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Maricopa County: Arizona judge denies GOP lawsuit to keep polls open in county after ballot 'hiccups'

An Arizona judge declined to keep polls open in Maricopa County, Arizona, after the scheduled 7 p.m. MT closing time despite a lawsuit from Republicans.

An Arizona court ruled against a Republican-backed lawsuit to keep polls open for provisional ballots in Maricopa County after "hiccups" with some vote tabulators earlier in the day caused confusion at polling places. 

"The court does not have evidence there was a voter who was precluded the right to vote from what was presented," the judge said minutes before polls closed Tuesday. 

"From what I've seen they all got a collection of their vote," the judge said as the lawyer for Blake Masters' campaign argued before the court. Masters' campaign, the Republican National Committee and the campaign for Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake were behind the lawsuit. 

2022 MIDTERM ELECTIONS: LIVE UPDATES "Under the Maricopa County protocols, it's ultimately processed," the judge also said. 

Maricopa County's lawyer also argued that it is "simply not true" that some voters were denied the chance to vote. Ballots that could not go through the tabulators at polling places, they said, were put in a box and sent to a central counting location to be tabulated. 

A GUIDE TO THE FOX NEWS 2022 ELECTIONS EXPERIENCE

The lawyer for Maricopa County also said leaving polling places open after 7 p.m. MT would have serious constitutional implications. 

"We must treat all the counties the same," the county's lawyer said. "That's not giving equal access to the ballot to everybody. So the relief would be more harmful."

MARICOPA COUNTY: BLAKE MASTERS, KARI LAKE, RNC SUE AFTER ‘HICCUPS’ AT ARIZONA VOTING LOCATIONS

A lawyer for the campaign of Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., meanwhile, argued the GOP lawsuit should be invalid under the legal doctrine of "laches" – meaning that they waited for too long to file it. 

The lawyer for Masters' campaign, however, said the case was too important to not keep the polls open. 

"It's entirely possible this issue" could determine "our governor for the next four years, and the majority control of the United States Senate," the Masters lawyer said. "If the margin of victory or loss is so close that it could determine the outcome, then we'll come back to you and we'll argue about what to do about these ballots."

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