Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 2024 Maricopa County elections were held on November 5, 2024, in Maricopa County, Arizona, with partisan primary elections for county offices being held on July 30, 2024. All five seats of the Board of Supervisors were up for election, as well as all county-wide elected officials (except the Clerk of the Superior Court).
The 2024 Maricopa County Board of Supervisors elections were held on November 5, 2024. Primary elections were held on August 6. All five seats of the Maricopa County, Arizona Board of Supervisors will be up for election. The Republican Party currently holds four seats on the board, while the Democratic Party holds one.
District 10: Justin Heap ran for Maricopa County Recorder. [6] District 10: Barbara Parker retired. [7] District 14: Travis Grantham was term-limited. [7] District 15: Jacqueline Parker retired. [7] District 25: Tim Dunn ran for the Arizona State Senate. District 27: Ben Toma ran for the U.S. House of Representatives. [8] District 27: Kevin ...
Arizona has the largest Latino population share of any core battleground state, according to the Census Bureau; the country’s biggest battleground county is Maricopa County, a former Republican ...
The typically sleepy race for Maricopa County recorder is heating up, with Richer and his GOP opponents — one of whom is backed by a cadre of MAGA-aligned election deniers — squaring off for ...
Incumbent Republican mayor John Giles will be term limited and can not run for re-election. [2] A primary election for candidates were held on July 30, 2024, [3] [4] from which city councilor Mark Freeman and former mayor Scott Smith advanced to a runoff, [5] in which Freeman defeated Smith with 52.9 percent of the vote. [6]
Arizona state Republican chairman Jeff DeWit this week rejected a Maricopa County GOP proposal to hold a one-day state-run presidential primary in 2024, highlighting a continued fracture in the ...
The 2024 Arizona Corporation Commission election was held on November 5, 2024. It elected three members of the Arizona Corporation Commission , a five-member body tasked with regulating public utilities in the state.