Trump pressured former Arizona governor to overturn 2020 election results: Sources
Trump narrowly lost to Joe Biden in Arizona.
Former President Donald Trump attempted to pressure then-Gov. Doug Ducey to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in Arizona , according to multiple sources familiar with the matter. The Washington Post first reported the allegations.
Sources also confirm to ABC News that Trump dispatched former Vice President Mike Pence to pressure Ducey to find fraudulent votes in the state, and that while Pence did call Ducey multiple times in the aftermath of the election, he did not follow those orders.
Trump narrowly lost Arizona to Joe Biden in November 2020.
No recording of the call was made, sources told ABC News.
A spokesperson for Ducey called this reporting "nothing more than a 'copy and paste' of a compilation of articles from the past two years, disguised as something new."
"Governor Ducey defended the results of Arizona’s 2020 election, he certified the election, and he made it clear that the certification provided a trigger for credible complaints backed by evidence to be brought forward. None were ever brought forward. The Governor stands by his action to certify the election and considers the issue to be in the rear view mirror — it’s time to move on," the spokesperson said in a statement.
Trump's campaign, in response to the reporting, reiterated the former president's view that "the 2020 Presidential election was rigged and stolen," but did not refute the story.
"These witch-hunts are designed to interfere and meddle in the 2024 election in an attempt to prevent President Trump from returning to the White House to make this country great again," the statement from Trump's campaign said.
Pence, during a campaign stop in Iowa Tuesday, insisted he "didn't receive any pressure from President Trump" to sway Ducey to change the state's election results.
"Yes, in the aftermath of the election, there were so many questions in a half a dozen states–some 60 lawsuits that have been filed. Many states were going through a very orderly process of reviewing their election results," Pence said. "And I was asked to check in with a few governors. But there was no pressure. I was simply gathering information passing that along and frankly, it was a very routine time. We were just trying to determine where the process was in places like Georgia, places like Arizona that were going through a review of their election results."
"And I didn't receive any pressure from President Trump other than to gather an update on what was happening in those states."
ABC News' Isabella Murray contributed to this report.