


Gov. Katie Hobbs (D-AZ) is running for reelection to a second term in office, she announced Wednesday.
Hobbs won against Republican Kari Lake by a slim margin in 2022. Since her election, she has been championed by Democrats for her vetoes of bills passed by the state’s Republican-led legislature and her staunch defense of abortion.
Recommended Stories
- Republican Governors Association pours $1.5 million in Virginia's governor race after Jay Jones scandal
- Spanberger deflects questions of Jones's texts as Republicans see momentum
- Porter threatens to walk out of interview over follow-up questions on California Trump voters
“Arizona: I’m running for re-election,” Hobbs wrote in a post on X alongside an announcement video. “Your stories of hard work, hope, and determination inspire me to keep moving our state forward. I’m ready to serve you for 4 more years and always put your family first. Let’s get to work.”
Arizona: I’m running for re-election.
— Katie Hobbs (@katiehobbs) October 8, 2025
Your stories of hard work, hope, and determination inspire me to keep moving our state forward. I’m ready to serve you for 4 more years and always put your family first.
Let’s get to work. pic.twitter.com/f1EzrpbwyA
In the video, she touted her administration’s affordability wins and her success as governor.
“I’m running to serve you for four more years because there’s more work to do,” Hobbs said. “While Washington, D.C., keeps driving up prices, I’m taking action to bring them down, to fix our state’s education system, and to keep Arizona a safe place for all of our families.”
She also says she cut taxes, lowered child care costs, balanced the state’s budget, and attacked the state’s border problems with a National Guard deployment in the video.
Hobbs is likely to win out in the Democratic field. Her opposition to the state’s Republican-led legislature and her approval of a bill striking the state’s centuries-old abortion ban garnered her national attention.
The Republican field is much murkier.
Reps. David Schweikert (R-AZ) and Andy Biggs (R-AZ), along with 2022 gubernatorial candidate Karrin Taylor Robson, are among the most notable Republicans running. Trump endorsed Robson and Biggs, giving voters a choice between the two.
“I like Karrin Taylor Robson of Arizona a lot, and when she asked me to Endorse her, with nobody else running, I Endorsed her, and was happy to do so,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post. “When Andy Biggs decided to run for Governor, quite unexpectedly, I had a problem — Two fantastic candidates, two terrific people, two wonderful champions, and it is therefore my Great Honor TO GIVE MY COMPLETE AND TOTAL ENDORSEMENT TO BOTH. Either one will never let you down.”
Hobbs’s campaign expressed confidence in a memorandum released Wednesday: “While Arizona statewide races are guaranteed to be competitive until Election Day, Katie Hobbs is entering her re-election exactly where she needs to be to earn a second term.”
The campaign also blasted the GOP candidates as working to “enthusiastically embrace every harmful position coming out of Washington and sell out Arizonans in the hopes of keeping their political ambitions alive.”
CCP MEMBER CUT CHECK TO SUPPORT ARIZONA GOVERNOR SHORTLY AFTER SHE VETOED ANTI-CHINA LEGISLATION
“That makes it difficult to tell the difference between MAGA leader Andy Biggs, billionaire corporate developer Karrin Taylor Robson, and corrupt David Schweikert,” the campaign memorandum continues.
Arizona is often considered a purple state, meaning the 2026 election will be competitive. The Cook Political Report rates the race as one of three gubernatorial toss-ups for 2026, along with Michigan and Wisconsin.