Republican Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona announced Saturday that he is running for governor in 2026. Biggs, a Jan. 6 p r oponent and member of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, made the announcement at an Arizona Republican Party event, telling the crowd: “I am jumping in formally. It is now time to Make Arizona Great Again.”
AZ GOPers booed Trump-endorsed gubernatorial hopeful Karrin Taylor Robson at annual state meeting, cheering rival Andy Biggs
Gina Swoboda, an election lawyer endorsed by President Donald Trump, beat back an attempt to replace her by former state Rep. Cory McGarr.
Arizona Republican Party Chair Gina Swoboda will serve another term leading the party following her re-election on Saturday. “It is an honor to be elected to lead our Republican Party of Arizona into the 2026 elections.
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.
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.
Ariz., said Tuesday he is considering a 2026 bid to become the next governor a Arizona, according to a post on X.
On a party-line vote, an Arizona House committee advanced a GOP-backed bill that would require the state’s 15 counties to eliminate voting centers and force voters to return precinct-based polling places.
The new congressman still hasn't spoken about efforts to limit birthright citizenship in a way that would have excluded him.
Almost all counties in the state allow the use of a voting center in some way. Some counties like Gila County use a hybrid model with both precinct voting and vote centers while only three counties exclusively use precinct voting: Apache County, Mohave County and Pinal County.
Arizona Republican lawmakers on Wednesday advanced a bill designed to get voters the results of elections faster.
On the 52nd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Arizona Democrats called on their Republican colleagues to support repealing anti-abortion laws that remain on the books, saying that voters want guaranteed access to the procedure,