In Arizona, as elsewhere in the country, canvassing and certification have long been considered uncontroversial formalities in the postelection process. Under Arizona law, the canvass is the process of reviewing and declaring election results by a mandated deadline. Certification serves as the final step at the end of the canvass. State law makes clear that election officials have a mandatory, nondiscretionary duty to canvass and certify elections by the statutory deadlines.
Despite this well-settled law, states across the country — including Arizona — are facing a new phenomenon. Since the 2020 election, more than 30 local officials nationwide have refused or threatened to refuse to certify election results. These officials often justify their misconduct with claims rooted in election denialism — the false idea that the 2020 election was stolen and that widespread fraud pervades our election system. Their efforts have not succeeded, often because state courts and state officials have intervened to protect the certification process. But the threat remains that rogue officials in Arizona may attempt to interfere with the timely certification of this year’s presidential election results.
In a presidential election year, efforts to disrupt certification pose a particularly acute threat. Under the Electoral Count Reform Act (ECRA), passed by Congress in 2022, state executives must certify their state’s slate of presidential electors by December 11, 2024. 3 U.S.C. §§ 5(a)(1), 7. Delaying certification by even a few days could place a state’s ability to certify by the ECRA deadline at risk.
Fortunately, Arizona officials have several legal tools available to respond to any certification issues that arise — and to help prevent them in the first place. These guardrails are detailed below.