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The Arizona state elections of 2006 were held on November 7, 2006. All election results are from the Arizona Secretary of State's office. Percentages may not add to 100 because of rounding.
Contents
- State
- Incumbent
- Challengers
- Challenger
- Secretary of State
- State Treasurer
- State Mine Inspector
- Corporation Commissioner
- Incumbents
- Legislative Department
- Judicial Department
- References
The deadline for signing petition signatures to appear on the September 12, 2006 primary ballot for all races was June 14, 2006.
This article does not yet include complete information about the state propositions placed on the ballot, but major propositions for Arizona in 2006 included:
State
Races for Governor of Arizona, Attorney General of Arizona, Secretary of State of Arizona, State Treasurer, Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Mine Inspector, and two seats on the five-member Corporation Commission will be decided. All races except for the State Mine Inspector, State Treasurer, and one seat on the Corporation Commission feature incumbents running for re-election.
Incumbent
Challengers
Republican Primary
Incumbent
Challenger
Secretary of State
Republican incumbent Jan Brewer, the former chair of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, ran for a second four-year term, after winning her first term in 2002. She was challenged by Democrat Israel Torres, the former Arizona Registrar of Contractors and a businessman and attorney, and Libertarian Ernest Hancock, a talk radio producer, real estate agent, and restaurant owner.
Incumbent
Challengers
Democratic Party Primary
State Treasurer
State Mine Inspector
Republican Primary
Corporation Commissioner
Two seats on the Arizona Corporation Commission are up for re-election.
Incumbents
Challengers
Legislative Department
All 60 seats in the Arizona House of Representatives and all 30 seats in the Arizona Senate will be up for election. There are five incumbents not seeking re-election to the seats they currently hold, and eight races in which there is only one candidate for election.
Judicial Department
When a vacancy occurs on the bench, a Judicial Nominating Committee approves the names of at least three applicants for nomination, from which the Governor appoints one to the position. After appointment, all Judges and Justices are subject to judicial election retentions, statewide for Justices and in their separate districts for Judges. Supreme Court Justices serve a six-year term; all other state Judges serve four-year terms. There is a mandatory retirement age of 65 for all judicial offices.