Election Day is two weeks away, and Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are using this time to make their final pitches in swing states. In Arizona, early ballots are already being processed and tabulated,
President Joe Biden, former President Bill Clinton and vice presidential hopeful JD Vance are headed to Arizona.
For many seniors in battleground Arizona, housing costs are at the top of cost-of-living concerns. NBC News' Jacob Soboroff reports on how some are getting by, and how they view the presidential candidates.
Mormons were the most Republican-leaning religious group in the country, but in 2020, President Joe Biden won 18% of their vote.
American voters are hearing both parties promise to help the middle class if they win the election next month.
Voters in Nebraska and Arizona will see competing measures on their November ballots — in one case about abortion, in the other about primary elections. If voters approve them all, what happens next could be up to the courts to decide.
Arizona is the only swing state along the US-Mexico border, where about one in four voters are Latino. Arizona was also at the heart of 2020 election misinformation claims and pro-Trump protests. Biden by 10,000 votes.
And Arizona’s results will largely be decided in Maricopa County, which sprawls across the saguaro-covered desert with Phoenix at its heart. Nearly 60% of Arizona’s 4.1m registered voters live there.
Mesa Mayor John Giles, a Republican who supports Kamala Harris for president, is vexed by the disconnect between Arizona’s presidential race and what’s happening down the ballot.
Here are some key takeaways from Associated Press interviews with voters and economic experts in Arizona about the economy and how Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump are talking about it before Election Day: Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, Mesa, and Chandler, is booming.
Rob Taber, a national organizer with the Latter-Day Saints for Harris movement, told the Washington Examiner that Mormons are centrist in nature. He said some Arizona Republicans get “turned off” about election denialism, which has plagued Arizona elections since 2020.