You Decide 2022 Arizona Election Special, Pt.
In Part 2, the final part of FOX 10’s “You Decide 2022 Arizona Election Special,” a reporter sits down with some of Arizona’s highly contested candidates to discuss the election so far, their hopes, plans, and addresses some of the controversies surrounding it. their race. We also look at early forecast poll numbers where some candidates are lagging behind and others are widening the gap.
phoenix – As voting continues for the 2022 general election in Arizona, you can watch the process live.
according to Arizona law“In statewide, county, or legislative elections, the county registrar or officer in charge of the election shall provide a live video recording of the storage of all ballots while they are in the counting room of the counting center. It is assumed that
Live video recordings shall include a date and time indicator and be linked to the Secretary of State’s website. “The Secretary of State shall post a link to the video coverage for public viewing.”
Click the link below to visit the county election results website and view a live video feed of the vote count in progress.
Maricopa County
The Maricopa County Elections Office began counting early votes on October 24. All early and provisional ballots will be tallied at elections offices, while election day ballots will be tallied at tabulators inside vote centers, officials said.
District 3 Chairman Bill Gates said: If there are party observers, they will vote. No matter who wins or loses, voters can rely on the results our election processes, procedures and audits provide. “
Maricopa County Recorder Steven Richer said, “We are off to a great start for the November 2022 General Election, with 1.9 million early ballots mailed, 12 vote centers open, and 25,000 votes cast. The above new or updated voter registration applications have been processed and we will begin counting the ballots.”
State law allows early votes to be counted before Election Day.
“Maricopa County estimates that 98% of the ballots will be reported by November 11th using federally and state-approved counting equipment, and the count will be completed 10 to 12 days after Election Day.” MCED officials said.
Election results will be posted at 8:00 pm on Election Day at the following URL: https://Results.Maricopa.VoteThe first post will be all early votes tallied up to that point, and the county will be posting results from Election Day vote centers overnight.
“However, counting does not take place on Election Night. The county expects between 150 and 250,000 early votes on Election Day. Signatures must first be verified and processed in. The county also completes tallies of write-in candidates, investigates provisional ballots, and corrects questionable signatures before finalizing ballots. The county posts unofficial election results nightly and provides estimated vote counts remaining.
“With Arizona’s new law, counties are also preparing to increase the likelihood of automatic recounts after final results are confirmed. increased from 0.5 percent to 0.5 percent statewide, once the contest triggers the new threshold, Arizona counties will count all votes in a second machine starting in December after the statewide canvas The court may complete the recount in late December.
Text “JOIN” to 628-683, or https://BeBallotReady.Vote.
To watch a live video feed of the ballot vault, Mesa and Phoenix drop boxes, early voting, or tallies: https://recorder.maricopa.gov/elections/electionlivevideo.
Apache County
Cochise County
“All early ballots must be placed in a signed affidavit envelope. These validated ballots will then be processed and counted.The results will be announced one hour after voting closes on Election Night.If the signatures do not match, the registrar will We will try to reach out to voters,” a Cochise County official said. “Early voting by mail is very secure because signatures are matched for each ballot. You can use one of the secure and convenient ballot drop-boxes located in the county.”
Coconino County
The Coconino County Elections Office said, “All ballots are tallied in a central tally room. Access to the tally room is restricted to trained and security-cleared election staff and bipartisan tally board members.” Qualified party observers should directly observe the tallying process.”
The Coconino County Elections Office said, “All ballots are tallied in a central tally room. Access to the tally room is restricted to trained and security-cleared election staff and bipartisan tally board members.” Qualified party observers should directly observe the tallying process.”
Gila County
Graham County
Greenlee County
La Paz County
Mojave County
Navajo County
Pima County
Pima County offers six live video feeds. East Facing Ballot Processing, South East Facing Ballot Processing West Wall, Ballot Processing, Vault – South Entrance, Ballot Tallying Room, and Warehouse Rollup are counted.
“To prevent the possibility of illegal manipulation of voted ballots, at least two observers from different political parties shall be present whenever the voted ballots are not placed in a sealed container. In addition, the two-person rule has been expanded to: Operation in the tally room. Observers from political parties must also be present if there are ballots cast in the room.
For more information on Pima County election center security, visit Election security plan.
Pinal County
Pinal County provides two live video feeds of the tally room.
Santa Cruz County:
Yavapai County:
Yuma County:


A view from the live feed of the ballot drop-boxes in Phoenix, Maricopa County and the ballot tally as of October 24, 2022.