Arizona Republicans won big up and down the ballot in the 2024, but some party members want to oust the chairwoman who oversaw those victories at the state GOP’s annual meeting on Saturday.
The Arizona Republican Party could be poised to toss out the chairwoman who led them back to winning in November. Democrats must be loving this.
Arizona's early ballot laws make it impossible for election administrators to get results fast, wrecking trust in the system and their well-being.
According to the Arizona Secretary of State's website, Congressman Andy Biggs has filed what is known as a "Statement of Interest" for the governorship. Per the statement of interest, Biggs declared his interest to seek the Republican Party gubernatorial nomination during the 2026 primaries,
Trump, who won Arizona — a “purple” swing state — by more than 5 percentage points in 2024 after losing to former President Joe Biden in 2020, encouraged businesswoman Karrin Taylor Robson to jump in the race in 2026 while delivering his victory speech in Phoenix in December.
An election official in a southern Arizona county where some leaders embraced voting conspiracy theories plans to resign at the end of February
Patricia Socarras Santiago cut her teeth in Democratic politics in Rhode Island. Last year, she was working in the country’s newest swing state in a presidential election year.
Arizona Republican lawmakers on Wednesday advanced a bill designed to get voters the results of elections faster.
Arizona lawmakers have been busy filing a slew of proposed election reforms, including multiple plans designed to speed up results.
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.
It’s just one of a series of idea to revamp the state’s election system being introduced by Finchem that he wants adopted when lawmakers return to the Capitol on Jan. 13. And the package even includes a fairly radical proposal to change the date of some elections.
But for the sake of Arizona election administrators — their mental and physical well-being — please consider at least one component of Kolodin’s “Florida-style” election reforms ...