The Great Joe Rogan Debate Was Great for the Right
CNN's Scott Jennings Delivered Another Masterclass in Owning the Libs on Trust in...
Democrats Move to Destroy the Earth
Correspondent From Defamation Network CNN Asks New-Media Reporters If They Are 'Real' Jour...
Take Out Iran's Nuclear Facilities Now
Electric Vehicles: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Willful Idiots
The Illegal Aid Society Is Making New York Unsafe
'Round Up the Usual Suspects'
Restoring Integrity in America's Student Loan System
Young Minds, Big Sound: Students Experience the Magic of Live Orchestral Music at...
Caraveo Faces Lukewarm Reception As Democrats Push for More Progressive Candidate, Giving...
Trump Signs Multiple Executive Orders on Education, Including Against Accreditors Using DE...
As Van Hollen Defends Illegal Immigrant, a New 'Maryland Man' Is Charged With...
Yet Another Outlet Goes for Hit Piece Against Pete Hegseth, and This One...
Tipsheet

Oops! Poll Workers at Nine Arizona Voting Sites Forgot to Deliver Results

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Arizona’s primary election was Tuesday, but voters and candidates still don’t know the results in some of the most contentious races. That’s partially because poll workers at nine vote centers "forgot” to retrieve the data packs holding the results information. 

Advertisement

According to the Arizona Republic, each of the state’s 99 voting centers were equipped with two tabulators. After voters filled out their ballots, they fed them into the machines, which counted the results. The information was stored on memory packs in the machines. 

But at nine centers, poll workers failed to pick up these packs before they headed back to election headquarters, says Maricopa County Elections Department Spokesperson Megan Gilbertson. The votes were tabulated but not uploaded. 

Gilbertson said the packs are stored in locked, tamper-proof compartments inside the machines. On Wednesday morning, a bipartisan team of poll workers retrieved the data packs to bring them back to headquarters for processing. 

The memory packs account for some 3,000 votes. That could make a difference in some of the tightest races in the state that have yet to be called. Currently, the race for Maricopa County sheriff is neck-and-neck, with Jerry Sheridan leading legendary former Sheriff Joe Arpaio by only 572 votes. Nancy Barto and Heather Carter are similarly battling it out for state senate, with Barto leading 51.6% to Carter’s 48.4%. Hundreds of thousands of dollars have poured in from liberal out-of-state PACs to elect Carter, a moderate Republican, making their race arguably the nastiest and most closely-watched of the cycle. 

Advertisement

The data fiasco and delay in results has frustrated many voters, but Adrian Fontes, the Maricopa County Recorder, says they should “relax.”

Stephen Richer, a Republican running against Fontes in November, called him out for what he called a “false dichotomy.”

Arizona’s primary debacle adds to growing concerns over election integrity, especially as many on the Left call for mail-in voting in light of COVID-19. The results of a Congressional Democratic primary in New York City were finally announced on Tuesday—six weeks after polls closed. And when a local reporter in Pennsylvania conducted an experiment with mailing in mock ballots to see how reliable a total vote-by-mail system would be, he found that 21% of the ballots failed to materialize for four days and 3% never showed up at all.   

Advertisement

With a presidential election on the horizon, incidents such as those in Arizona and New York City should serve as a warning to voters and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. When a single vote could make all the difference, every vote must be counted.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement