Maricopa GOP fails to organize independent Arizona presidential primary.

The Maricopa County GOP’s ⁢Bid for an Independent Presidential Preference ‍Election Fails

The​ Maricopa County GOP has failed in its last-minute bid to persuade the ​Arizona Republican Party to hold its ​own‌ presidential preference election—similar to a primary—and ⁢will instead take part ​in a joint taxpayer-funded Democrat and Republican preference election⁢ in March 2024.

The Maricopa County Republican⁢ Committee (MCRC) tried​ to ⁤convince ​Arizona Republican Party⁣ (AZGOP) ‌chairman Jeff‌ DeWit to withdraw ⁢the ⁤AZGOP from the government-run 2024 presidential preference election‍ and instead hold its own statewide election for the ⁢GOP presidential nominee.

The MCRC⁣ said in an ‍ Aug. 26 resolution that it wanted to “reclaim election ‌integrity” and have Republicans run their own presidential preference⁣ election according to rules that include in-person only voting and ​hand‍ counting of results. ⁤The group cited failures during the 2020 election that supposedly resulted in “hundreds of thousands of illegitimate ballots being counted.”

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Craig Berland, MCRC⁤ chairman, said in a video posted on ‍Rumble that the “historic”​ resolution ⁢sought to “reclaim our ‌presidential preference election‌ from the ⁣government that has failed us over and over ⁣again and⁤ to hold the election for our presidential ‌nominee by the People, for the People,⁣ one-day, one-vote, ⁢paper ballot, hand count, all⁤ at the​ precinct level.”

But the Maricopa County GOP proposal failed to get the backing of‍ AZGOP leadership.

Arizona’s presidential⁣ preference election is similar to its ⁤open primary but differs in several ways, including that ‌only registered ⁢Democrat and Republican party members can‌ vote in the preference ⁤election, while those⁣ who are unaffiliated cannot. Independents are‌ eligible to ⁣vote in Arizona’s open primaries.

‘They⁢ Can Run Their Own Thing’

AZGOP ​chair Jeff DeWit rejected the MCRC’s request, meaning that early⁤ and mail-in⁣ voting will go ‌on as usual⁤ on March‍ 19, 2024,‍ with registered Republicans casting ​votes for who ‌they want to ⁤represent them⁤ in the presidential election later that year.

In ⁢a letter to party​ members cited by AZCentral, Mr. DeWit said‌ that a number of obstacles, including time⁢ and legal constraints, made a Republican-only presidential preference election impossible.

“The Party has no well-articulated plan to replace ⁣the PPE and ​no ‌money⁢ with ⁤which to communicate‍ this change to Arizona Republican voters,” Mr. DeWit wrote,⁢ per the outlet.

Mr. DeWit told Capitol Media‍ Services ‌ that ⁤the MCRC’s demands could not be met because⁣ party rules require a 30-day ⁤notice to convene a meeting of the AZGOP’s executive board, while the county party’s Aug. 26 resolution came just six days before the⁣ Sept. 1 deadline to notify the Arizona secretary of state whether AZGOP would opt ⁤out of⁤ the government-run preference ‍election ⁢in March.

However, Mr. DeWit told the ⁣outlet that he offered a “compromise solution” that‍ would⁢ allow the Maricopa Republicans to run a “parallel” election under its own rules⁢ (in-person only ‌voting with hand counting of ballots and same-day results).

That parallel election would not be ‍official,‍ however, and would only serve ​as a kind of test run and audit, but⁤ voters would still have​ to vote in ⁢the‌ state-run election‌ for their votes to count.

“They know the real one is the state election, but they can do basically like a real-time audit if they want,” Mr. ‍DeWit said, per the outlet.⁣ “They can run their own thing and see if their results match. Because they say it can be done⁢ very cheaply⁣ and easily and so this gives them a chance⁢ to.”

‘Plain Stupid’

Asked to ⁤respond‍ to Mr. DeWit’s remarks, Mr. Berland⁤ told Capitol Media‌ Services⁤ that he​ was opposed to such a​ “compromise,”​ arguing ‍that it would confuse ⁢voters and make little sense since the votes in the county-run election wouldn’t actually count.

“That is plain stupid,” Mr. Berland told the outlet.

Other members of the ​Maricopa GOP criticized Mr.⁣ DeWit’s ⁤response, accusing him of undermining their efforts ‍while calling for ​his removal from office.

“He has betrayed Trump and Arizona and‍ is a Uniparty RINO‍ and cannot be trusted with 1 cent of Trumps‍ money ‍and must be removed from⁣ office,” Brian Ference ⁢said in a statement posted on his website.‌ Mr. Ference is a member at ⁤large of ⁤the MCRC executive board.

Dan ​Farley, AZGOP Legislative District 4 ‍chairman, said in ⁢a statement on social‌ media that Mr.​ DeWit’s message to‍ party leaders included a message from the state party attorney warning of legal risks ‍to the MCRC’s proposal.

Mr. Farley said that, per the counsel, ​even‍ if the AZGOP were to run its own presidential preference



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