Arizona Elections Officials Want Primary And General To Be Mail-in Only
Arizona lawmakers and officials are responding to the coronavirus pandemic by proposing new measures and calling for more support.
Arizona lawmakers and officials are responding to the coronavirus pandemic by proposing new measures and calling for more support.
SRP officials are asking voters to mail in ballots for the April 7 election rather than voting in person during the coronavirus pandemic.
Joe Biden won the Arizona Democratic primary Tuesday after the state pressed ahead with its election in the shadow of the coronavirus outbreak.
The decision of two state senators to skip the rest of the legislative session amid coronavirus fears puts the GOP majority in jeopardy.
With nearly 30% of the K-12 student population projected to be Hispanic by 2027, education needs to be a priority for Latino voters.
Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes' plan to mail out more ballots before Tuesday's election was just shot down in court.
Election results show Mayor-Elect Corey Woods beat incumbent Mark Mitchell by 14%, and Doreen Garlid won with the most votes at 25%.
Although Sen. McSally has positioned herself as a champion of the military, she has yet to defend it’s budget from being siphoned away by President Trump.
Sen. McSally’s bill goes further than previous Republican-backed bills, but not as far as one passed in the House last year.
A new poll from Phoenix-based firm OH Predictive Insights shows Democrat Mark Kelly is now leading Republican Sen. Martha McSally by seven points.