A leaked phone call shows that Katie Hobbs, Kris Mayes, and Adrian Fontes are worried about an alleged glitch that could create calls to do the 2020 and 2022 elections again. The glitch has to do with the fact that as many as 100,000 voters did not have their citizenship verified. It should be noted that Katie Hobbs was responsible for the elections in 2020 and 2022. Attorney General Kris Mayes confirmed to Hobbs that the past two elections could cause do-overs in those elections.
Hobbs is concerned that the news would be taken as proof that illegals have been voting in recent elections. It would also cast doubt on the upcoming November election. A do-over for the 2022 election could overturn the victories of Hobbs, Mayes, and Fontes. Mayes, especially since her alleged victory was by less than two hundred votes and Stephen Richer would not be around to make sure 60% of the voting machines in the red district in Maricopa County were dysfunctional.
It is not clear who leaked the copy of the phone call, but whoever it was is my hero. Many Arizonans already doubted the honesty of recent elections, and this phone call should erase all doubts. Beyond that, it could make it impossible for Democrats to rig the 2024 election since they would not be given the benefit of the doubt that cheating did not take place. All three of the officials on the call allegedly won their elections in 2022, where 60% of machines failed on election day in the State’s largest county, Maricopa, and hundreds of thousands of phony or illegal mail-in ballots were believed to have been counted.
This leak of the September 10 phone call also verifies that the election officials knew about this issue a week or more earlier than they led the public to believe.
Arizona GOP Chairwoman Gina Swoboda told The Gateway Pundit two days ago, “It’s my understanding that the Secretary knew and informed the Governor on September 6.” However, Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer did not notify the public of the glitch until September 17.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELThe Gateway Pundit reported on the error, announced by Richer, in the Arizona Motor Vehicle Department’s (MVD) system that caused nearly 100,000 voter registrations to be validated without verifying the registrants’ citizenship.
But this error wasn’t new. In fact, for 20 years, a loophole in the system has allowed individuals who received a driver’s license before 1996 to vote without citizenship verification.
Because Arizona began requiring documentary proof of citizenship to vote in 2004, licenses issued before Arizona required proof of citizenship to drive in 1996, regardless of citizenship status, showed as proof of citizenship on file with the MVD, election officials claim.
“If a driver received a license prior to 1996, he did not have a documented proof of citizenship on file. But then, if he got a duplicate license (e.g. in the case of losing a license), the issuance date would be updated in the statewide voter registration’s interface with MVD,” Richer said.
During the 40-minute phone call, the Democrat officials debated how to proceed in what Hobbs described as “an urgent, a dire situation,” according to the Washington Post.
Attorney General Kris Mayes and Secretary of State Adrian Fontes also worried they would be accused of election fraud in 2024 and “beat up no matter what the hell we do.”
“When this goes public, it is going to have all of the conspiracy theorists in the globe — in the world — coming back to re-litigate the past three elections, at least in Arizona,” said Governor Katie Hobbs, noting that it will “validate” the issue of illegals voting in elections.




















