Arizona Democratic Party Explained

Arizona Democratic Party
Colorcode:Blue
Headquarters:PO Box 36123, Phoenix, AZ 85067-6123
Leader1 Title:State Chair
Leader1 Name:Yolanda Bejarano
Leader2 Title:Governor
Leader2 Name:Katie Hobbs
Leader3 Title:Senate Leader
Leader3 Name:Mitzi Epstein
Leader5 Title:House Leader
Leader5 Name:Lupe Contreras
Seats1 Title:U.S. Senate
Seats2 Title:U.S. House
Seats3 Title:Statewide offices
Seats4 Title:Arizona Corporation Commission
Seats5 Title:Seats in the Arizona Senate
Seats6 Title:Seats in the Arizona House of Representatives
Seats7 Title:Phoenix City Council
Seats8 Title:Navajo leadership
Membership Year:2024
Membership:1,195,696[1]
Ideology:Modern liberalism
National:Democratic Party
Colors:Blue
Website:www.azdem.org
Country:Arizona

The Arizona Democratic Party is the affiliate of the Democratic Party in the U.S. state of Arizona. Its headquarters are in Phoenix.[2]

Along with its main rival, the Arizona Republican Party, it is one of two major parties in the state. As of 2023, the party controls the governorship, secretary of state, and attorney general offices, and three out of the state's nine U.S. House seats. Additionally, both of the state's U.S. Senators were elected as Democrats and caucus with the party.

Party organization

The Arizona Democratic Party is organized into three parts: the state committee, the executive committee, and the executive board.

State Committee

The state committee is composed of "the chairperson of each county committee of the Democratic Party of Arizona, plus one member of the county committee for every three members of the county committee elected pursuant to statute."[3] The state committee meets biennially. A state committee member has four duties:

a) Canvass and campaign only on behalf of Democratic candidates.b) Assist in registration programs and in turning out a maximum Democratic vote.c) Support the permanent State Party organization as well as their County and District Party committees.d) Encourage financial support of the State Democratic Party, their County Committees and their districts.[3]

The state committee has many officers including: Chair, Secretary, Treasurer, First Vice-Chair (who is required to be a different gender and county residence than the chair), three Vice-Chairwomen, three Vice Chairmen, Educational Coordinator, and Affirmative Action Moderator.

Executive committee

The executive committee meets quarterly. The executive committee consists of, "the County Chairperson and the first and second County Vice-Chairpersons from each county; the State Committee-elected National Committeemen, the State Committee-elected National Committeewomen; three members-at-large from each Congressional District; the President or a representative of the President of the Young Democrats of Arizona; the President or representative of the President of the Arizona Federation of Democratic Women's Clubs; and the other State Officers as listed in Article III of these bylaws. The Chair of the State Committee shall serve as Chair of the Executive Committee".[3] The executive committee has several duties. "The Executive Committee shall approve the budget and amendments to the budget, approve specific contracts extending beyond the Chair's term, act as the final board of arbitrators for State Committeepersons seeking reinstatement after removal, and perform such duties as assigned by the State Chair".[3]

Executive Board

The executive board duties are assigned by the chair. It also, "acts on behalf of the state committee between State Committee meetings".[3] The executive board meets at least quarterly. Members of the executive board are, "State Chair, First Vice-Chair, Senior Vice-Chair, Vice-Chairwomen, Vice-Chairmen, Secretary, Treasurer, Educational Coordinator, and Affirmative Action Moderator, the State Committee-elected National Committeemen and the State Committee-elected National Committeewomen".[3]

National role

The state committee selects candidates to become presidential electors. These candidates pledge to vote for the National Democratic Convention's presidential and vice presidential nominee.[3] Additionally, the chair and first vice-chair serve on Democratic National Committee.[3] The state committee also elects the national committee members which represent Arizona.[3] These members serve a term of four years and must have previously been an elected precinct committee person.[3] National committee members are to be as evenly split between male and female as possible.[3]

Local groups

The party has affiliate groups in localities throughout the state:

Current elected officials

U.S. Senate

Democrats had controlled both of Arizona's seats in the U.S. Senate since 2020. Currently, a single seat is under their direct control:

United States House of Representatives

Out of the 9 seats Arizona is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives, 3 are held by Democrats:

Arizona Democrats in House of Representatives!District!Member!Photo
3rd
4th[4]
7th

Statewide Offices

Democrats control 4 of the 11 elected statewide executive offices:

State legislative leaders

State Senate

The Arizona Democratic Party is the minority party in the Arizona State Senate, holding 14 of the 30 seats.[5]

State House

The Arizona Democratic Party is the minority party in the Arizona State House of Representatives, holding 29 of the 60 seats.[6]

Mayoral offices

Some of the state's major cities have Democratic mayors. As of 2021, Democrats control the mayor's offices in three of Arizona's ten largest cities and in one median-sized city.

History

The Arizona Democratic Party has been functioning since territorial times. The citizens of the Arizona Territory were mostly Democrats as a reaction to the Republican governors appointed by Washington, D.C.[7] When drafting a state constitution in 1910, 41 Democrats were elected as delegates to the convention[8] The convention totaled 52 delegates.[8]

In July 2020, the party's headquarters was destroyed by a fire that was declared to be an act of arson.[9]

Past officers

State Chairs

Members of Democratic National Committee 1920–present

Election results

Presidential

Arizona Democratic Party presidential election results!Election!Presidential Ticket!Votes!Vote %!Electoral votes!Result
1912Woodrow Wilson/Thomas R. Marshall10,32443.5%
1916Woodrow Wilson/Thomas R. Marshall33,17057.2%
1920James M. Cox/Franklin D. Roosevelt29,54643.7%
1924John W. Davis/Charles W. Bryan26,23535.5%
1928Al Smith/Joseph T. Robinson38,53742.2%
1932Franklin D. Roosevelt/John N. Garner79,26467.0%
1936Franklin D. Roosevelt/John N. Garner86,72269.9%
1940Franklin D. Roosevelt/Henry A. Wallace95,26763.5%
1944Franklin D. Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman80,92658.8%
1948Harry S. Truman/Alben W. Barkley95,25153.8%
1952Adlai Stevenson/John Sparkman108,52841.7%
1956Adlai Stevenson/Estes Kefauver112,88038.9%
1960John F. Kennedy/Lyndon B. Johnson176,78144.4%
1964Lyndon B. Johnson/Hubert Humphrey237,75349.5%
1968Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie170,51435.0%
1972George McGovern/Sargent Shriver198,54030.4%
1976Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale295,60239.8%
1980Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale246,84328.2%
1984Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro333,85432.5%
1988Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen454,02938.7%
1992Bill Clinton/Al Gore543,05036.5%
1996Bill Clinton/Al Gore653,28846.5%
2000Al Gore/Joe Lieberman685,34144.7%
2004John Kerry/John Edwards893,52444.3%
2008Barack Obama/Joe Biden1,034,70744.9%
2012Barack Obama/Joe Biden1,025,23244.5%
2016Hillary Clinton/Tim Kaine1,161,16744.6%
2020Joe Biden/Kamala Harris1,672,14349.4%

Gubernatorial

Arizona Democratic Party gubernatorial election results!Election!Gubernatorial candidate!Votes!Vote %!Result
1911George W. P. Hunt11,12351.5%Won
1914George W. P. Hunt25,22649.5%Won
1916George W. P. Hunt28,09448.0%Won
1918Fred T. Colter25,58849.3%Lost
1920Mit Simms31,38545.9%Lost
1922George W. P. Hunt37,31054.9%Won
1924George W. P. Hunt38,37250.5%Won
1926George W. P. Hunt39,97950.3%Won
1928George W. P. Hunt44,55348.2%Lost
1930George W. P. Hunt48,87551.4%Won
1932Benjamin Baker Moeur75,31463.2%Won
1934Benjamin Baker Moeur61,35559.7%Won
1936Rawghlie Clement Stanford87,67870.7%Won
1938Robert Taylor Jones80,35068.6%Won
1940Sidney Preston Osborn97,60665.5%Won
1942Sidney Preston Osborn63,48472.5%Won
1944Sidney Preston Osborn100,22077.9%Won
1946Sidney Preston Osborn73,59560.1%Won
1948Dan Edward Garvey104,00859.2%Won
1950Ana Frohmiller96,11849.2%Lost
1952Joe C. Haldiman103,69339.8%Lost
1954Ernest McFarland128,10452.5%Won
1956Ernest McFarland171,84859.6%Won
1958Robert Morrison130,32944.9%Lost
1960Lee Ackerman161,60540.7%Lost
1962Samuel Goddard165,26345.2%Lost
1964Samuel Goddard252,09853.2%Won
1966Samuel Goddard174,90446.2%Lost
1968Samuel Goddard204,07542.2%Lost
1970Raúl Héctor Castro202,05349.1%Lost
1974Raúl Héctor Castro278,37550.4%Won
1978Bruce Babbitt282,60552.5%Won
1982Bruce Babbitt453,79562.5%Won
1986Carolyn Warner298,98634.5%Lost
1990 (runoff)Terry Goddard448,16847.6%Lost
1994Eddie Basha500,70244.3%Lost
1998Paul Johnson361,55235.5%Lost
2002Janet Napolitano566,28446.2%Won
2006Janet Napolitano959,83062.6%Won
2010Terry Goddard733,93542.4%Lost
2014Fred DuVal626,92141.6%Lost
2018David Garcia994,34141.8%Lost
2022Katie Hobbs1,287,89150.3%Won

Former prominent Arizona Democrats

United States delegates

United States senators

United States representatives

Territorial governors

State governors

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Voter Registration Statistics – July 2024.
  2. http://www.azdem.org/ Home
  3. http://www.azdem.org/about/109 "ADP Bylaws."
  4. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/members/AZ Arizona Senators, Representatives, and Congressional District Maps - GovTrack.us
  5. http://www.azleg.gov/MemberRoster.asp?Body=S
  6. http://www.azleg.gov/MemberRoster.asp?Body=H
  7. http://www.city-data.com/states/Arizona-History.html "Arizona - History"
  8. http://www.shgresources.com/az/history/ "Arizona State History."
  9. Web site: Police arrest former activist suspected of Arizona Democratic Party headquarters arson.
  10. Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "Arizona Democratic Party Offices." The Political Graveyard. March 10, 2005. The Political Graveyard. URL accessed on August 6, 2007.
  11. "List of United States senators from Arizona." Wikipedia. URL accessed on August 6, 2007 .
  12. "Governors of Arizona." U-S-History.com. 2005. Online Highways. URL accessed on August 6, 2007.
  13. http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.8fd3d12ab65b304f8a278110501010a0?submit=Submit&State=AZ "Governors."