Attorneys with Arizona’s Maricopa County filed a response to GOP candidate Kari Lake’s lawsuit that she took to the state Supreme Court, arguing that Lake’s team has failed to present any new arguments after the state Court of Appeals rejected her case several weeks ago.
“Lake’s Petition utterly fails at fulfilling its limited task,” Maricopa’s lawyers stated. “It does not present any argument illustrating a need for this Court to review the court of appeals’ opinion. It does not identify a single novel legal issue that this Court needs to clarify. And it does not identify any legal precedent that should be overturned or abrogated. Instead, the Petition is almost entirely a regurgitation of petitioner Kari Lake’s failed arguments before the trial court and the court of appeals.”
Earlier this month, the Arizona Supreme Court agreed to expedite hearing Lake’s election lawsuit and set a March 21 date to consider whether it will accept the petition. During that conference, the court will also decide on whether to hear oral arguments, according to a brief order.
Lake initially filed a legal challenge with a Maricopa County court and asserted that there were enough Election Day-related problems that suppressed Republicans from turning out to vote for her on Nov. 8 before a judge, Peter Thompson, rejected it after a two-day trial in December. The Court of Appeals rejected it about two months later, also saying she did not provide enough evidence that would warrant the courts to initiate a re-do of the election in Maricopa County.
Officials said Lake, endorsed by former President Donald Trump, lost the midterm election to Democrat Katie Hobbs by some 17,000 votes. After the Supreme Court agreed to expedite her challenge, she wrote on social media to “pray for the judges.”
In her latest appeal, Lake’s attorneys argued that Maricopa County election officials intentionally caused problems on Nov. 8 via vote-tabulation machines that created delays as well as long lines at dozens of Maricopa polling locations in what she said was an attempt to quash GOP voters. Maricopa County officials, she added, mingled illegal ballots with legal ones.
“The evidence and testimony presented at the Arizona Senate Committee on Elections meeting on January 23, 2023, showed more than 7,000 ballots being rejected by vote center tabulators every 30 minutes from 6:00 am to 8:00 pm—totaling over 217,000 rejected ballot insertions on a day with approximately 248,000 votes cast,” Lake’s suit said.
We filed our Historic Election Integrity case with the Arizona Supreme Court.
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) March 2, 2023
Pray for our Attorneys.
Pray for the Judges.
Pray for Justice.
Pray for America. 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/SgFI9FixxT
BREAKING: Out of 30 contenders, @KariLake wins @CPAC straw poll for Vice President.
— Kari Lake War Room (@KariLakeWarRoom) March 4, 2023
We’re flattered, but unfortunately our legal team says the Constitution won’t allow for her to serve as Governor and VP at the same time. pic.twitter.com/gFV3z3wtxB
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