Arizona faces Friday deadline for giving counties more time to count votes

The Arizona House agreed Thursday to give counties more time to tally votes after county officials complained that a 2022 change in law would make it difficult to complete counting votes in time if the results were close enough to trigger a mandatory recount.

The Republican-majority Legislature and Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs face a Friday deadline for making the proposed fix, which would apply to Arizona’s primary this summer and general election in the fall but won’t affect the state’s March 19 presidential primary.

County officials who are expecting an increase in mandatory recounts have warned for months that if they aren’t given more time, Arizona could miss federal deadlines for sending general election ballots to military and overseas voters and for certifying the state’s voting results.

Counties say Friday is the last day to make the changes before the primary becomes untenable.

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Under the proposal approved in the House, counties would be given an extra 19 days after primaries and 17 days after general elections to count votes. The Senate is scheduled to vote on the measure later Thursday.

The changes are prompted by a 2022 measure that increased the threshold for recounts, which are now triggered when candidates are within 0.5% of each other. The previous margin for a mandatory recount was one-tenth of 1%.

Arizona’s results from the 2020 presidential race, when Democrat Joe Biden beat Republican Donald Trump by 10,457 votes, didn’t go to an automatic recount. Under the new threshold, the race would have triggered a mandatory recount.

The bill also would move up Arizona’s primary election from Aug. 6 to July 30, altering the timeline during which voters can “cure” early ballots that are missing signatures from five business days to five calendar days, and enshrines standards for verifying ballot signatures into law.

Rep. Alexander Kolodin, the Scottsdale Republican who was the bill’s top sponsor, said it addresses a common complaint he heard as a member of the GOP.

“There is no complaint that I hear more — or more vociferously — from our grassroots than that this body did not use leverage in order to get election integrity signed into law,” Kolodin said. “Today, we remedy that error.”

Democrats said the proposal pushed by Republicans wasn’t the “clean fix” they were looking for and complained about the addition of the signature verification provisions.

Hobbs, whose office declined on the bill after it cleared the House on a 56-2 vote, has said she is open to compromise but won’t sign a bill that’s “filled with harmful unrelated legislation or that hurts voters’ right to have their voice heard at the ballot box.”

Democratic Rep. Cesar Aguilar, of Phoenix, said the changes being made to the cure period are worrisome because it could leave voters without enough time to fix their ballots. Still, he voted for the bill.

“We simply cannot risk that Arizona doesn’t have representation in the Electoral College,” Aguilar said.

Republicans say the signature verification standards were needed to guard against breaching signature verification protocols that might be made to meet a deadline. They point out the standards are already contained in a 2020 signature verification guide issued by Hobbs when she served as Arizona’s secretary of state.

Hobbs, however, vetoed a 2023 bill declaring that the standards in the guide are to serve as the minimum requirement for comparing signatures. In her veto letter, the governor said it was more appropriate to include the standards in the state’s elections procedure manual or in guidance from the secretary of state’s office.

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