Of the 1,287,891 Arizonans who cast their 2022 gubernatorial votes for Democrat Katie Hobbs to replace termed-out Republican Doug Ducey, at least 25% would likely want to take their votes back. Hobbs has proven to be, at best, ineffective and, at worst, a viable threat to national security.
Hobbs' latest gubernatorial action, consistent with her apparent indifference to Arizonans' well-being, was to veto Republican-backed Senate Bill 1109. The bill's objective was to prevent nationals from the People's Republic of China from purchasing Arizona property. The measure sought to add Arizona to the growing list of states that, because of national security concerns, ban the communist nation from acquiring U.S. land.
In her veto message, Hobbs stated that while protecting infrastructure is important, the bill is "ineffective at counterespionage and does not directly protect our military assets." Senate Majority Leader Janae Shamp, who sponsored SB 1109, slammed Hobbs for the veto and called out the governor for threatening state and national security. Shamp pointed to China's recent effort to lease property near Luke Air Force Base in the west Phoenix suburb of Glendale. Luke serves as a primary training base for F-35 stealth fighter pilots from the U.S. and several allies.
The bill also applied to Chinese citizens unless they are permanent U.S. residents. The only exception was for homes on less than two acres located at least 50 miles from a military base or 25 miles from a military practice range—meaning not in Phoenix, Tucson, Yuma, Flagstaff, or Sierra Vista.
The "Veto Queen"
Around Arizona, Hobbs has earned the nickname "Veto Queen." She has already smashed the Arizona veto record during her first two years as governor, killing 216 bills: 143 in 2023 and 73 in 2024. Democratic Governor Janet Napolitano previously held the record with 181 bills vetoed from 2003-09. Hobbs is running up her winning margin, with 138 vetoes so far this year including SB 1109, as she approaches surpassing her 2023 record.
In defiance of the Department of Homeland Security, Hobbs has vetoed multiple Republican-backed bills that would have forced cooperation with federal immigration and deportation efforts, including three border-related bills on May 12. The Democratic governor's vetoes demonstrate that she will not embrace federal immigration law, even as the Republican-majority Legislature advances the Trump administration's priorities on enforcement and deportation. Hobbs frequently states that Arizonans will determine Arizona's future, not the federal government—a position that could put her on the Department of Justice's list of states that defy the Supremacy Clause.
Questionable Campaign and Early Actions
Hobbs' 2022 candidacy raised ethical questions. As the then-Secretary of State, Hobbs was responsible for certifying the gubernatorial election results—a clear conflict of interest since she was in a tight race against Kari Lake. Once she won the nomination, Hobbs ran a Biden-like campaign: she refused to debate Lake and avoided reporters and their questions. Immediately after Hobbs' paper-thin victory, inquiries arose about Maricopa County's malfunctioning electronic voting machines and mail-in ballot validity. Maricopa is Arizona's largest county and leans Republican.
From the start, Hobbs proved herself an open-borders advocate. In her 2023 inaugural address, she promised to extend the Arizona Promise Scholarship Program to illegal aliens attending state universities and colleges. Before Title 42 ended, Hobbs established five new bus routes from border communities to Tucson, overwhelming the city to accommodate undocumented immigrants.
Ongoing Legal and Financial Issues
The governor's problems are ongoing. A Maricopa County Superior Court judge ruled that Hobbs violated state law when she appointed 13 de facto state agency heads to sidestep the Senate confirmation process. This judicial rebuke represents only the tip of the iceberg regarding Hobbs' legal troubles.
Her $2 million taxpayer-funded Super Bowl LVII celebration included open-bar parties, 70 hotel rooms at the high-end Arizona Biltmore, sponsorships, and free tickets valued at between $4,000 and $40,000 for teachers, staffers, and political allies. This extravagance drew criticism in a state struggling to provide essential services like helping the homeless and funding responses to the growing illegal alien immigrant presence at Arizona's southern border.
Pay-for-Play Allegations
The most serious charge against Hobbs involves alleged pay-for-play schemes. Republican Senate President Pro Tempore Thomas Shope demanded an investigation after reports emerged that Sunshine Residential Homes, which donated $400,000 to Hobbs, received an exclusive daily care rate increase from Hobbs' Department of Child Safety (DCS). The reports alleged that Sunshine's daily rate increased from $149 to $195 per child while DCS denied rate increases to similar service providers. The Democratic Attorney General has acknowledged that her office has begun an investigation.
Political Future in Question
Hobbs often boasts that she has never lost an election. However, with border politics likely to be at the forefront of voters' minds and state issues close behind in her now-long-shot reelection bid next year, the question more commonly heard around Arizona is: "How can she win?"
Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst. Contact him at jguzzardi@ifspp.org
Dear Katy,
Don't worry
Things are usually darkest right before they go totally black.
Vetoing Senate Bill 1109 tells me this America-hating Democrat is joined at the hip with a Chinese Communist Party whose agenda calls for the destruction of this republic; the same can be said about those "Americans" who voted for her.