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The 2024 Maricopa County elections were held on November 5, 2024, in Maricopa County, Arizona, with partisan primary elections for county offices being held on July 30, 2024. All five seats of the Board of Supervisors were up for election, as well as all county-wide elected officials (except the Clerk of the Superior Court).
The 2024 Maricopa County Board of Supervisors elections will be held on November 5, 2024. Primary elections were held on August 6. All five seats of the Maricopa County, Arizona Board of Supervisors will be up for election. The Republican Party currently holds four seats on the board, while the Democratic Party holds one.
(The Center Square) – Recounts confirmed the leads in multiple races in Arizona. Republican Kate Brophy McGee won the District 3 Maricopa County Board of Supervisors race. "I am incredibly ...
The elections use plurality block voting, and each party will nominate 3 candidates. Republicans currently hold 4 seats on the board, while Democrats hold 1. Two Republicans, Lea Márquez Peterson and James O'Connor, were up for re-election in 2024, as is the lone Democrat, Anna Tovar.
Maricopa County, which takes in metro Phoenix and includes about 60% of the state’s voters, backed McCain and Mitt Romney in their presidential bids over Barack Obama by double digits.
The 2024 Phoenix mayoral election was held on November 5, 2024, to elect the mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. A potential runoff election would be held on March 11, 2025, if no candidate receives a majority of the vote. [1] Incumbent Mayor Kate Gallego is running for re-election to a second full term and is considered the favorite to win. [2]
Statewide races here have become tighter in recent elections, and the number of voters waiting until Election Day to drop off their ballots has grown, leaving a larger percentage of the state's ...
The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors is the governing body of Maricopa County, a county of over four million in Arizona. The five supervisors [1] are each elected from single-member districts to serve four-year terms. Primary elections and general elections take place in years divisible by four. [2]