Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen filed a statement of interest to run for attorney general, the first step to making a bid for office.
Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen is interested in running for state attorney general in 2026. Petersen filed a statement of interest Sunday, which allows him to collect signatures for a nominating petition to end up on the ballot for the August 2026 Republican primary,
Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen may run to be Arizona's next Attorney General. The state Senator just filed a statement of interest for the 2026 election. His next step will be to get enough signatures to appear on the ballot.
Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen has filed a statement of interest to run for attorney general in 2026.
Republicans in the state Senate advanced a bill to make it more difficult for local governments in Arizona to raise taxes.
Republican Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen introduced a law to legislators requiring local law enforcement agencies like Sheriff's departments to cooperate with the Trump Administration's immigration policies.
Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen introduced legislation on Tuesday to help federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents with their efforts under President Donald Trump.
Immigration crackdown is starting. What to know in Trump's Week 2 Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen files paperwork for 2026 attorney general run Peoria school board president loses Bible verse lawsuit against district Trump's orders on climate and ...
FOX 10's Lindsey Ragas has more on what lawmakers are doing. Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen may run to be Arizona's next Attorney General. The state Senator just filed a statement of ...
Isaac Elementary is even more broke than we thought, but the Phoenix public school district isn't the only one with mounting financial troubles.
A week into the second Trump administration and the crackdown on the border and illegal immigration is underway. DHS arrested and deported over 7,000 people that were in the U.S. illegally, and some of them were in Arizona.
Legislation requiring municipalities to have a two-thirds council or board vote of approval before raising taxes made it through the Arizona Senate Government Committee on Wednesday.