Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer loses GOP primary to right-wing challenger

PHOENIX — Arizona state Rep. Justin Heap defeated incumbent Stephen Richer in the GOP primary for Maricopa County recorder, an outcome that could have a major impact on how elections are administered in the nation’s most populous battleground county.  

Heap had 42.4% support from Republican primary voters to 35.9% for Richer when The Associated Press called the race Wednesday morning. Don Hiatt, a candidate who worked in information management technology, took 21.8%. 

Richer is an outspoken defender of the swing state’s election process who forcefully pushed back against the unfounded voter fraud claims that festered after the 2020 and 2022 races. 

Heap, a critic of Maricopa elections in years past, has dodged questions about whether the 2020 election was fraudulent. He was endorsed by many prominent Arizona Republicans who have refused to accept Joe Biden’s victory four years ago, including Kari Lake, who is running for U.S. Senate this year after her failed 2022 gubernatorial campaign. 

“I am endorsing Justin Heap for the Maricopa County Recorder because we want honest elections,” Lake said at a campaign event in Goodyear, Ariz., in June. “We need a heap of honesty in our elections.”

The primary for Maricopa County recorder, a job with a vast administrative role that includes processing deeds and overseeing the voter file and other parts of elections, is typically a sleepy affair. But the contest was much more heated this year, as Maricopa, the largest county of a key battleground state, has emerged as a hotbed for unfounded election fraud claims.

After ballot printers and vote tabulation machines malfunctioned during Arizona’s 2022 election, baseless claims of malicious activity arose, and conspiracy theories about Richer resulted in Richer’s facing death threats. 

Richer has continued to face a slew of attacks. Last month, he posted a video on X of Shelby Busch, the chair of Arizona’s delegation to the 2024 Republican National Convention, saying she would “lynch” him if she had the chance. The video stemmed from a live-streamed event on Rumble, a conservative video platform, in Mesa on March 20. 

The three candidates squared off in a debate in late June, and Heap claimed Richer’s track record disgraced Arizona on a national scale.

“I’m running for this office because Maricopa County’s elections made us a national laughing stock,” Heap said at the debate in late June.

Heap will now face Democrat Tim Stringham, who ran unopposed in his party’s primary, in the general election.