Secretary of State Fontes Violated State Transparency Law When Issuing Manual
(Phoenix, AZ – March 6, 2025) – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections PAC (“RITE PAC”), an organization dedicated to protecting election integrity, secured a major victory today to ensure that Arizona officials cannot unilaterally impose unlawful election rules that undermine public confidence in elections. The Arizona Court of Appeals unanimously agreed with RITE PAC that Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes violated the law when he adopted Arizona’s 2023 Elections Procedures Manual (EPM). The ruling ensures that Arizona election officials will follow the rulemaking procedures set forth in law when they make changes to how the state conducts its elections.
In this case, RITE PAC supported the Arizona GOP and the Yavapai County Republican Party to challenge the 2023 EPM. Upon publishing it, Secretary Fontes took to X to dare his opponents to sue him. The RNC, Arizona GOP, and Yavapai County Republicans did just that, arguing that in his rush to impose his illegal, partisan policy preferences on Arizona voters, Secretary Fontes had violated the law by depriving them of their statutory right to review and comment upon the EPM. Today, the court agreed that Secretary Fontes broke the law.
The unlawfully promulgated EPM contained several provisions that weakened key safeguards against fraud and errors in voter registration and ballot security, including rules that unlawfully allowed federal-only voters without proof of citizenship to vote in presidential elections and by mail, prohibited challenges to early ballots before they were returned, and prevented county recorders from using national databases to verify citizenship.
“This decision is a significant win for election integrity and the rule of law,” said RITE PAC’s President & CEO Derek Lyons. “Arizona’s Secretary of State believed he was not bound by Arizona law. We were happy to respond to his invitation to sue him and grateful for the appellate court’s decision showing him just how wrong he was. Today’s ruling reaffirms that Arizona’s election officials must follow the law and cannot rewrite election procedures without public input.”
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