Vince Leach Explained

Vince Leach
Office:President pro tempore of the Arizona Senate
Term Start:January 10, 2021
Term End:January 9, 2023
Predecessor:Eddie Farnsworth
Successor:T. J. Shope
State Senate1:Arizona
District1:11th
Term Start1:January 14, 2019
Term End1:January 9, 2023
Predecessor1:Steve Smith
Successor1:Catherine Miranda
State House2:Arizona
District2:11th
Term Start2:January 5, 2015
Term End2:January 14, 2019
Predecessor2:Steve Smith
Successor2:Bret Roberts
Birth Place:Wild Rose, Wisconsin, U.S.
Party:Republican
Children:1
Education:University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point (BA)

Venden "Vince" Leach is an American politician from Arizona. A Republican, he was a member of the Arizona State Senate from 2019 to 2023, representing District 11. From 2015 to 2019, he was a member of the Arizona House of Representatives representing District 11. Leach is the Republican nominee for Arizona state senate from Legislative District 17 in the 2024 Arizona Senate election.

Career before politics

Originally from Coloma, Wisconsin, Leach received a bachelor's degree in political science/history from the University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point.[1] Leach was a mineral-products salesman in Wisconsin until 2009, when he retired to Arizona.[2] He then became a conservative activist and political candidate.[1]

Political career

In the November 2014 election for District 11 in the Arizona House of Representatives (Pima and Pinal counties), Leach successfully ran alongside fellow Republican Mark Finchem. Finchem received 36,732 votes and Leach received 34,274 votes, defeating Democratic challenger Holly Lyon, who received 27,392 votes in the general election with 34,274 votes.[3] In 2016, Leach and Finchem defeated Democratic candidate Corin Hammond in the general election: Finchem received 52,509 votes, Leach 49,209 votes, and Hammond 42,511 votes.[4] In 2018, he was elected to the state Senate from Legislative District 11, a heavily Republican district, and he was reelected in 2020.[5] [6]

In 2019, Leach voted for a bill expanding so-called "junk" health insurance plans in Arizona that do not protect against pre-existing conditions.[7]

Leach criticized Arizona public schoolteachers over the 2018 Arizona teachers' strike and for wearing red shirts to support salary increases. Leach called the "Red for Ed" movement a "political action" and, in 2019, supported a Republican bill to impose fines of up to $5,000 on educators deemed to have attempted to "indoctrinate" students by influencing their political or religious views.[8]

In 2019, Leach sponsored legislation that would give unrestricted power to the Arizona attorney general to rewrite the ballot text of citizen voter initiatives. The bill failed after at least four Republicans joined all Democrats in opposing it.[9] In 2020, Leach sponsored legislation to weaken the 1998 Voter Protection Act, a voter-approved amendment to the Arizona Constitution that barred the legislature from changing initiatives approved by the voters, unless they "further the purpose" of the voter initiatives and obtained a three-quarters supermajority vote of the Legislature. Leach said that he sponsored the Republican-supported measure due to his opposition to the voter-approved initiatives that authorized medical marijuana and raised the state minimum wage to $12. The bill passed a state Senate committee on a party-line vote.[10]

Leach sponsored several anti-medical marijuana bills in the state Senate; none advanced.[2]

In 2020, Leach promoted the conspiracy theory QAnon, a radical pro-Trump fringe movement, on social media.[11] [12] [13] In 2021, Leach supported legislation that made it easier to purge Arizona voters from the early voting list.[14] The bill, signed into law by Republican Governor Doug Ducey, was one of many efforts by Republicans nationwide to restrict voting following Trump's loss in the 2020 United States presidential election.[14]

In 2021, Leach sponsored legislation that would block any Arizona county or municipal government from banning so-called gay "conversion therapy."[15] At the time, 20 states and Pima County, Arizona had enacted such bans.[15]

In 2022, Leach sponsored Arizona legislation to give the legislature the power to overturn election results.[16] He was defeated for reelection in the Republican primary by Justine Wadsack.

In 2024, Leach is running for reelection to the Arizona state senate from Legislative District 17. In the July 2024 Republican primary election, Leach defeated incumbent Senator Justine Wadsack who had defeated him in the 2022 primary. In the November 2024 general election, Leach will face Democratic nominee John McLean.[17]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.inmaricopa.com/vince-leach-house-of-representatives-candidate/ Leach looks to take activism to elected office
  2. Ray Stern, On Probation? Arizona Lawmaker Wants to Take Away Your Medical Cannabis, Phoenix New Times (January 8, 2018).
  3. Web site: State of Arizona Official Canvass: 2014 General Election - November 4, 2014 . Secretary of State of Arizona . Phoenix, Arizona . 9 . March 18, 2016.
  4. Web site: State of Arizona Official Canvass: 2016 General Election - November 8, 2016. Secretary of State of Arizona. Phoenix, Arizona. 16. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220203745/https://www.azsos.gov/sites/azsos.gov/files/2016_1205_official_final_signed_state_canvass_for_2016_gen.pdf . December 20, 2016 . dead .
  5. Raquel Hendrickson, Mendoza wins Democratic primary in LD11 Senate race, In Maricopa (August 5, 2020).
  6. Suzanne Adams-Ockrassa, Leach re-elected in LD11 Senate race, Casa Grande Dispatch (November 9, 2020).
  7. Web site: New Arizona law will expand so-called 'junk' health insurance plans. March 12, 2019. Stephanie. Innes. The Arizona Republic.
  8. Bob Christie, Arizona lawmakers revive teacher penalty proposal, Associated Press (April 3, 2019).
  9. Bob Christie, Bill giving attorney general initiative veto in trouble, Associated Press (May 15, 2019).
  10. Bob Christie, GOP-backed measure weakens Arizona’s Voter Protection Act, Associated Press (February 13, 2020).
  11. Web site: Josh Kelety. QAnon in Arizona Politics: A Guide. August 25, 2020. Phoenix New Times.
  12. Web site: Two GOP lawmakers promote QAnon on social media. Arizona Mirror. July 7, 2020. Jeremy Duda. Tucson Sentinel.
  13. Julia Shumway, Candidates spread conspiracy theory in bid to be elected, Arizona Capitol Times (September 4, 2020).
  14. Jonathan J. Cooper, Arizona makes it easier to purge some from early voting list, Associated Press (May 11, 2021).
  15. Joe Dana, Bill would prevent gay conversion therapy bans in Arizona, KPNX (February 17, 2021).
  16. Web site: Andy Rose and Veronica Stracqualursi. Arizona Republican House speaker effectively dooms GOP bill to allow state legislature to reject election results. February 4, 2022. CNN.
  17. News: Wolfe . Ellie . Controversial Tucson-area Sen. Justine Wadsack loses primary . August 4, 2024 . . August 1, 2024 . en.