A federal judge on Friday tossed out a ridiculous election lawsuit filed by far-right, conspiracy theory-pushing candidates in Arizona.
Kari Lake and Mark Finchem — Arizona’s Republican nominees for governor and secretary of state, respectively — sued in April to ban the use of electronic voting machines ahead of the midterm elections, citing baseless claims of potential fraud. The lawsuit named Katie Hobbs, Arizona’s Democratic secretary of state and Lake’s opponent in the gubernatorial race, as a defendant, along with several county election officials.
The far-fetched case was an extension of former President Donald Trump’s lies claiming widespread voter fraud cost him the 2020 election. And it stood no chance for success.
In their lawsuit, Lake and Finchem claimed:
Electronic voting machines cannot be deemed reliably secure and do not meet the constitutional and statutory mandates to guarantee a free and fair election. The use of untested and unverified electronic voting machines violates the rights of Plaintiffs and their fellow voters and office seekers, and it undermines public confidence in the validity of election results.
There’s no evidence backing any of those claims. And, legally speaking, the words “untested and unverified” mean nothing here. Arizona, in fact, already has a committee in place that examines voting machines for potential malfunctions. Even a right-wing firm Arizona Republicans commissioned to examine the 2020 election results concluded there was no evidence voter fraud influenced the outcome of any race.
In so many words, U.S. District Judge John Tuchi told Lake and Finchem their claims were trash.
“While the court agrees with plaintiffs that the right to vote is precious, and should be protected, plaintiffs lack standing because they have articulated only conjectural allegations of potential injuries,” Tuchi wrote in his ruling.
On top of being anti-democratic, Lake and Finchem’s lawsuit would have been completely impractical if it had succeeded. And it would have worsened issues Trump-loving conservatives claim to abhor.








