Republican lawmakers who control the Arizona House and Senate expressed a willingness to work with Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs but were largely skeptical about her signature policy proposals, focused on housing and child care,
Democrats meet Saturday to pick party leaders for the coming two years. Five candidates vie for the role of chair, among calls to reboot the party.
Hobbs says she’s willing to work with Republicans but will veto any legislation she believes fails to provide adequate solutions to the issues Arizonans are facing.
Arizona Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs gives the State of the State address in the House of Representatives at the Capitol Monday, Jan. 13, 2025, in Phoenix. Credit: AP/Ross D. Franklin GOP Senate President Warren Petersen called Hobbs' comments on border ...
That explains why Arizona law requires rotation of names on primary election ballots, said Democrats' attorney Sarah Gonski. She urged U.S. District Court Judge Diane Humetewa to extend that rotation to general elections. The judge declined, and the DNC had no better luck going all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Kelly and Gallego joined eight other Senate Democrats to help the Republican-led immigrant crime bill thwart a filibuster.
A Republican lawmaker is proposing a ballot measure that would change Arizona's early voting system. He says the vamp would make ballot counting faster.
Two state lawmakers saw that as an attack. Two Republican state representatives have accused the Arizona Department of Health Services of coming after the Second Amendment rights of parents after ...
PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Democratic Gov ... as she looks to advance policies that have long been stymied under the GOP-controlled Legislature. While President-elect Donald Trump swept the ...
The party spent $365,611 on “voter contact” in 2022. In comparison, in 2024 the Arizona GOP spent $14,610,764.17 to reach out to voters, which amounted to 74% of the entire 2024 budget.
President-elect Donald Trump has promised to storm into the presidency with a whirlwind of executive actions during his first days as president, making sweeping changes to the country at the stroke of a pen and setting the tone for his second administration.
They say Republicans can’t assume that they will always support GOP candidates, though. They’re waiting to see whether Trump keeps his promises.