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Reason: None provided.

Thanks for all your important work and comments here. "I’m very worried on the AG specifically." What kind of legal counsel does the AZ Senate Judiciary Chairman have? I've been listening to Dr. Lyle in his videos. He said this whole process has been unchartered waters. He said the legislature didn't know all its options. Are there other legal remedies which could be employed? I'm not familiar with AZ law and AG authority or lack thereof. Does state law specifically require an attorney general to enforce Senate subpoenas? You have to be very careful who is giving legal advice on political matters. Trump's lawyers have given him terrible advice. Patrick Bryne said Pat Cippolone was trying to get Trump to concede without actually telling him to give up. Even his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was working behind the scenes against Trump, he said. You have to be very careful about who you can trust. The most obvious example, of course, was Mike Pence. Everybody thought he was loyal until it was too late.

I just found this article:

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is siding with Republican legislators who are requesting access to election materials in Maricopa County.

"Our filing today in the subpoena dispute between the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors and the legislature details why the Arizona Legislature has constitutional authority to investigate the County's administration of elections," Brnovich tweeted.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/arizona-attorney-general-sides-with-gop-lawmakers-and-asks-judge-to-enforce-subpoenas-for-access-to-voting-machines/ar-BB1cmrK9

So are you sure after filing that the AG would be against enforcing the subpoenas? That wouldn't make sense to me because it would make him look ridiculous.

Here is his amicus brief (pdf):

https://www.azag.gov/sites/default/files/2020-12/Maricopa%20County%20v%20Fann_%20AGO%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf

16 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for all your important work and comments here. "I’m very worried on the AG specifically." What kind of legal counsel does the AZ Senate Judiciary Chairman have? I've been listening to Dr. Lyle in his videos. He said this whole process has been unchartered waters. He said the legislature didn't know all its options. Are there other legal remedies which could be employed? I'm not familiar with AZ law and AG authority or lack thereof. Does state law specifically require an attorney general to enforce Senate subpoenas? You have to be very careful who is giving legal advice on political matters. Trump's lawyers have given him terrible advice. Patrick Bryne said Pat Cippolone was trying to get Trump to concede without actually telling him to give up. Even his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was working behind the scenes against Trump, he said. You have to be very careful about who you can trust. The most obvious example, of course, was Mike Pence. Everybody thought he was loyal until it was too late.

I just found this article:

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is siding with Republican legislators who are requesting access to election materials in Maricopa County.

"Our filing today in the subpoena dispute between the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors and the legislature details why the Arizona Legislature has constitutional authority to investigate the County's administration of elections," Brnovich tweeted.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/arizona-attorney-general-sides-with-gop-lawmakers-and-asks-judge-to-enforce-subpoenas-for-access-to-voting-machines/ar-BB1cmrK9

So are you sure after filing that the AG would be against enforcing the subpoenas? That wouldn't make sense to me because it would make him look ridiculous.

16 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Thanks for all your important work and comments here. "I’m very worried on the AG specifically." What kind of legal counsel does the AZ Senate Judiciary Chairman have? I've been listening to Dr. Lyle in his videos. He said this whole process has been unchartered waters. He said the legislature didn't know all its options. Are there other legal remedies which could be employed? I'm not familiar with AZ law and AG authority or lack thereof. Does state law specifically require an attorney general to enforce Senate subpoenas? You have to be very careful who is giving legal advice on political matters. Trump's lawyers have given him terrible advice. Patrick Bryne said Pat Cippolone was trying to get Trump to concede without actually telling him to give up. Even his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was working behind the scenes against Trump, he said. You have to be very careful about who you can trust. The most obvious example, of course, was Mike Pence. Everybody thought he was loyal until it was too late.

I just found this article:

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is siding with Republican legislators who are requesting access to election materials in Maricopa County.

"Our filing today in the subpoena dispute between the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors and the legislature details why the Arizona Legislature has constitutional authority to investigate the County's administration of elections," Brnovich tweeted.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/arizona-attorney-general-sides-with-gop-lawmakers-and-asks-judge-to-enforce-subpoenas-for-access-to-voting-machines/ar-BB1cmrK9

16 days ago
2 score
Reason: Original

Thanks for all your important work and comments here.

"I’m very worried on the AG specifically."

What kind of legal counsel does the AZ Senate Judiciary Chairman have?

I've been listening to Dr. Lyle in his videos. He said this whole process has been unchartered waters.

He said the legislature didn't know all its options.

Are there other legal remedies which could be employed? I'm not familiar with AZ law and AG authority or lack thereof. Does state law specifically require an attorney general to enforce Senate subpoenas?

You have to be very careful who is giving legal advice on political matters. Trump's lawyers have given him terrible advice. Patrick Bryne said Pat Cippolone was trying to get Trump to concede without actually telling him to give up.

Even his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was working behind the scenes against Trump, he said. You have to be very careful about who you can trust. The most obvious example, of course, was Mike Pence. Everybody thought he was loyal until it was too late.

16 days ago
1 score