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Arizona State Senate elections, 2012
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The signature-filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was May 30, 2012. The primary election day was August 28, 2012.
Majority control
- See also: Partisan composition of state senates
Heading into the November 6 election, the Republican Party held the majority in the Arizona State Senate:
| Arizona State Senate | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | As of November 5, 2012 | After the 2012 Election | |
| Democratic Party | 9 | 13 | |
| Republican Party | 21 | 17 | |
| Total | 30 | 30 | |
Incumbents retiring
| Name | Party | Current office |
|---|---|---|
| David Lujan | Senate District 15 | |
| David Schapira | Senate District 17 | |
| Linda Gray | Senate District 10 | |
| Lori Klein | Senate District 6 | |
| Paula Aboud | Senate District 28 | |
| Ron Gould | Senate District 3 | |
| Steve Smith | Senate District 23 | |
| Sylvia Allen | Senate District 5 |
Campaign contributions
This chart shows how many candidates ran for state senate in Arizona in past years and the cumulative amount of campaign contributions in state senate races, including contributions in both primary and general election contests. All figures come from Follow The Money.[1]
| Year | Number of candidates | Total contributions |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 84 | $2,954,711 |
| 2008 | 60 | $3,185,493 |
| 2006 | 65 | $2,571,504 |
| 2004 | 58 | $2,274,490 |
| 2002 | 73 | $2,149,412 |
In 2010, candidates running for the state senate received a total of $2,954,711 in campaign contributions. Their top contributors were: [2]
| Donor | Amount |
|---|---|
| Public Fund | $751,935 |
| Davis, Rich | $36,230 |
| Konopnicki, William | $33,140 |
| Kohner, Shawn | $26,132 |
| Kohner, Stephen | $25,050 |
| Downing, Theodore | $24,450 |
| Arizona Association of Realtors | $19,424 |
| Cox Communications | $17,490 |
| Bundgaard, Scott | $15,000 |
| Arizona Medical Association | $10.580 |
Impact of redistricting
- See also: Redistricting in Arizona
The Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission approved new maps on December 20, 2011 by a 3-2 vote, the dissents coming from Republicans; the Department of Justice. Sixteen districts were considered safe for Republicans, 10 for Democrats, and four were deemed competitive.[3] A lawsuit was filed in April 2012 charging that Republicans were being packed into districts to maximize Democratic seats.[4]
In Arizona, there are six state senate districts where the partisan registration of Democratic and Republican voters was less than 10 percentage points apart. These districts would be considered "competitive" when looked at strictly with respect to voter party affiliation. The six districts in Arizona were Districts 4, 8, 9, 10, 18 and 26.
Qualifications
Article 4, Part 2, Section 2 of the Arizona Constitution states: No person shall be a member of the Legislature unless he shall be a citizen of the United States at the time of his election, nor unless he shall be at least twenty-five years of age, and shall have been a resident of Arizona at least three years and of the county from which he is elected at least one year before his election.
Term limits
All of Arizona's 30 state senate seats were up for election on November 6. Arizona senators serve two-year terms with a four-term/eight-year limit that was imposed by Proposition 107 in 1992. Arizona's term limits apply to parts of terms and not just full terms. One state senator in 2010, Albert Hale, was affected by this provision of Arizona's law.
In the 2012 state senate elections, 2 senators, or 6.7% of the total senate seats, (0 Democratic state senators and 2 GOP state senators) could not run for re-election.
In addition to the 2 state senators who left office because of Arizona's term limits, 5 state representatives are also termed-out.
Democrats (0):
None
Republicans (2):
List of candidates
District 1
August 28 GOP primary:
- Steve Pierce
Incumbent Pierce first assumed office in 2009.
- Steve Pierce
November 6 General election candidates:
Steve Pierce: 65,988
Tom Rawles:[5] 26,656
District 2
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Linda Lopez
Incumbent Lopez first assumed office in 2009.
- Linda Lopez
November 6 General election candidates:
Linda Lopez: 39,590
Don Woolley (Write-in): 1,263
District 3
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Olivia Cajero Bedford: 9,718
Incumbent Bedford first assumed office in 2011.
- Maria Garcia: 4,822
- Olivia Cajero Bedford: 9,718
November 6 General election candidates:
Olivia Cajero Bedford: 43,084
District 4
August 28 GOP primary:
- Perla Inzunza (write-in)
- Perla Inzunza (write-in)
Note: Inzunza did not appear on the general election ballot.
November 6 General election candidates:
Lynne Pancrazi: 29,823
District 5
August 28 GOP primary:
- Nancy McLain: 5,762
- Sam Scarmardo: 7,832
- Kelli Ward: 9,925
November 6 General election candidates:
Beth Weisser: 20,040
Kelli Ward: 49,613
District 6
November 6 General election candidates:
Tom Chabin: 39,933
Chester Crandell: 45,105
District 7
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Jack C. Jackson, Jr.
Incumbent Jackson assumed office in 2011.
- Jack C. Jackson, Jr.
November 6 General election candidates:
Jack C. Jackson, Jr.: 49,639
District 8
August 28 Libertarian primary:
- Dean Dill (write-in)
- Dean Dill (write-in)
November 6 General election candidates:
Barbara McGuire: 25,026
Joe Ortiz: 23,542
Dean Dill (Write-in): 2,570
District 9
November 6 General election candidates:
Steve Farley: 49,818
Tyler Mott: 39,562
District 10
August 28 GOP primary:
- Frank Antenori
Incumbent Antenori first assumed office in 2010.
- Frank Antenori
November 6 General election candidates:
David Bradley: 48,509
Frank Antenori: 40,193
District 11
August 28 GOP primary:
- Al Melvin
Incumbent Melvin first assumed office in 2009.
- Al Melvin
November 6 General election candidates:
District 12
August 28 GOP primary:
- Andy Biggs
Incumbent Biggs first assumed office in 2011.
- Andy Biggs
November 6 General election candidates:
Andy Biggs: 63,812
District 13
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Terri Woodmansee (write-in)
- Terri Woodmansee (write-in)
Note: Woodmansee does not appear on the general election list of candidates.
August 28 GOP primary:
- Don Shooter
Incumbent Shooter first assumed office in 2011.
- Don Shooter
Note: Incumbent John Nelson is listed on the candidate list as having withdrawn late.[7][8] Nelson's name will still appear on the ballot. His name appears on the official list of withdrawn candidates.[9]
November 6 General election candidates:
Don Shooter: 48,132
District 14
August 28 GOP primary:
- Gail Griffin
Incumbent Griffin first assumed office in 2011.
- Gail Griffin
November 6 General election candidates:
Patricia Fleming: 30,808
Gail Griffin: 49,647
District 15
August 28 GOP primary:
- Nancy Barto
Incumbent Barto first assumed office in 2011.
- Nancy Barto
November 6 General election candidates:
Nancy Barto: 58,213
Dennis Grenier: 21,384
District 16
August 28 GOP primary:
- Rich Crandall: 9,493
- Incumbent Crandall first assumed office in 2011.
- John Fillmore: 8,614
- Rich Crandall: 9,493
November 6 General election candidates:
Scott Prior: 25,553
Rich Crandall: 45,586
District 17
August 28 GOP primary:
- Steve Yarbrough
Incumbent Yarbrough first assumed office in 2011.
- Steve Yarbrough
November 6 General election candidates:
Bill Gates: 36,349
Steve Yarbrough: 48,581
District 18
August 28 GOP primary:
- John McComish
Incumbent McComish first assumed office in 2011.
- John McComish
November 6 General election candidates:
Janie Hydrick: 45,115
John McComish: 51,084
District 19
November 6 General election candidates:
Anna Tovar: 31,473
District 20
November 6 General election candidates:
Michael Powell: 26,987
Kimberly Yee: 37,371
Doug Quelland: 8,829
District 21
August 28 GOP primary:
- Rick Murphy
Incumbent Murphy first assumed office in 2011.
- Rick Murphy
November 6 General election candidates:
Michael Tarrats: 30,087
Rick Murphy: 44,369
District 22
August 28 GOP primary:
- Judy Burges
Incumbent Burges first assumed office in 2012.
- Judy Burges
November 6 General election candidates:
Judy Burges: 72,211
District 23
August 28 GOP primary:
- Michele Reagan
Incumbent Reagan first assumed office in 2011.
- Michele Reagan
November 6 General election candidates:
Michele Reagan: 82,278
District 24
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Ken Cheuvront: 4,589
- Katie Hobbs: 7,234
August 28 GOP primary:
- Note: Scott Fistler filed for election, but withdrew prior to the primary.[6]
November 6 General election candidates:
Katie Hobbs: 38,142
Augustine Bartning: 19,326
District 25
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Greg Gadek: 7,005
- Nick Thomas: 2 (Write-in)
- Greg Gadek: 7,005
August 28 GOP primary:
- Russell Pearce: 13,534
- Bob Worsley: 17,200
November 6 General election candidates:
Greg Gadek: 27,720
Bob Worsley: 55,290
District 26
August 28 GOP primary:
- Jerry Lewis
Incumbent Lewis first assumed office in 2011.
- Jerry Lewis
November 6 General election candidates:
Ed Ableser: 26,051
Jerry Lewis: 19,442
Damian Trabel: 2,747
District 27
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Victor Jett Contreras: 3,546
- Leah Landrum-Taylor: 5,516
Incumbent Landrum-Taylor first assumed office in 2007.
November 6 General election candidates:
Leah Landrum-Taylor: 33,137
Sarah Coleman: 10,333
District 28
August 28 GOP primary:
- Adam Driggs
Incumbent Driggs first assumed office in 2011.
- Adam Driggs
August 28 Libertarian primary:
- Note: Jim Iannuzo was removed from the ballot.[6]
November 6 General election candidates:
Eric Shelley: 39,243
Adam Driggs: 49,160
District 29
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Steve Gallardo
Incumbent Gallardo first assumed office in 2011.
- Steve Gallardo
November 6 General election candidates:
Steve Gallardo: 27,931
District 30
August 28 Democratic primary:
- Robert Meza: 4,268
Incumbent Meza first assumed office in 2011.
- Raquel Teran: 4,155
- Robert Meza: 4,268
November 6 General election candidates:
Robert Meza: 27,485
See also
External links
- Arizona Secretary of State - Official 2012 General Election Results
- Arizona Secretary of State - 2012 General Election Candidates
- Arizona Secretary of State - Official 2012 Primary Results
- Arizona Secretary of State - 2012 Primary Candidates
References
- ↑ Follow the Money, Arizona
- ↑ Follow the Money: "Arizona 2010 Senate Campaign Contributions"
- ↑ Tuscon Citizen "Arizona approves final maps," December 20, 2011
- ↑ The Arizona Republic, "Arizona redistricting maps challenged by lawsuits," April 27, 2012. Retrieved August 25, 2012.
- ↑ Arizona Secretary of State Elections Division "Independent Candidates" Accessed September 5, 2012
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 azsos.gov - 2012 Primary Candidates
- ↑ AZ Secretary of State "Full listing" Accessed July 31, 2012
- ↑ Yuma Sun "Shooter unopposed in bid for state senate seat" Accessed July 31, 2012
- ↑ AZ Secretary of State "Withdrawn Removed Candidates" Accessed July 31, 2012
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