The wrong lessons from Maricopa County’s voting fiasco

lessons-learned-chalkboardMaricopa County’s botched primary brought accusations of voter suppression. What really happened is more complicated – and even encouraging.

By Phil Keisling | Governing

For the 2016 presidential primary season, it was the classic and inevitable television “election moment”: As the clock ticked past midnight, thousands of Maricopa County, Ariz., voters were still standing in line to cast ballots in Arizona’s presidential primary.

Longtime County Recorder Helen Purcell soon became the logical “film-at-11” culprit, especially after she’d initially suggested, not implausibly, that nearly 20,000 non-party-affiliated voters who couldn’t legally cast ballots in Arizona’s closed presidential primary had clogged the lines by showing up anyway on March 22.

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