As we await the showdown between Donald Trump and Katie Hobbs over immigration, Arizona's Democratic governor has a tough decision to make.
Among his first day of executive orders, President Trump on Monday ordered flags be at full-staff "on this and all future Inauguration Days." Gov. Katie Hobbs raised them until Tuesday.
President Donald Trump codified the bill named after a Georgia woman who was killed by an undocumented Venezuelan immigrant in February of 2024.
The nation remains in mourning for former President Jimmy Carter, and that means flags in Arizona will remain at half-staff on Monday, the day of President-elect Donald Trump’s second inauguration,
Republican Rep. Andy Biggs is exploring a run for Arizona governor in 2026, setting up a potential battle with Donald Trump’s pick.
Twenty days later, in a complaint delivered to the Evo A. DeConcini courthouse in Tucson on Nov. 25, 2024, Ortiz again threatened to shoot the incoming "fraudulent elected" president. He said he had earned an expert badge for marksmanship during his time with the Marines, the court documents read.
Arizona is joining with other states to sue President Donald Trump over his sweeping federal grant freeze that is set to go into effect Tuesday evening, according to the Attorney General’s Office.
Hobbs reacted to a federal judge in Seattle halting the Trump executive order aimed at ending Birthright citizenship.
Trump’s second term will have an outsized impact on Arizona, a border state and presidential battleground that was at the heart of Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and then elected him decisively four years later. Trump is in a more powerful position than he was on Inauguration Day in 2017, political watchers say.
The order is temporarily on ice, but uncertainty swirls around which programs would and wouldn't be hit by the federal aid freeze.
Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs has appointed Maria Elena Cruz to the Arizona Supreme Court. The state appellate judge from rural Yuma County will become the first Latina and the first Black person chosen for the state’s high court.
AZ GOPers booed Trump-endorsed gubernatorial hopeful Karrin Taylor Robson at annual state meeting, cheering rival Andy Biggs