Co-founder Shelby Busch issued a video last week revealing that the group found hundreds of instances involving people who said they voted for Abe Hamadeh but their ballots were not counted - more than the 280 votes he lost the attorney general's race by.
Busch said in the video, "Abe Hamadeh won the attorney general's race. I'm going to outline for you the evidence behind how Kris Mayes was installed as the illegitimate attorney general. Our evidence in Abe's case shows that thousands of Arizona voters were disenfranchised on Election Day in violation of the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, and Katie Hobbs, the secretary of state and the counties know about these voters and have done nothing to correct it."
She read the stories of several voters who were disenfranchised, who were told at the polls they would have to vote a provisional ballot since they were no longer registered to vote in their county, only to find out that the provisional was never counted later.
A Native American woman in Pima County who had voted for years showed up at the polls on Election Day and was told she wasn't registered to vote there, but was registered in Maricopa County, even though she hadn't lived there in years.
Hamadeh only found out after his election contest trial ended, and has been trying to obtain a new trial to include the new evidence, since there may have been undervotes in other counties that would put him in the lead, along with all the new evidence of provisional votes that were not counted.
He cited the disenfranchisement of Republicans on Election Day in Maricopa County due to the voting machine tabulators not recognizing the ballots since they were printed on 19-inch paper instead of 20-inch.
In 2021, in Surry County, North Carolina, a judge ordered a new election in the commissioners' race due to a poll worker informing voters that one of the candidates was deceased.
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