Donald Trump looped Arizona Republican Kari Lake into a conspiracy spiel about the integrity of the state's election results on wednesday.
One of the former president's claims was disproved by Lake.
On his Truth Social platform, Trump claimed that there was a large number of voting machines in Arizona that were broken on Election Day.
Lake hasn't conceded in the governor's race despite her opponent winning.
The election-denying candidate was brought into the heart of Trump's false claim to sell Lake's conspiracy theory to his followers.
The voters couldn't return to the voting lines. The machines got worse when mechanics worked on them. She couldn't vote in her own district.
He said that the election should be over or declared the winners. Act fast.
The candidate herself has already said that Lake traveled to a different area and had no problems.
Lake said that they voted in the heart of liberal Phoenix because they wanted to make sure they had good machines.
Guess what? There were no problems with their machines today. There were no machines that spit out a ballot here today.
The Associated Press found that printing issues that stopped the counting of some ballots were not limited to areas that voted Republican or Democrat.
Voters were able to try another tabulator at sites, cancel and go to another site to vote or put their ballot in a box that would be brought to and counted at the tabulation center later in the election.