2022 Arizona elections


The 2022 Arizona elections were held in the state of Arizona on November 8, 2022, coinciding with the nationwide general election. All six executive offices were up for election, as well as a U.S. Senate seat, all of the state's U.S. House of Representatives seats, and the state legislature.
In recent years, Arizona's status as a Republican stronghold has significantly weakened; since 2018, Democratic candidates have made substantial gains in the state's legislature, congressional delegation, and statewide executive offices. Going into the 2022 midterm elections, Arizona was considered a crucial swing state.
Primary elections in Arizona took place on August 2. The November general election had mixed results for both parties. The Republican Party picked up two of the five Democratic-held seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, the office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, and an additional seat on the Arizona Corporation Commission. In contrast, the Democrats held on to the state's Class 3 U.S. Senate seat and the secretary of state's office, while they flipped the governorship and the Attorney General's office.
Lawsuits contesting the election results were filed by the Republican candidates for governor, secretary of state, and attorney general, but the Arizona Superior Court ruled against the Republican candidates.

United States Senate

Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Mark Kelly was first elected in the 2020 special election with 51.2% of the vote. Kelly ran for a full-term in office and won the Democratic primary unopposed.
Blake Masters, former president of the Thiel Foundation and former chief operating officer of Thiel Capital, was the Republican nominee after defeating Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, businessman Jim Lamon, retired Air Force Major General Mick McGuire, and Arizona Corporation Commission member Justin Olson.
The Libertarian Party nominated Marc Victor, an attorney and the party's nominee for U.S. Senate in 2012. Victor withdrew from the race and endorsed Masters on November 1, 2022.

Results

Incumbent senator Mark Kelly won reelection with 51.4% of the vote. Blake Masters conceded his election loss.

United States House of Representatives

Arizona has nine seats to the United States House of Representatives, which were held by five Democrats and four Republicans.
Six seats were won by Republican candidates while Democratic candidates won three seats.

Governor

Incumbent Republican governor Doug Ducey was term-limited by the Arizona Constitution in 2022 and unable to seek re-election. He was re-elected in 2018 with 56.0% of the vote.
News anchor Kari Lake defeated Arizona Board of Regents member Karrin Taylor Robson in the Republican primary. In the Democratic primary, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs defeated former CBP official Marco A. López Jr.
Hobbs narrowly defeated Lake with 50.3% of the vote.

Results

Secretary of state

Incumbent Democratic secretary of state Katie Hobbs retired to run for governor. She was first elected in 2018 with 50.4% of the vote.
In the Democratic primary, former Maricopa County recorder Adrian Fontes defeated state representative Reginald Bolding. Republican state senator Mark Finchem defeated fellow state legislators Shawnna Bolick, Michelle Ugenti-Rita, and advertising executive Beau Lane for the nomination.

Results

Fontes defeated Finchem in the general election with 52.4% of the votes.

Attorney general

Incumbent Republican attorney general Mark Brnovich was term-limited by the Arizona Constitution and unable to seek re-election. He was re-elected in 2018 with 51.7% of the vote.
The Republican nominee was Abraham Hamadeh.
Former commissioner Kris Mayes ran in the Democratic primary unopposed.

Results

The original round of vote counting ended on November 21, with Mayes having 511 more votes than Hamadeh in unofficial results, within the 0.5% margin for an automatic recount. The results of the recount were announced on December 29, with Mayes having 280 more votes than Hamadeh.

State treasurer

Incumbent Republican state treasurer Kimberly Yee originally announced her intentions to retire to run for governor. However, she later withdrew from that race to instead run for reelection. She was first elected in 2018 with 54.3% of the vote.
Corporate finance officer Bob Lettieri and state representative Jeff Weninger unsuccessfully challenged Yee in the Republican primary.
Democratic state senator Martín Quezada was the Democratic nominee.
Yee was successful, winning approximately 56% of the vote.

Superintendent of Public Instruction

Incumbent Democratic Superintendent of Public Instruction Kathy Hoffman ran for re-election. She was first elected in 2018 with 51.6% of the vote.
Republicans nominated Tom Horne, former superintendent and former Arizona Attorney General, who defeated real estate manager Shiry Sapir, and state representative Michelle Udall.
Hoffman conceded defeat on November 17.
The original count of the election results had Horne winning by 8,967 votes; the recount results had Horne winning by 9,188 votes.

Results

State Mine Inspector

Former Republican Mine Inspector Joe Hart was term-limited by the Arizona Constitution and unable to seek re-election. He was re-elected in 2018 with 51.7% of the vote. Hart resigned on October 31, 2021, and was replaced by Paul Marsh, who was immediately eligible to run for a full term. Marsh then ran un-opposed and was elected to a four-year term outright.
Trista di Genova was the Democratic write-in candidate.

Republican primary

Results

General election

Results

Corporation Commission

Two of the five seats on the Corporation Commission were up for election, elected by plurality block voting. Incumbents Sandra Kennedy, a Democrat, and Justin Olson, a Republican, were eligible for re-election. However, Olson announced he was running for U.S. senator.
Republicans Kevin Thompson and Nick Myers won the general election.

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared
  • Nick Myers, policy advisor to commissioner Justin Olson
  • Kim Owens, Arizona Power Authority commissioner and candidate for the corporation commission in 2020
  • Kevin Thompson, Mesa city councilor
    Declined
  • Justin Olson, incumbent commissioner ''''

    Polling

Endorsements

Results

Democratic primary

Declared

  • Sandra Kennedy, incumbent commissioner
  • Lauren Kuby, Tempe city councilor

    Endorsements

Results

General election

Results

State legislature

All 90 seats in both chambers of the Arizona State Legislature were up for election in 2022. Republicans held small majorities in both chambers.

State senate

House of Representatives

Supreme Court

Three Arizona Supreme Court justices were up for retention in 2022.

Justice Beene retention

was appointed by Governor Doug Ducey in 2019 to succeed retiring justice John Pelander.

Justice Montgomery retention

was appointed by Governor Doug Ducey in 2019 to succeed retiring justice Scott Bales. Unlike the other two justices on the ballot, he received significant opposition from the voters due to his controversial conduct.

Justice Timmer retention

was appointed by Governor Jan Brewer in 2012 after outgoing justice Andrew D. Hurwitz became a federal judge on the Ninth Circuit. She was retained by the voters in 2016.

Local elections

Numerous local elections also took take place in 2022. Some notable ones include:
Arizona had ten statewide propositions on the ballot in 2022.

Certification

14 of Arizona's 15 counties certified the voting results by the November 28, 2022 deadline; the exception was Cochise County. Despite no evidence of irregularities with vote counting, Cochise County's Republican officials delayed their certification vote to December 2, 2022, to accommodate a hearing on the certification of voting machines. Previously, on November 21, Arizona's State Elections Director, Kori Lorick, had sent Cochise County officials confirmation that the Cochise County's voting machines had been certified by the United States Election Assistance Commission in an accredited laboratory. However, the county's Republican officials insisted on hearing more from those who had without evidence alleged that the voting machines were not properly certified. Cochise County election officials certified the county's voting results on December 1, after a court order was issued by Pima County Superior Court Judge Casey McGinley, who cited that by law, since Cochise County were no longer tabulating votes and had no missing votes, a certification vote needed to take place within 20 days of the election, which was November 28.

Lawsuits over results

Kari Lake's lawsuit

Unsuccessful Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake initiated a lawsuit on December 9 seeking a court order to either overturn Katie Hobbs' victory and declare Lake as the winner of the election, or redo the election in Maricopa County. On December 19, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson dismissed eight of ten counts of Lake's lawsuit, regarding invalid signatures on mail-in ballots, incorrect certification, inadequate remedy, as well as violations of freedom of speech, equal protection, due process, the secrecy clause, and constitutional rights. Judge Thompson allowed the remaining two counts to go to trial, these being allegations that election officials intentionally interfered with Maricopa County ballot printers and with the chain of custody of Maricopa County ballots; Judge Thompson ruled that Lake needed to prove the allegations and that the alleged actions "did in fact result in a changed outcome" of the election. After the trial occurred on December 21 and December 22, Judge Thompson dismissed Lake's remaining case on December 24, as the court did not find clear and convincing evidence that misconduct was committed. Judge Thompson wrote: "Every single witness before the Court disclaimed any personal knowledge of such misconduct. The Court cannot accept speculation or conjecture in place of clear and convincing evidence".
Lake appealed on December 27 to the Arizona Court of Appeals against Judge Thompson's rulings. Lake also attempted to have the lawsuit transferred before the Arizona Supreme Court, but the Arizona Supreme Court rejected this without prejudice on January 4, 2023, as "no good cause appears to transfer the matter to this court"; by this date, Hobbs had already assumed the position of Arizona Governor. On February 16, a three-judge panel for the Arizona Court of Appeals affirmed Thompson's ruling; chief judge Kent Cattani wrote the opinion and two other judges, Maria Elena Cruz and Peter Swann, concurred. The appeals court found that the evidence presented in court showed, contrary to Lake's claims, that "voters were able to cast their ballots, that votes were counted correctly and that no other basis justifies setting aside the election results".
After Lake appealed to the Arizona Supreme Court, it issued a ruling on March 22, 2023, written by Chief Justice Robert Brutinel, finding that the Arizona Court of Appeals correctly dismissed six of Lake's seven legal claims, as these challenges of hers were "insufficient to warrant the requested relief under Arizona or federal law." For Lake's remaining legal claim, on signature verification, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled that the lower courts incorrectly interpreted her challenge as pertaining to signature verification policies themselves, instead of the application of such policies; thus this issue was sent back for Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson to reconsider.
After a second trial, Judge Thompson on May 22, 2023, dismissed Lake's remaining claim on improper signature verification, stating that Lake had not provided "clear and convincing evidence or a preponderance of evidence" of misconduct in the election; instead the court received "ample evidence that — objectively speaking — a comparison between voter records and signatures was conducted in every instance asked the Court to evaluate." While Lake's attorneys ultimately argued that signature verification was done too quickly, Thompson concluded that it was possible for signature verification to be done quickly and properly when "looking at signatures that, by and large, have consistent characteristics".