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Gov. Katie Hobbs is allocating $1.8 million left over from federal COVID funds to provide at least some help to the nearly 900,000 Arizonans who won’t be getting food stamp benefits in November.
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Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes filed a lawsuit that seeks to get Democrat Adelita Grijalva sworn in as the state’s newest member of Congress after House Speaker Mike Johnson has refused to seat her for a month since winning the post.
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A fight over a planned overhaul in downtown Page that made it to the Arizona Supreme Court has led to a new ruling making it easier for residents across the state to block locally approved projects at the ballot box.
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Attempts to regulate groundwater in rural Arizona have stalled in the Legislature and Gov. Katie Hobbs' office says negotiators haven't met since early April.
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Reproductive rights advocates are suing Arizona to unravel several laws regulating abortion access in the state.
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Republican Arizona lawmakers want an appeals court to reverse a previous decision dismissing their lawsuit that sought to void the Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni–Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument.
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State lawmakers voted Monday to require hospitals to inquire whether patients are in the U.S. illegally despite concerns that it would deter some people from seeking care.
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The GOP-controlled House and Senate have approved legislation spelling out that the secretary of state's office cannot certify voting machines unless every part are "sourced from the United States.''
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Gov. Katie Hobbs signed a breakthrough bipartisan measure to fund services for tens of thousands of disabled Arizonans that had run out of cash and led to a months-long fight with Republican lawmakers.
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Border czar Tom Homan told Arizona lawmakers Tuesday that he and the president are not at all sorry about rounding up and deporting everyone who is here illegally, regardless of whether they are guilty of any other offense.
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A Hispanic immigrant rights group is leading the fight in asking a judge to block Proposition 314 from taking effect.
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Republican lawmakers are working to sidestep a court challenge that has kept $15.3 million earmarked for improvements at the rodeo grounds in Prescott locked up for more than two years.