Voters in Arizona and Nebraska will see competing measures on their ballots this November. In Nebraska, one measure would create a right to abortion while another would restrict it.
American voters are hearing both parties promise to help the middle class if they win the election next month.
And Arizona’s results will largely be decided in Maricopa County, which sprawls across the saguaro-covered desert with Phoenix at its heart. Nearly 60% of Arizona’s 4.1m registered voters live there.
Rob Taber, a national organizer with the Latter-Day Saints for Harris movement, told the Washington Examiner that Mormons are centrist in nature. He said some Arizona Republicans get “turned off” about election denialism, which has plagued Arizona elections since 2020.
Immigration and abortion rights will drive many voters to the polls across the country this election cycle, but there is nowhere in the United States where they are more pertinent than in battleground Arizona.
Here are some key takeaways from Associated Press interviews with voters and economic experts in Arizona about the economy and how Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump are talking about it before Election Day: Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, Mesa, and Chandler, is booming.
Former president Obama sharpened his criticism of Donald Trump at a rally Friday in Tucson, Arizona, casting Trump as a huckster who lacks the mental fitness to lead the nation.
Senate candidate Ruben Gallego’s 8-mile hike to Supai village is part of a broader push to court tribal voters.
Arizona is one of ten states this November that will consider a ballot proposal to protect abortion rights. The state's voters will decide whether to enshrine the right to an abortion in their state constitution.
Early voters in Arizona are casting their ballots as Vice President Harris and former President Trump make their closing arguments to swing state voters this weekend. MSNBC’s Ali Velshi sat down with Arizona voters to hear their concerns and opinions this election.
Proposition 137 was referred to the ballot by the Legislature. It would end automatic judicial retention elections in Arizona. Here's what to know.