November 23, 2024

Kari Lake Critics Cheer Her Arizona Court Loss: ‘Merry Christmas to Us!’

Merry Xmas #MerryXmas

Above, a split image of Kari Lake and Arizona Governor-elect Katie Hobbs. A judge on Saturday ruled against Lake's lawsuit challenging Hobbs' victory, sparking a series of reactions from Lake critics on social media. © Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Above, a split image of Kari Lake and Arizona Governor-elect Katie Hobbs. A judge on Saturday ruled against Lake’s lawsuit challenging Hobbs’ victory, sparking a series of reactions from Lake critics on social media.

Kari Lake critics celebrated on Saturday after a judge rejected her lawsuit claiming to show evidence of election fraud during the Arizona gubernatorial race during last month’s midterms.

Lake—a Republican who blamed her loss on election fraud—filed a lawsuit earlier in December alleging fraud in the election, which she narrowly lost to her Democratic opponent, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs. Lake, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, claimed she actually won by 400,000 to 500,000 votes, but provided no evidence to back it up.

Kari Lake Tells America To ‘Buckle Up’ As Sliver Of Lawsuit Advances

SHARE

SHARE

TWEET

SHARE

EMAIL

What to watch next

  • Key Republicans weigh whether to enter 2024 presidential race

    Key Republicans weigh whether to enter 2024 presidential race

    CBS News

  • Beagles bust food smugglers in Atlanta airport

    Beagles bust food smugglers in Atlanta airport

    CBS News

  • Trump responds furiously to Jan. 6 House committee report

    Trump responds furiously to Jan. 6 House committee report

    CBS News

  • Judge throws out Kari Lake's lawsuit over defeat in Arizona governor's race

    Judge throws out Kari Lake’s lawsuit over defeat in Arizona governor’s race

    CBS News

  • WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 20: Former U.S. Attorney General William Barr speaks at a meeting of the Federalist Society on September 20, 2022 in Washington, DC. Barr spoke as The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies held its Education Law and Policy Conference. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    ‘Jumped off the page’: CNN reporter on insight from latest batch of Jan. 6 witness transcripts

    CNN

  • New assault in Kherson leave 10 dead, dozens wounded

    New assault in Kherson leave 10 dead, dozens wounded

    NBC News

  • Thousands of flights canceled and delayed hours before Christmas

    Thousands of flights canceled and delayed hours before Christmas

    NBC News

  • WSJ Opinion: Hits of the Year

    WSJ Opinion: Hits of the Year

    The Wall Street Journal

  • WSJ Opinion: Misses of the Year

    WSJ Opinion: Misses of the Year

    The Wall Street Journal

  • WSJ Opinion: The Supreme Court's Most Momentous Year

    WSJ Opinion: The Supreme Court’s Most Momentous Year

    The Wall Street Journal

  • WSJ Opinion: The Year in Politics

    WSJ Opinion: The Year in Politics

    The Wall Street Journal

  • WSJ Opinion: The Economy's 2022 Rollercoaster Ride

    WSJ Opinion: The Economy’s 2022 Rollercoaster Ride

    The Wall Street Journal

  • 'Pretty much worthless': Trump lawyer responds to Jan. 6 criminal referrals

    ‘Pretty much worthless’: Trump lawyer responds to Jan. 6 criminal referrals

    CNN

  • Snow, Winds, Subfreezing Temps: Winter Storm Hits Holiday Weekend

    Snow, Winds, Subfreezing Temps: Winter Storm Hits Holiday Weekend

    The Wall Street Journal

  • Watch: Video captures moment gas tanker explodes in Johannesburg, killing 8

    Watch: Video captures moment gas tanker explodes in Johannesburg, killing 8

    NBC News

  • Rep. Stacey Plaskett: Midterms taught us ‘we want this to remain a democracy’

    Rep. Stacey Plaskett: Midterms taught us ‘we want this to remain a democracy’

    MSNBC

  • Click to expand

    UP NEXT

    UP NEXT

    On Saturday, Maricopa County Superior Judge Peter Thompson ruled that Lake’s legal team failed to provide “clear and convincing” evidence of misconduct by Arizona election officials. Thompson wrote in his decision that the state’s election system is not “perfect,” but “more than sufficient to comply with the law and conduct a valid election.”

    Lake’s critics then celebrated her loss on social media, praising the ruling for upholding Hobbs’ victory. Hobbs defeated Lake by less than 1 percentage point, winning 1,287,891 votes to Lake’s 1,270,744 votes in one of the closest races of the midterms.

    Harvard legal scholar Laurence Tribe described the ruling as “good,” but not unexpected.

    “Kari Lake is as phony as they get, her lawsuit as frivolous as any,” he tweeted.

    Writer Tim Miller tweeted: “Merry Christmas to us!”

    “Like her mentor, she’ll never acknowledge the truth. She lost,” tweeted political adviser David Axelrod, referring to Trump, who also blamed his 2020 defeat on widespread election fraud, without preventing evidence.

    Attorney Bradley Moss tweeted: “Kari Lake knew she lost. She didn’t care. She, like Trump, knows her base is filled with ignorant and gullible rubes who will fill her coffers so she can run her martyr scam for months and months. She uses those people because they’re too ignorant to recognize the scam.”

    MeidasTouch, a Twitter account that posts in support of Democratic causes, taunted Lake over the decision, tweeting: “Just a quick reminder for Kari Lake: Katie Hobbs will be your governor.”

    Following the ruling, Lake pledged to appeal it, writing on Twitter that her lawsuit “provided the world with evidence that proves our elections are run outside of the law.”

    Her loss comes after a difficult few weeks for Arizona Republicans, who faced courtroom defeats in two other recent lawsuits challenging the results from the midterm elections.

    On Friday, Maricopa County Judge Lee Jantzen ruled against a lawsuit filed by GOP attorney general candidate Abraham Hamadeh, who lost to Democrat Kris Mayes by only 511 votes.

    In the secretary of state race, Maricopa County Judge Melissa Julian ruled against GOP candidate Mark Finchem’s similar lawsuit, writing that none of his allegations constitute “‘misconduct’ sufficient to survive dismissal.” Finchem lost by more than 100,000 votes to his Democratic challenger, Adrian Fontes.

    However, Republicans did not contest Democrat Mark Kelly’s victory in the closely-watched Senate race. Kelly defeated Trump-endorsed Republican Blake Masters by nearly 5 percentage points.

    Newsweek reached out to Lake’s campaign for further comment.

    Related Articles

    Start your unlimited Newsweek trial

    Leave a Reply