Arizona Republican Party

The Arizona Republican Party is the affiliate of the Republican Party in the US state of Arizona. Its headquarters are in Phoenix. The party currently controls six of Arizona's nine U.S. House seats, sixteen of thirty State Senate seats, thirty-one of sixty State House of Representatives seats, four of five seats on the Arizona Corporation Commission and three Statewide Executive Offices (State Treasurer, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and State Mine Inspector)

Since 2020, the state party has been dominated by Christian nationalist and far-right factions. Its platform calls for the overturning of Obergefell v. Hodges, the repeal of same-sex marriage, and a near-total ban on abortion access. The Arizona Republican Party played key roles in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 United States presidential election and the 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election.

History
Republicans held both of the state's U.S. Senate seats between 1995 and 2019, and the governorship for all but six years between 1991 to 2023. Republican presidential candidates won the state in every election between 1996 and 2020.

The party's cash reserves fell from around $770,000 in 2019, to less than $50,000 in 2023. The organization spent $300,000 on legal counseling while attempting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and $500,000 on an election night party in 2022.

Current structure
Here is the structure of the state party, as of Feb 2019.

State Committee

 * The 15 county Republican chairmen
 * One member for each three elected Republican PCs

The chairman, Secretary and Treasurer elected at the biannual Statutory Meeting and other officers elected at the biannual Mandatory Meeting (except National Committeeman and Committeewoman, who are elected at quadrennial State Convention).

County committees
County committees include all PCs within that county. They meet in January after general elections to elect a chairman, two vice chairs, a secretary and a treasurer.

Legislative district committees
Legislative district committees exist in counties of more than 500,000 people (Maricopa and Pima Counties), and include all PCs within that district. Officers are elected at Organizational Meetings after the general election including a chairman, two vice chairs, a secretary and a treasurer.

Precinct committeemen
Precinct committeemen are elected one per precinct, plus one additional for each 125 registered voters of that party as of March 1 of the general election year. There are over 1,666 precincts statewide (including over 724 precincts in Maricopa County.)

Federal officials
These are the Republican Party members who hold federal offices.

U.S. Senate

 * None

Both of Arizona's U.S. Senate seats have been held the Democratic caucus since 2020. Martha McSally is the last Republican to represent Arizona in the U.S. Senate. Appointed in 2019 by Governor Doug Ducey after the resignation of Jon Kyl who was appointed to the seat after the death of John McCain in 2018, McSally lost the 2020 special election to determine who would serve the remainder of the term expiring in 2023. McSally lost the special election to Democratic challenger Mark Kelly, who won a full term in 2022, defeating Blake Masters. John McCain is the last Republican elected to represent Arizona in the U.S. Senate in 2016, while Jeff Flake is the last Republican to represent Arizona for a full term in the U.S. Senate from 2013 to 2019.

U.S. House of Representatives
Out of the nine seats Arizona is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives, six are held by Republicans:
 * AZ-01: David Schweikert
 * AZ-02: Eli Crane
 * AZ-05: Andy Biggs
 * AZ-06: Juan Ciscomani
 * AZ-08: Debbie Lesko
 * AZ-09: Paul Gosar

Executive
The Arizona Republican Party controls 7 of 11 elected statewide executive offices:

Senate
The Arizona Republican Party holds the majority in the Arizona Senate, holding 16 of the 30 seats.

House
The Arizona Republican Party holds the majority in the Arizona House of Representatives, holding 31 of the 60 seats.

Mayors

 * Gail Barney (Queen Creek)
 * Jason Beck (Peoria)
 * Kenny Evans (Payson)
 * Ed Honea (Marana)
 * John Insalaco (Apache Junction)
 * Bridgette Petersen (Gilbert)
 * Scott LeMarr (Paradise Valley)
 * Michael LeVault (Youngtown)
 * Georgia Lord (Goodyear)
 * Mark Nexsen (Lake Havasu City)
 * Lana Mook (El Mirage)
 * Christian Price (Maricopa)
 * Thomas Schoaf (Litchfield Park)
 * Thomas Shope (Coolidge)
 * Greg Mengarelli (Prescott)
 * John Giles (Mesa)
 * Kevin Hartle
 * Byron Lewis (Snowflake)