arizona law, and on the same day that several defeated Republican candidates filed their own challenges.
Senate shakeup:A visual breakdown of what Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s switch to Independent means to Democrats
Republican secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem and U.S. House candidate Jeff Zink contested their losses saying Arizona’s election was not full, fair or secure — and must be nullified.
“A process that should be sacrosanct oozes impropriety,” they said in a joint statement of election contest filed in Maricopa County Superior Court. “Our election is the only mid-term election in the 50 states with such a comical and tragic outcome.”
Republican Abe Hamadeh, who was defeated by Democrat Kris Mayes in the race for attorney general by about 500 votes, also filed a lawsuit that stood in stark contrast to the others, in that it explicitly did not allege fraud or intentional wrongdoing, but sought to eliminate or add votes Hamadeh claims were improperly counted. That race is headed to a recount.
Lake’s 70-page lawsuit includes a laundry list of problems and allegations related to the Nov. 8 election, including echoing many claims she has raised in recent weeks over long lines and printer issues creating “chaos” at voting locations. She claims “hundreds of thousands of illegal ballots infected the election in Maricopa County.”
Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema’s defection from the Democrats muddies party’s path forward
Lake alleges First Amendment violations committed by Hobbs, whose staffer in the Secretary of State’s Office flagged Twitter posts as misinformation before Hobbs even entered the race — an issue that has spawned another misleading election theory.
Many of the claims in Lake’s lawsuit lacked supporting evidence, or were said to come from eyewitness or “expert” accounts that The Arizona Republic could not independently verify.
The lawsuit alleges “intentional misconduct” leading to problems with machines and that ballots were “illegally injected” into the election by county contractors. She claims between 15,600 and 26,200 voters were disenfranchised by “catastrophic failures of tabulators” at Election Day voting sites, though the issues were actually with printers, and she cites an opinion poll of 800 voters as the basis to extrapolate that tens of thousands were disenfranchised.
The lawsuit spends pages pointing to claims raised following the 2020 election in Maricopa County, including about signature verification. Two years ago, that razor-thin contest saw Joe Biden defeat Donald Trump for the White House and led to a months-long review of the election that cost taxpayers millions of dollars, only to prove Biden’s victory.
The case has several ties to the 2020 ballot review and election, just as Lake’s campaign for governor centered on her belief Trump won that race. One of Lake’s lawyers is Bryan Blehm, whose dual work for 2020 review contractor Cyber Ninjas and the Arizona Senate raised concerns of a conflict. Lake’s second lawyer is Kurt Olsen, a Washington, D.C.-based attorney who helped with a lawsuit challenging the 2020 election results that was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court.
The lawsuit was filed in Maricopa County Superior Court and names Hobbs, the members of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, Maricopa County Elections Director Scott Jarrett and Recorder Stephen Richer as defendants. The county provided one statement in response to the flurry of election cases filed Friday, noting the court system is the proper avenue for election challenges.
“Maricopa County respects the election contest process and looks forward to sharing facts about the administration of the 2022 General Election and our work to ensure every legal voter had an opportunity to cast their ballot,” the statement reads.
The claims filed by Finchem, the losing candidate for secretary state, and one-time Congressional hopeful Zink are based on three key allegations, which they say gave Democrats an unfair advantage on Nov. 8.
Finchem, a state representative from Oro Valley, also alleged in the suit, without direct evidence, that Hobbs and his Democratic challenger, Secretary of State-elect Adrian Fontes, conspired with Twitter to censor and suspend his social media account at the peak of election season.
Finchem lost the election by more than 120,000 votes. Zink lost his longshot race against incumbent Democrat Ruben Gallego by 76,124 votes.
Finchem was endorsed by former President Donald Trump and Zink was endorsed by AZ MAGA , a nonprofit dedicated to getting conservatives elected. Both disputed the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.
Both men were outside the U.S. Capitol on Jan.6, 2021, when Trump supporters stormed the building in an effort to prevent Congress from certifying election results. Zink’s son, Ryan Zink, was arrested and indicted on several charges in connection with the riot, including trespassing and obstruction. He has pleaded not guilty.