You will find her friendly and personable, responsive to your needs and concerns while maintaining the highest work standards providing a diligent and ethical commitment to your ranch real estate needs. Currently, her sole focus is representing buyers and sellers of ranch and farm real estate in the Southwest. As a Certified Paralegal with a degree from Yavapai College, a bachelor’s degree in Business Management and a master’s degree in Public Administration, Tamra has transferred her twenty-five-year experience working in the legal and business fields to selling ranch and farm real estate. Tamra couples this “hands-on” ranch experience with an exceptional higher education and work history to provide a seasoned, diligent and competent approach to selling ranch real estate. Tamra not only understands problems and issues facing cattle ranchers, but she also lives them. Currently, Tamra along with her husband and children own, operate and work several cattle ranches in Central and Eastern Arizona. Her parents worked in agricultural farms in several states ranging from Texas to California. She grew up spending time at Castle Hot Springs in Morristown, Arizona working with her grandfather who ran cattle almost a century ago in the Central Arizona desert. Her ranching experience began at a young age with her grandfather, who worked cattle and broke horses with legendary cowboy and actor Ben Johnson. Born and raised in Arizona, Tamra and her family have a long history in agriculture.
Her “hands-on” background in ranching includes meeting with government officials to discuss operating plans, negotiating ag loans with lenders, vaccinating, cutting and branding calves, pulling a windmill or rotating cattle between pastures, adds authenticity to her representation of ranch buyers and sellers. See the sources here and more of their fact checks here.Tamra Kelly is an experienced rancher and real estate broker licensed in Arizona and New Mexico. This fact check was originally published by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute. The 2020 presidential election in Arizona was settled months ago, and the GOP-led review of ballots in Maricopa County doesn’t change that fact or call for any decertification. Those results showed that Biden won the election. State officials certified the results of the election on Nov.
Our rulingĪ Facebook post stated that Arizona “could decertify” the 2020 presidential election. 14, 2020, “there is no constitutional mechanism to undo the popular vote that led to the appointment of the electors,” said Ohio State University law professor Edward Foley.Īnd federal law clearly does not give states a right to withdraw or change a certification once a president has been sworn into office, said Paul Bender, Arizona State University law professor. Once the electors vote, as they did on Dec. That’s true for all states once the Electoral College has cast its votes. As we have every step of the way, Arizona will follow the law,” Ducey tweeted. “There will be no decertification of the 2020 election - the audit does not call for one, and even if it had, there is no lawful way to decertify. Doug Ducey said on Twitter, the results stand: The election is over. 30 showing that Joe Biden won Arizona by about 10,500 votes.Īs Republican Gov. That number was virtually the same as the county’s official canvass.Īrizona state officials certified the results on Nov. The review found that Joe Biden beat Trump in Maricopa by about 45,000 votes. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)Īrizona state Senate Republicans ordered a review of 2 million ballots in Maricopa, the state’s largest county and home to Phoenix, the capital.
The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. The post linked to a clip of Steve Bannon, a former adviser to former President Donald Trump, interviewing Boris Epshteyn, an adviser to Trump’s 2020 campaign.
#ARIZONA AG FULL#
24, the day that the full report about the ballot review was released. “Arizona bombshell dropped - could decertify,” said a Facebook post on Sept. Some supporters of a GOP-led review of ballots cast in the 2020 presidential election in Arizona’s Maricopa County have engaged in wishful thinking that the process would lead to decertification of the election results.