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A new court filing seeks to disqualify Arizona’s far-left AG after documents expose ‘wide-reaching multi-state political influence campaign.’
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes on Thursday announced she is dismissing her years-long witch hunt against President Donald Trump’s allies while desperately clinging to hope she can soon resurrect it. Perhaps a new motion filed in Maricopa County Court alleging Mayes and fellow far-left attorneys general from multiple swing states engaged in prosecutorial collusion forced her hand.Attorneys for Christina Bobb, former Republican National Committee Counsel for Election Integrity, have filed a motion to disqualify Mayes from the case, accusing the Democrat of working with leftist lawfare group States United Democracy Center in her corrupt prosecution. A supplemental filing to the motion obtained by The Federalist asserts the coordinated campaign originated from a “small group of politically motivated lawyers to pursue partisan interests.”
And the lawfare warriors — including Arizona’s politically motivated attorney general — “are functionally tools of the Democratic Party,” Bobb’s legal counsel, Tucson lawyer Thomas Jacobs, told The Federalist in a phone interview on Wednesday. According to the court filing, the Democratic Attorneys General Association cut a $200,000 check to the attorney general’s legal defense fund after Bobb and her fellow co-defendants were paraded into court for their arraignments.
It all appears to be an extreme conflict of interest, and certainly not the narrative of noble public servants taking down the “fake elector” schemers behind Trump’s attempt to “overthrow” the 2020 election. That big lie on the left has been crumbling in courtrooms in several swing states, including in Arizona where the state’s highest court took Mayes’ legally suspect prosecution off life support earlier this month.
But the documents obtained by Judicial Watch suggest Arizona’s lawfare has direct ties to those in Nevada, Michigan, and Wisconsin. The swing states were pivotal in deciding the 2020 presidential election, and where Trump’s attorneys legally challenged the narrow margins of victory for Joe Biden that put the autopen president in the White House. Strange that, according to once-hidden records, these states all received legal guidance and strategies on how to prosecute the people they marked as “election deniers” from States United Democracy Center.
“Maybe it is just a coincidence that all of the states that indicted Trump allies with the same ridiculous unprecedented charges all get legal counsel from States United,” Bobb’s court filing states. “However, the available evidence seems to indicate that many of these political cases, both civil and criminal, are created and pushed by States United Democracy Center. They are merely hiding behind the government officials willing to accept the non-profit’s political influence and funding in exchange for government criminal prosecution authority.”
So, as Mayes prosecutes Bobb and the others on “charges related to a conspiracy to undermine the results of the 2020 presidential election,” the AG and her leftist lawfare friends are accused of “conducting a wide-reaching multi-state political influence campaign using its political power to influence criminal prosecutions of political opponents.”
Alright, kids. Here it is. Released today by the FBI, nearly 200 pages of formerly classified FBI documents, posted today on the House Judiciary Committee website and proves that the "state law cases" with the fake criminal charges against Pres Trump, Trump lawyers, Trump…
— Cleta Mitchell (@CletaMitchell) October 28, 2025‘This Obsession is not Justice’
In May 2024, Mayes got a grand jury to indict 18 people in what Democrats falsely billed as a “fake electors” case. The indictment arrived three and a half years after 11 Arizona Republicans stood as alternate electors following the rigged 2020 presidential election. Each was charged with nine felonies including fraud, forgery, and conspiracy. State Sen. Jake Hoffman, founding chairman of the Arizona Freedom Caucus, former Arizona Sen. Anthony Kern, and Tyler Bowyer, Turning Point Action Chief Operating Officer, were among the indicted.
Trump was identified as an “unindicted co-conspirator.”
Also charged were Trump attorney and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows, and former Trump lawyer John Eastman. Bobb stands accused of making “false claims of widespread election fraud in Arizona and in six other states.”
Some of the defendants also faced or are facing charges in other states on similar allegations.
But Mayes has had a difficult time holding her trumped-up case together.
On Thursday, Mayes dismissed the charges, but she’s not done yet. KTAR News in Phoenix reported that “the legal maneuver is aimed at getting around a Friday deadline for starting new grand jury proceedings …”
“This case is complex and will require substantial presentation of evidence and time to accommodate defendants’ request to testify and present evidence,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing.
Earlier this month, the Arizona Supreme Court denied the state’s appeal to resurrect the moribund political witch hunt. Lower courts previously had found that the AGs indictments were invalid because she had failed to inform jurors of the 1887 Electoral Count Act, which lays out why the defendants strategy was not illegal.
JUST IN: Arizona Supreme Court has shot down AG Kris Mayes' effort to revive her indictment against top allies of President Donald Trump in his effort to overturn the 2020 election results.
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) June 4, 2026
She can either seek a new indictment or drop the case. pic.twitter.com/x7UynCJQqbAs The Federalist has extensively reported, the use of alternate electors was used in the disputed 1960 presidential election, and the strategy was considered again during the disputed 2000 election — by Democrat Al Gore. In Trump’s case, the campaign was still legally challenging ballots in swing states as the deadline for states to submit their elector certificates to Congress approached. The alternate electors met at their respective state legislatures to preserve Trump’s votes in the event the campaign prevailed in its court challenges.
And the state court of appeals recently found that Mayes illegally withheld communications between the AG’s office and the States United Democracy Center. Judicial Watch sued the attorney general, who insisted the documents sought were protected by attorney-client privilege. The judge disagreed.
The Arizona Supreme Court told Mayes that she would have to convince a new grand jury to indict the defendants all over again. AG spokesman Richie Taylor said the prosecutor plans to do just that.
Arizona GOP chairwoman Gina Swoboda told the Arizona Capitol Times that Mayes should “stop wasting time and taxpayer resources on partisan lawfare.”
“Five years later, Kris Mayes is still fixated on 2020 while violent crime, fentanyl trafficking, and border chaos threaten our communities every single day,” Swoboda said in the statement. “This obsession is not justice — it’s politics.”
And that is precisely what Bobb’s motion alleges: such a politically obsessed AG is not qualified to prosecute this case.
The Stench of Weaponization --->READ MORE HERE


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