Sarah Brown, director of Gov. Katie Hobbs' Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting, said her last day would be Feb. 12.
Arizona Democrats and local Republican officials championing a plan to protect rural groundwater are urging GOP lawmakers at the Capitol to join them.
Governor Katie Hobbs, along with bipartisan state and local leaders held a news conference Thursday to announce legislation to protect rural families and farmers from out-of-state corporations pumping the state groundwater for their own profit.
ARepublican lawmaker who plays a key role in negotiating the state budget with Gov. Katie Hobbs last week called her plan to cut private school voucher spending with an income
Hobbs did not nominate her past pick to lead the Department of Economic Security, Angie Rodgers, who has led the agency for about two years. Instead, Hobbs nominated former director Michael Wisehart to return to the role. The Governor's Office was tight-lipped about the change.
Katie Hobbs on Tuesday pronounced the Democrat’s plan to cut $150 ... It didn’t go well for Zylla, who was hammered by GOP lawmakers for what the budget plan contained, what is left out, and what Hobbs wants to cut. Republicans particularly questioned ...
Imagine the howling from Republicans if the D.C. plane crash had happened on Biden's watch. Trump had just fired key aviation officials in the days leading up to the accident. Wouldn't it be better, instead of rushing to blame, if we mourned the tragedy and the lives lost?
Maria Elena Cruz is Gov. Katie Hobbs' first appointment to the Arizona Supreme Court, a pick that earned praise from both sides of the political aisle. Catch up quick: Before her appointment yesterday, Cruz was a judge on the Arizona Court of Appeals.
The political persona of Katie Hobbs has always been a bit obscured, at least to me. The rawest glimpse came after Dobbs overturned Roe ’s finding of a constitutional right to an abortion.
A Republican lawmaker who plays a key role in negotiating the state budget with Gov. Katie Hobbs on Tuesday pronounced the Democrat's plan to cut $150 million in
Gov. Katie Hobbs’ budget proposal aims to reduce spending on private school vouchers — which her staff described as an “entitlement” for wealthy Arizonans.
In unveiling her $17.65 billion spending plan for next fiscal year, Hobbs said that allowing the program that funds tuition for private and parochial schools as well as home schooling to continue as is would cost nearly $964 million. So Hobbs proposes to put some income restrictions on families.