Supreme Court brushes aside Kari Lake lawsuit over electronic voting machines
The Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a lawsuit brought by Republican Senate candidate Kari Lake challenging the use of electronic voting machines in Arizona.
The lawsuit, which was filed by Ms Lake and Republican state lawmaker Mark Finchem during her failed 2022 campaign for governor, sought to block electronic voting machines from being used in Arizona and questioned whether they assured “a fair and accurate vote”.
They argued that Arizona’s use of electronic voting machines violated their right to vote under the US Constitution and Arizona law because the machines are “inherently vulnerable” to cyberattacks and voter fraud and could not be relied on to yield objective and accurate vote tallies.
The case was rejected by a federal judge in 2022, and that dismissal was affirmed by the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in October last year.
“On appeal, plaintiffs conceded that their arguments were limited to potential future hacking, and not based on any past harm,” the 9th Circuit wrote.
“In the end, none of plaintiffs’ allegations supports a plausible inference that their individual votes in future elections will be adversely affected by the use of electronic tabulation, particularly given the robust safeguards in Arizona law, the use of paper ballots, and the post-tabulation retention of those ballots,” it added.
In her appeal to the Supreme Court, Ms Lake’s attorneys claimed that they had sufficiently argued that all “Arizona-certified optical scanners and ballot marking devices, as well as the software on which they rely, have been wrongly certified for use”.
They added that they had shown that Arizona’s voting machines had been “hacked” and “manipulated”.
But their claims were ultimately rejected by the