Arizona

Arizona's governor vetoed the entire $17.9B budget. The AG filed 41 lawsuits against Trump. Voucher oversight was called haphazard. What you can do.

Latest: June 19, 2026 Latest BriefArizona Voucher BlockJune 13, 2026

Arizona has a Democratic governor and attorney general holding the line against a Republican legislature. Governor Katie Hobbs vetoed the entire $17.9 billion state budget and imposed a bill moratorium. AG Kris Mayes has filed 41 lawsuits against the Trump administration. Both face re-election in November 2026.

The legislature expanded the nation’s first universal school voucher program to 102,500 students. A state audit found oversight was “haphazard”, and $10 million in taxpayer funds were misspent. Voters approved Prop 314 to let state police enforce immigration law.


Hobbs vetoed the entire state budget

On May 5, 2026, Governor Hobbs vetoed all 17 bills that made up the $17.9 billion Republican budget package. She called it “unbalanced and reckless” and said it would default on debt obligations, slash public safety funding, and pay for tax breaks to billionaires by kicking Arizonans off their healthcare.

The fight started in March when Republicans refused to extend Proposition 123, a $300 million annual K-12 funding source that expired in 2025. Hobbs walked away from negotiations and on April 13 declared a blanket bill moratorium.

”Until the legislative majority shows us their plans for a balanced budget that works for middle-class Arizonans, their bills will be dead on arrival.”

Governor Katie Hobbs, April 2026

The moratorium lasted a month. Two bills were exempted for public safety. Every other bill that reached her desk was vetoed. When the Republican budget finally arrived, she vetoed that too.

In her veto letter to House Speaker Steve Montenegro, she wrote three words that summarized the standoff. “I am ready when you are.”

$17.9 billion Total budget vetoed on May 5, 2026
17 bills All budget bills vetoed in a single day
$300 million/year K-12 funding lost when Prop 123 expired
One month Duration of the blanket bill moratorium

A billion-dollar voucher program with no oversight

Arizona’s Empowerment Scholarship Accounts were supposed to cost $65 million when the legislature expanded them to all students in 2022. Three years later, the program costs over $1 billion annually. More than 102,500 students are enrolled for the 2025-2026 school year, a 60% increase in three years.

$10 million in taxpayer funds misspent by 20% of ESA parents, including purchases of iPhones, widescreen TVs, and Kenmore appliances

The state Auditor General released a report in May 2026 describing oversight as “haphazard, continually changing and lacking concrete instructions.” Superintendent Tom Horne ordered automatic approval of all purchases under $2,000 starting in December 2024. That pushed 2.3 million transactions worth $654 million through with no human review.

Auto-approved purchases included amusement park tickets, airline tickets, hotel stays, and meals. In 14 of 15 cases where the department’s own auditors flagged unallowable purchases, managers took no action.

Who This Affects

Jennifer Jennings, Education researcher, Princeton University

'I've never seen, quite frankly, a system that is so loosey-goosey as this; they're doing the audit offline, not within the class wallet system, in a weekly Excel sheet that gets passed around the office.'

Based on documented cases and public data.

The program also skews heavily toward wealth. Brookings found 52% of recipients come from zip codes in the top income quartile, with median incomes between $81,000 and $178,000. Only 5% come from the lowest income quartile. Students with disabilities dropped from 60% of users before the universal expansion to 18% today.

Who benefitsShare of ESA recipients
Top income quartile zip codes52%
Above-average income zip codes75%
Lowest income quartile zip codes5%
Students with disabilities (pre-expansion)60%
Students with disabilities (today)18%

AG Kris Mayes is investigating the fraud and considering a lawsuit against Superintendent Horne. Only $1.2 million of the $10 million has been recovered.


Kris Mayes filed 41 lawsuits and saved $1.5 billion

$1.5 billion in federal funds saved through 41 lawsuits against the Trump administration since January 2025

In 75% of cases where judges have issued rulings, the most recent ruling went in her favor. In 15 cases, courts granted temporary relief blocking federal action while litigation continues.

NIH grants Court of Appeals permanently blocked $35M in cuts to Arizona research funding (Jan 2026)
Federal funding freeze Appeals court kept $1.4B unfrozen for Arizona agencies (March 2026)
Education funding Restored $132M in frozen Dept. of Education programs (May 2025)
SNAP benefits Blocked feds from obtaining personal data of food assistance recipients

”This is not what I get up every day wanting to do. But if Donald Trump decides to violate the Constitution, violate statute, or harm the people of Arizona, I’m going to file that lawsuit.”

Attorney General Kris Mayes

Both Republican AG candidates, Warren Petersen and Rodney Glassman, are running on the message that Mayes focused on suing Trump instead of protecting Arizonans. Petersen outraised Mayes last quarter at roughly $790,000, but Mayes holds about $400,000 more in cash on hand.


Prop 314 turned immigration enforcement into state law

Arizona voters approved Proposition 314 in November 2024 by nearly 2-to-1. The measure makes it a state crime for noncitizens to enter Arizona outside official ports of entry and allows local police to make arrests. State judges can order deportations. First-time convictions carry up to six months in jail.

Critics call it SB 1070 on steroids. In 2010, Arizona passed SB 1070, the “show me your papers” law. In 2012, the Supreme Court struck down three of its four provisions, ruling that immigration enforcement belongs to the federal government.

$224 million to $447 million projected annual detention costs under Prop 314, according to the Arizona Center for Economic Progress

The main enforcement provisions cannot take effect until a similar law in Texas has been in effect for 60 consecutive days, or until the Supreme Court overturns its 2012 ruling. As of May 2026, federal courts have blocked those Texas provisions.

If Prop 314 enforcement triggers

  • State and local police begin arresting noncitizens at the border
  • State judges start issuing deportation orders
  • Detention costs hit $224M-$447M annually for Arizona taxpayers
  • Legal challenges reach the Supreme Court

If federal courts continue blocking

  • Enforcement provisions remain dormant
  • Fentanyl provisions and E-Verify requirements stay active
  • Legislature pushes for new enforcement mechanisms
  • 2026 election results determine next steps

Armed federal agents at every polling place

SB 1570, sponsored by Sen. Jake Hoffman (R-Queen Creek), would have required ICE agents at every Arizona polling location, early voting site, and ballot drop box for the 2026 election. County recorders would have been forced to sign written agreements with federal immigration agencies to make it happen.

The bill stalled in committee in February 2026 after a six-hour hearing. It missed the deadline to advance and is effectively dead for this session. But no bill is ever truly dead at the Arizona Capitol. Lawmakers can revive it as a strike-everything amendment in the House.

”When voters see armed federal enforcement near polling sites and they’re already part of communities that have been profiled or traumatized by law enforcement they represent, that presence does not feel neutral. It feels targeted.”

Rev. Veronica Alvarez

The ACLU cited federal statutes prohibiting “conspiring to prevent by force, intimidation, or threat, any citizen who is lawfully entitled to vote.” Civil rights groups called it voter suppression dressed up as election integrity.

What SB 1570 would have doneStatus
ICE at every polling locationDead in committee (Feb 2026)
ICE at every early voting siteDead in committee
ICE at every ballot drop boxDead in committee
Can be revived as strike-everything amendmentYes

2026 puts the governor, AG, and superintendent on the same ballot

Arizona’s three most contested statewide offices are all up in November 2026. The results will determine whether the state keeps its Democratic firewall or hands full control to Republicans.

RaceDemocratRepublican frontrunnerPrimary
GovernorKatie Hobbs (incumbent)Andy Biggs (Trump-endorsed)July 21
Attorney GeneralKris Mayes (incumbent)Warren Petersen / Rodney GlassmanJuly 21
SuperintendentTeresa Leyba RuizTom Horne (incumbent)July 21

In the governor’s race, Biggs leads the Republican primary with 48-50% support. Trump endorsed him. In a general election matchup, Hobbs leads Biggs 44-43 (Emerson) or 41-37 (Noble Predictive Insights). A third of GOP primary voters remain undecided.

The superintendent race matters more than it looks. Tom Horne is the official who ordered automatic approval of all ESA voucher purchases under $2,000, creating the oversight collapse the Auditor General flagged. If he wins re-election, that approach to the billion-dollar voucher program continues.

July 21, 2026 Primary election date
November 3, 2026 General election date
3 statewide offices Governor, AG, and Superintendent all on the ballot

Protect yourself right now

  1. Check your voter registration. The primary is July 21. Verify your status at azsos.gov. Arizona’s registration deadline is 29 days before election day.

  2. Know your school’s ESA exposure. If your district is losing students to the voucher program, your school board needs to hear from you before the next budget cycle. Ask how many students have left and what the funding impact is.

  3. Track your federal benefits. AG Mayes has blocked cuts to NIH grants, SNAP benefits, education funding, and the federal funding freeze. If you receive federal benefits, verify your status now. Do not assume they are secure.

  4. Watch for SB 1570 revivals. The ICE-at-polling-places bill can come back as a strike-everything amendment at any time. Follow AZ Mirror and KJZZ for legislative tracking.

  5. Call the governor’s office. 602-542-4331. Tell them whether the budget veto matters to you. Tell them what Prop 123 funding means for your district’s schools.

Call Your Senators
Mark Kelly Democrat
202-224-2235 Senate profile →
Ruben Gallego Democrat
202-224-4521 Senate profile →
Governor Katie Hobbs (D) 602-542-4331
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Briefs

What Changed Recently

Economy Updated June 19, 2026

Arizona Lost 49% of Its SNAP Caseload in Six Months. 474,000 People Stopped Receiving Food Assistance.

Arizona's SNAP caseload dropped from 909,000 to 435,000 after the One Big Beautiful Bill imposed new work requirements and state cost-sharing. Food banks report surging demand. The pattern is spreading.

Education June 13, 2026

Arizona GOP Blocked Voucher Reforms With a Hidden Constitutional Clause

Arizona Republicans rushed through a constitutional amendment in the final hours of the legislative session that would nullify two citizen-led initiatives

Red States June 13, 2026

Arizona GOP Voted at 4 a.m. to Bypass Gov. Hobbs. Measures Go to November Ballot.

Arizona Republicans ended the 2026 legislative session at 4:45 a.m. on June 14, passing a series of ballot referrals along party lines that circumvent Gov.

Education May 23, 2026

Eighteen States Spend Billions on Vouchers With Almost No Oversight

A state-by-state look at how private school voucher programs dodge the testing, audits, and civil rights rules that public schools follow

Civil Rights May 20, 2026

Maricopa County Billed $163 Million in Racial Profiling Reform Money to Golf Carts, Cable TV, and Office Renovations

A court-ordered audit found the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office misused 72% of $226 million meant to fix racial profiling. Now they want the court oversight ended.

Voting May 19, 2026

38% of Election Workers Reported Threats in 2024. One in Five Quit.

Voter intimidation at polling places is increasing. 38% of election workers reported threats in 2024, up from 17% in 2020. Armed watchers, vigilante challenges, and bad-faith objections are driving experienced workers out.

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