The 2018 Arizona State Legislature elections were held on Tuesday, November 6, 2018. A primary election took place on August 28, 2018. Voters in all 30 legislative districts of the Arizona Legislature elected one state senator and two state representatives. The elections coincided with the elections of other offices , including for governor and the United States Senate .
Members to the state senate are elected from the same legislative districts as members of the state house of representatives; however, one senator represents the constituency, while for the house there are two representatives per district.[ 1] In this election, each of the party leaders from both chambers retired, and were elected to different offices.
State Senate seats where the margin of victory was under 10%:
State Senate district 28, 0.2%
State Senate district 6, 1.8% (Tipping seats)
State Senate district 17, 1.8% (Tipping seats)
State Senate district 20, 3.8%
State Senate district 21, 4.4%
State House seats where the margin of victory was under 5%:
State House district 6, 0.3%
State House district 20, 1.4%
State House district 28, 1.4%
State House district 17, 1.8%
State House district 18, 2.8%
State House district 10 , 2.9%
State House district 23, 3.0%
State House district 7, 4.9%
In June, a judge ruled that former state senator Don Shooter , who'd been removed from the chamber earlier in 2018, could remain on the ballot for the Yuma district even though Shooter briefly registered to vote in Phoenix .[ 3]
Independent district 28 senate candidate Mark Syms, husband of representative Maria Syms , was removed from the ballot after a Superior Court judge determined that his petitions contained over 900 forged voter signatures.[ 4] This followed reports that incumbent District 28 state senator Kate Brophy McGee was supporting house candidate Kathy Petsas.[ 5]
The most competitive districts in the state included District 28,[ 5] District 6,[ 5] and District 18.[ 6]
Democrats
State Senate: Jo Craycraft[ 8]
State House: Ed Gogek[ 8]
State House: Jan Manolis[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: none [ 8]
State House: none [ 8]
Green Party
State House: Beryl Baker[ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: Julian Contreraz (write-in) [ 8]
State House: none [ 8]
Green Party
State House: Sara Mae Williams[ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: J'aime Morgaine[ 8]
State House: Mary McCord Robinson[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Wade Carlisle[ 8]
State House: Felicia French[ 8]
State House: Bobby Tyler[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: JL Mealer[ 8]
State House: Doyel Shamley[ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Sharon Girard[ 8]
State House: Carmen Casillas[ 8]
State House: Linda C. Gross[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: Randy Fleenor (write-in)[ 8]
State House: Ana Henderson[ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
Green Party
State House: Joshua Reilly[ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Ralph Atchue[ 8]
State House: Hollace Lyon[ 8]
State House: Marcela Quiroz[ 8]
Republicans
Green Party
State Senate: Mohammad Arif[ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Elizabeth Brown[ 8]
State House: Joe Bisaccia[ 8]
State House: Lynsey Robinson[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Michelle Harris[ 8]
State House: Thomas Tzitzura[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Jaime Alvarez[ 8]
State House: Bob Karp[ 8]
State House: Shelley Renne-Leon[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Kristin Dybvig-Pawelko[ 8]
State House: Julie Gunnigle[ 8]
State House: Jennifer Samuels[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Benjamin Carmitchel[ 8]
State House: Sharon Stinard[ 8]
Republicans
Green Party
State House: Richard Grayson[ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: none [ 8]
State House: none [ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Douglas Ervin[ 8]
State House: Hazel Chandler[ 8]
State House: Christopher "Chris" Gilfillan[ 8]
Republicans
No party
Democrats
State Senate: none [ 8]
State Hous: Bradley Hughes[ 8]
State House: Gilbert Romero[ 8]
Republicans
Independents
State Senate: Kathy Knecht[ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Wendy Garcia[ 8]
State House: Valerie Harris[ 8]
State House: Teri Sarmiento[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
State Senate: Daria Lohman[ 8]
State House: Eric Kurland[ 8]
Republicans
Independents
State Senate: Christopher Leone[ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: Vicki Alger[ 8]
State House: David Alger Sr.[ 8]
Libertarians
State House: Christopher Karpurk (write-in) [ 8]
Democrats
State Senate: Kathy Mohr-Almeida[ 8]
State House: Johnny Martin[ 8]
Republicans
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: Rebecca Speakman[ 8]
State House: Raymond D. Speakman[ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: none [ 8]
State House: none [ 8]
No party
State House: Julian "Jul" Szymanski (write-in) [ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: Charles Carpenter (write-in) [ 8]
State House: none [ 8]
Democrats
Republicans
State Senate: none [ 8]
State House: Gary Spears[ 8]
^ "Arizona State Legislature - Ballotpedia" .
^ Jacobson, Louis (October 8, 2018). "A Month Before Election Day, Democrats Poised for Legislative Gains" . Governing . Retrieved June 27, 2024 .
^ "Arizona Senate candidate appeals Don Shooter's eligibility" . Associated Press. Retrieved August 17, 2018 .
^ "Judge removes Mark Syms from Arizona Senate ballot following forgery accusations" . Retrieved August 17, 2018 .
^ a b c "Arizona Legislature: 4 sizzling races that could decide the balance of power" . Retrieved August 17, 2018 .
^ "Allhands: This time, Arizona teachers want to take over the House and Senate - from the inside" . Retrieved August 17, 2018 .
^ "Arizona Election Results" .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj fk fl fm fn fo fp fq fr "Arizona Election Information" . apps.arizona.vote . Retrieved September 11, 2018 .
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