Sinema Now Leads McSally by More Than 32,000 Votes in Close Arizona Senate Race
The numbers in a contentious Arizona Senate race widened today, with Democrat Kyrsten Sinema jumping ahead of Republican Martha McSally by 32,640 vote at the Sunday 5 p.m. count, according to CBS 5. The race determines who will take an open seat left by retiring centrist Republican Sen. Jeff Flake. Whichever candidate wins will become the first woman to represent Arizona in the Senate.
Election night ended with McSally in the lead, but as the counting continued, that lead narrowed, then collapsed. An effort began to verify the many mail in ballots that went uncounted, particularly in rural counties.
“Some of the ballots we are currently processing require extra attention and research. We are taking the time needed to make sure every voter’s voice is heard,” Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes wrote to CBS 5 in an email. “We want every vote to count and that’s exactly what we’re working on right now.”
On Friday, a court decided that all Arizona counties must continue validating signatures on absentee ballots until Wednesday, November 14th. Maricopa County Elections Department said today that it had 182,000 ballots left to count. The complaint was brought by the Republican Party in Maricopa, Apache, Navajo and Yuma counties, which the party said had failed to thoroughly verify the signatures on absentee ballots.