Elections in Arizona
Elections in Arizona |
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Elections in Arizona are authorized under the Arizona State Constitution, which establishes elections for the state level officers, cabinet, and legislature.
In a 2020 study, Arizona was ranked as the 21st hardest state for citizens to vote in.[1]
Year | Republican | Democratic | Third party(ies) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | % | No. | % | |
2020 | 1,661,686 | 48.91% | 1,672,143 | 49.22% | 63,559 | 1.87% |
2016 | 1,252,401 | 48.08% | 1,161,167 | 44.58% | 191,089 | 7.34% |
2012 | 1,233,654 | 53.48% | 1,025,232 | 44.45% | 47,673 | 2.07% |
2008 | 1,230,111 | 53.39% | 1,034,707 | 44.91% | 39,020 | 1.69% |
2004 | 1,104,294 | 54.77% | 893,524 | 44.32% | 18,284 | 0.91% |
2000 | 781,652 | 50.95% | 685,341 | 44.67% | 67,120 | 4.38% |
1996 | 622,073 | 44.29% | 653,288 | 46.52% | 129,044 | 9.19% |
1992 | 572,086 | 38.47% | 543,050 | 36.52% | 371,870 | 25.01% |
1988 | 702,541 | 59.95% | 454,029 | 38.74% | 15,303 | 1.31% |
1984 | 681,416 | 66.42% | 333,854 | 32.54% | 10,627 | 1.04% |
1980 | 529,688 | 60.61% | 246,843 | 28.24% | 97,414 | 11.15% |
1976 | 418,642 | 56.37% | 295,602 | 39.80% | 28,475 | 3.83% |
1972 | 402,812 | 61.64% | 198,540 | 30.38% | 52,153 | 7.98% |
1968 | 266,721 | 54.78% | 170,514 | 35.02% | 49,701 | 10.21% |
1964 | 242,535 | 50.45% | 237,753 | 49.45% | 482 | 0.10% |
1960 | 221,241 | 55.52% | 176,781 | 44.36% | 469 | 0.12% |
1956 | 176,990 | 60.99% | 112,880 | 38.90% | 303 | 0.10% |
1952 | 152,042 | 58.35% | 108,528 | 41.65% | 0 | 0.00% |
1948 | 77,597 | 43.82% | 95,251 | 53.79% | 4,217 | 2.38% |
1944 | 56,287 | 40.90% | 80,926 | 58.80% | 421 | 0.31% |
1940 | 54,030 | 36.01% | 95,267 | 63.49% | 742 | 0.49% |
1936 | 33,433 | 26.93% | 86,722 | 69.85% | 4,008 | 3.23% |
1932 | 36,104 | 30.53% | 79,264 | 67.03% | 2,883 | 2.44% |
1928 | 52,533 | 57.57% | 38,537 | 42.23% | 184 | 0.20% |
1924 | 30,516 | 41.26% | 26,235 | 35.47% | 17,210 | 23.27% |
1920 | 37,016 | 55.61% | 29,546 | 44.39% | 0 | 0.00% |
1916 | 20,524 | 35.37% | 33,170 | 57.17% | 4,327 | 7.46% |
1912 | 3,021 | 12.74% | 10,324 | 43.52% | 10,377 | 43.74% |
Presidential elections
[edit]United States Senate elections
[edit]Before the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, United States senators were elected by state legislatures. Arizona's first two Senate elections, which took place in 1912, still featured popular elections, following which the state legislature unanimously elected their respective victories.
Class I (1916 - Present)
[edit]Year | Winner | Votes | Percent | Runner-up | Votes | Percent | Other notable
candidates |
Votes | Percent | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Kyrsten Sinema | 1,191,100 | 50.0% | Martha McSally | 1,135,200 | 47.6% | ||||
2012 | Jeff Flake | 1,104,457 | 49.2% | Richard Carmona | 1,036,542 | 46.2% | Marc J. Victor | 102,109 | 4.6% | |
2006 | Jon Kyl | 814,398 | 53.3% | Jim Pederson | 664,141 | 43.5% | ||||
2000 | Jon Kyl | 1,101,196 | 79.3% | William Toel | 109,230 | 7.8% | Vance Hansen | 108,926 | 7.8% | |
1994 | Jon Kyl | 600,999 | 53.7% | Sam Coppersmith | 442,510 | 39.5% | Scott Grainger | 75,493 | 6.7% | |
1988 | Dennis DeConcini | 660,403 | 56.7% | Keith DeGreen | 478,060 | 41.1% | ||||
1982 | Dennis DeConcini | 411,970 | 56.9% | Pete Dunn | 291,749 | 40.3% | ||||
1976 | Dennis DeConcini | 400,334 | 54.0% | Sam Steiger | 321,236 | 43.3% | ||||
1976 | Paul Fannin | 228,284 | 56.0% | Sam Grossman | 179,512 | 44.0% | ||||
1964 | Paul Fannin | 241,089 | 51.4% | Roy Elson | 227,712 | 48.6% | ||||
1958 | Barry Goldwater | 164,593 | 56.1% | Ernest McFarland | 129,030 | 43.9% | ||||
1952 | Barry Goldwater | 132,063 | 51.3% | Ernest McFarland | 125,338 | 48.7% | ||||
1946 | Ernest McFarland | 80,415 | 69.2% | Ward S. Powers | 35,022 | 30.1% | ||||
1940 | Ernest McFarland | 101,495 | 71.6% | Irving A. Jennings, Sr. | 29,657 | 28.0% | ||||
1934 | Henry F. Ashurst | 67,648 | 72.0% | Joseph Edward Thompson | 24,075 | 25.6% | ||||
1928 | Henry F. Ashurst | 47,013 | 54.2% | Ralph H. Cameron | 39,651 | 45.8% | ||||
1922 | Henry F. Ashurst | 39,722 | 65.03% | James Harvey McClintock | 21,358 | 34.97% | ||||
1916 | Henry F. Ashurst | 29,873 | 55.4% | Joseph H. Kibbey | 21,261 | 39.4% | W.S. Bradford | 2,827 | 5.2% |
Class I (1912)
[edit]Year | Winner | Popular votes | Percent | Electoral Votes | Runner-up | Popular votes | Percent | Electoral votes | Other notable
candidates |
Popular Votes | Percent | Electoral votes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1912 | Henry F. Ashurst | 10,872 | 50.00% | 54 | Ralph H. Cameron | 9,640 | 44.33% | 0 | E. Johnson | 1,234 | 5.68% | 0 |
Class III (1914 - Present)
[edit]Year | Winner | Votes | Percent | Runner-up | Votes | Percent | Other notable
candidates |
Votes | Percent | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Mark Kelly | 1,322,027 | 51.4% | Blake Masters | 1,196,308 | 46.5% | ||||
2020 (special) | Mark Kelly | 1,716,467 | 51.2% | Martha McSally | 1,637,661 | 48.8% | McSally was appointed to this seat in 2019 to replace the retiring Jon Kyl, who was himself appointed in 2018 to replace the deceased John McCain. | |||
2016 | John McCain | 1,359,267 | 53.7% | Ann Kirkpatrick | 1,031,245 | 40.8% | Gary Swing | 138,634 | 5.5% | |
2010 | John McCain | 1,005,615 | 59.1% | Rodney Glassman | 592,011 | 34.8% | ||||
2004 | John McCain | 1,505,372 | 76.7% | Stuart Starky | 404,507 | 20.6% | ||||
1998 | John McCain | 696,577 | 68.7% | Ed Ranger | 275,224 | 27.2% | ||||
1992 | John McCain | 771,395 | 55.8% | Claire Sargent | 436,321 | 31.6% | Evan Mecham | 145,361 | 10.5% | |
1986 | John McCain | 521,850 | 60.5% | Richard Kimball | 340,965 | 39.5% | ||||
1980 | Barry Goldwater | 432,371 | 49.5% | Bill Schulz | 422,972 | 48.4% | ||||
1974 | Barry Goldwater | 320,396 | 58.3% | Jonathan Marshall | 229,523 | 41.7% | ||||
1968 | Barry Goldwater | 274,607 | 57.2% | Roy Elson | 205,338 | 42.8% | ||||
1962 | Carl Hayden | 199,217 | 54.9% | Evan Mecham | 163,338 | 45.1% | ||||
1956 | Carl Hayden | 170,816 | 61.4% | Ross F. Jones | 107,447 | 38.6% | ||||
1950 | Carl Hayden | 116,246 | 62.8% | Bruce Brockett | 68,846 | 37.2% | ||||
1944 | Carl Hayden | 90,335 | 69.4% | Fred Wildon Fickett Jr. | 39,891 | 30.6% | ||||
1938 | Carl Hayden | 82,714 | 76.5% | Burt H. Clingan | 25,378 | 23.5% | ||||
1932 | Carl Hayden | 74,310 | 66.7% | Ralph H. Cameron | 35,737 | 32.1% | ||||
1926 | Carl Hayden | 44,591 | 58.3% | Ralph H. Cameron | 31,845 | 41.7% | ||||
1920 | Ralph H. Cameron | 35,893 | 55.2% | Marcus A. Smith | 29,169 | 44.8% | ||||
1914 | Marcus A. Smith | 25,800 | 53.2% | Don Lorenzo Hubbell | 9,183 | 18.9% | Eugene W. Chafin | 7,293 | 15.0% |
Class III (1912)
[edit]Year | Winner | Popular votes | Percent | Electoral Votes | Runner-up | Popular votes | Percent | Electoral votes | Other notable
candidates |
Popular Votes | Percent | Electoral votes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1912 | Marcus A. Smith | 10,598 | 50.35% | 54 | Hoval A. Smith | 9,228 | 43.85% | 0 | E.B. Simonton | 1,221 | 5.80% | 0 |
United States House of Representatives elections
[edit]Gubernatorial elections
[edit]Governors of Arizona are elected to a term of four years. Prior to a 1968 amendment to the state constitution, governors of Arizona served two-year terms.
1970 - Present
[edit]Year | Winner | Votes | Percent | Runner-up | Votes | Percent | Other notable
candidates |
Votes | Percent | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Katie Hobbs | 1,287,891 | 50.3% | Kari Lake | 1,270,774 | 49.7% | ||||
2018 | Doug Ducey | 1,330,863 | 56.0% | David Garcia | 994,341 | 41.8% | ||||
2014 | Doug Ducey | 805,062 | 53.4% | Fred DuVal | 626,921 | 41.6% | ||||
2010 | Jan Brewer | 938,934 | 54.3% | Terry Goddard | 733,935 | 42.4% | Brewer ascended to the governorship after Janet Napolitano's resignation to become U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security. | |||
2006 | Janet Napolitano | 959,830 | 62.6% | Len Munsil | 543,528 | 35.4% | ||||
2002 | Janet Napolitano | 566,284 | 46.2% | Matt Salmon | 554,465 | 45.2% | Richard Mahoney | 84,947 | 6.9% | |
1998 | Jane Dee Hull | 620,188 | 60.9% | Paul Johnson | 361,552 | 35.5% | ||||
1994 | Fife Symington | 593,492 | 52.5% | Eddie Basha | 500,702 | 44.3% | ||||
1991 (runoff) | Fife Symington | 492,569 | 52.4% | Terry Goddard | 448,168 | 47.6% | Runoff necessitated because no candidate received over 50% of the vote in the first round | |||
1990 | Fife Symington | 523,984 | 49.7% | Terry Goddard | 519,691 | 49.2% | Max Hawkins (write-in) | 10,983 | 1.0% | Symington and Goddard advanced to runoff |
1986 | Evan Mecham | 343,913 | 39.67% | Carolyn Warner | 298,986 | 34.49% | Bill Schulz | 224,085 | 25.85% | |
1982 | Bruce Babbitt | 453,795 | 62.5% | Leo Corbet | 235,877 | 32.5% | Sam Steiger | 36,649 | 5.1% | |
1978 | Bruce Babbitt | 282,605 | 52.5% | Evan Mecham | 241,093 | 44.8% | ||||
1974 | Raúl Héctor Castro | 278,375 | 50.4% | Russell Williams | 273,674 | 49.6% | ||||
1970 | Jack Williams | 209,355 | 50.9% | Raúl Héctor Castro | 202,053 | 49.1% |
1911 - 1968
[edit]Year | Winner | Votes | Percent | Runner-up | Votes | Percent | Other notable
candidates |
Votes | Percent | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1968 | Jack Williams | 279,923 | 57.8% | Samuel Goddard | 204,075 | 42.2% | ||||
1966 | Jack Williams | 203,438 | 53.8% | Samuel Goddard | 174,904 | 46.2% | ||||
1964 | Samuel Goddard | 252,098 | 53.2% | Richard Kleindienst | 221,404 | 46.8% | ||||
1962 | Paul Fannin | 200,578 | 54.8% | Samuel Goddard | 165,263 | 45.2% | ||||
1960 | Paul Fannin | 235,502 | 59.3% | Lee Ackerman | 161,605 | 40.7% | ||||
1958 | Paul Fannin | 160,136 | 55.1% | Robert Morrison | 130,329 | 44.9% | ||||
1956 | Ernest McFarland | 171,848 | 59.5% | Horace B. Griffen | 116,744 | 40.5% | ||||
1954 | Ernest McFarland | 128,104 | 52.5% | John Howard Pyle | 115,866 | 47.5% | ||||
1952 | John Howard Pyle | 156,592 | 60.16% | Joe C. Haldiman | 103,693 | 39.84% | ||||
1950 | John Howard Pyle | 99,109 | 50.77% | Ana Frohmiller | 96,118 | 49.23% | ||||
1948 | Dan Edward Garvey | 104,008 | 59.17% | Bruce Brockett | 70,419 | 40.06% | ||||
1946 | Sidney Preston Osborn | 73,595 | 60.10% | Bruce Brockett | 48,867 | 39.90% | ||||
1944 | Sidney Preston Osborn | 100,220 | 77.91% | Jerrie W. Lee | 27,261 | 21.9% | ||||
1942 | Sidney Preston Osborn | 63,484 | 72.48% | Jerrie W. Lee | 23,562 | 26.90% | ||||
1940 | Sidney Preston Osborn | 97,606 | 65.52% | Jerrie W. Lee | 50,358 | 33.81% | ||||
1938 | Robert Taylor Jones | 80,350 | 68.57% | Jerrie W. Lee | 32,022 | 27.33% | ||||
1936 | Rawghlie Clement Stanford | 87,678 | 70.68% | Thomas Edward Campbell | 36,114 | 29.11% | ||||
1934 | Benjamin Baker Moeur | 61,355 | 59.65% | Thomas Maddock | 39,242 | 38.15% | ||||
1932 | Benjamin Baker Moeur | 75,314 | 63.22% | Jack Kinney | 42,202 | 35.43% | ||||
1930 | George W.P. Hunt | 48,875 | 51.39% | John Calhoun Phillips | 46,231 | 48.61% | ||||
1928 | John Calhoun Phillips | 47,829 | 51.71% | George W.P. Hunt | 44,553 | 48.16% | ||||
1926 | George W.P. Hunt | 39,979 | 50.25% | Elias S. Clark | 39,580 | 49.75% | ||||
1924 | George W.P. Hunt | 38,372 | 50.53% | Dwight B. Heard | 37,571 | 49.47% | ||||
1922 | George W.P. Hunt | 37,310 | 54.94% | Thomas E. Campbell | 30,599 | 45.06% | ||||
1920 | Thomas E. Campbell | 37,060 | 54.15% | Mit Simms | 31,385 | 45.85% | ||||
1918 | Thomas E. Campbell | 25,927 | 49.9% | Fred T. Colter | 25,588 | 49.3% | ||||
1916 | George W.P. Hunt | 28,094 | 48.01% | Thomas E. Campbell | 28,051 | 47.94% | Campbell was sworn in as governor on January 1, 1917, but Hunt declared the winner after recount and subsequently took office | |||
1914 | George W.P. Hunt | 25,226 | 49.46% | Ralph H. Cameron | 17,602 | 34.51% | George U. Young | 5,206 | 10.20% | |
1911 | George W.P. Hunt | 11,123 | 51.46% | Edmund W. Wells | 9,166 | 42.41% | P.W. Gallentine | 1,247 | 5.77% |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ J. Pomante II, Michael; Li, Quan (15 Dec 2020). "Cost of Voting in the American States: 2020". Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy. 19 (4): 503–509. doi:10.1089/elj.2020.0666. S2CID 225139517. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ Leip, David. "Presidential General Election Results Comparison – Arizona". US Election Atlas. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
External links
[edit]- Arizona at Ballotpedia
- Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association, "Arizona", Voting & Elections Toolkits
- "League of Women Voters of Arizona". 16 March 2018. (State affiliate of the U.S. League of Women Voters)
- Digital Public Library of America. Assorted materials related to Arizona elections
- "State Elections Legislation Database", Ncsl.org, Washington, D.C.: National Conference of State Legislatures,
State legislation related to the administration of elections introduced in 2011 through this year, 2020