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2024 United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona

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2024 United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona

← 2022 November 5, 2024 2026 →

All 9 Arizona seats to the United States House of Representatives
 
Party Republican Democratic
Last election 6 3

The 2024 United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona will be held on November 5, 2024, to elect the nine U.S. representatives from the State of Arizona, one from each of the state's nine congressional districts. The elections will coincide with the 2024 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate, and various state and local elections. The primary elections took place on July 30, 2024.

District 1

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 1st congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee David Schweikert Amish Shah
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

David Schweikert
Republican



This district is based in northeastern Phoenix and Scottsdale. The incumbent is Republican David Schweikert, who was re-elected with 50.4% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Robert Backie, medical company sales director[3]
  • Kim George, global security operations investigator[3]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of September 30, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
David Schweikert (R) $3,580,353 $2,889,975 $743,314
Source: Federal Election Commission[9]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Schweikert (incumbent) 62,811 62.7
Republican Kim George 27,587 27.5
Republican Robert Blackie 9,854 9.8
Total votes 100,252 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Andrei Cherny
U.S. executive officials
U.S representatives
Local officials
Organizations
Andrew Horne
Organizations
Kurt Kroemer
Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of September 30, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Andrei Cherny (D) $2,592,326[b] $2,581,642 $10,685
Marlene Galán-Woods (D) $1,776,275[c] $1,773,390 $2,885
Andrew Horne (D) $1,508,528[d] $1,483,737 $24,791
Kurt Kroemer (D) $297,460[e] $297,460 $0
Conor O'Callaghan (D) $2,208,809[f] $2,077,400 $0
Amish Shah (D) $4,930,584[g] $3,432,166 $1,498,419
Source: Federal Election Commission[9]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Andrei
Cherny
Marlene
Galán-Woods
Andrew
Horne
Kurt
Kroemer
Conor
O'Callaghan
Amish
Shah
Undecided
Noble Predictive Insights June 25–27, 2024 420 (LV) ± 4.78% 16% 14% 8% 1% 11% 16% 36%
RMG Research[A] June 10-19, 2024 406 (LV) ± 4.9% 12% 12% 11% 17% 15% 33%[i]

Debate

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 1st congressional district democratic primary debate
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Andrei Cherny Marlene Galán-Woods Andrew Horne Kurt Kroemer Conor O'Callaghan Amish Shah
1 May 17, 2024 The Arizona Republic Steve Goldstien
Richard Ruelas
YouTube P P P P P P

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Amish Shah 17,214 23.5
Democratic Andrei Cherny 15,596 21.3
Democratic Marlene Galán-Woods 15,490 21.2
Democratic Conor O'Callaghan 13,539 18.5
Democratic Andrew Horne 8,991 12.3
Democratic Kurt Kroemer 2,356 3.2
Total votes 73,186 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Michelle Martin[3]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Tossup July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Tilt R October 31, 2024
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Tossup June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Tossup June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Tossup November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Lean R October 21, 2024

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
David
Schweikert (R)
Amish
Shah (D)
Undecided
GBAO (D)[B] August 8–13, 2024 (LV) 47% 48% 5%
Impact Research (D)[C] August 1–4, 2024 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 48% 48% 4%

Results

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 1st congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Schweikert (incumbent)
Democratic Amish Shah
Libertarian Michelle Martin
Total votes

District 2

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 2nd congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Eli Crane Jonathan Nez
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Eli Crane
Republican



The 2nd district encompasses much of northeastern Arizona. The incumbent is first-term Republican Eli Crane, who flipped the district and was elected with 53.9% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Eli Crane (R) $3,935,292 $2,625,043 $1,376,504
Jack Smith (R) $1,350 $0 $1,350
Source: Federal Election Commission[56]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Eli Crane (incumbent) 89,480 80.5
Republican Jack Smith 21,637 19.5
Total votes 111,117 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jonathan Nez
Organizations
Labor unions
Tribes

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jonathan Nez (D) $380,266 $154,214 $226,052
Source: Federal Election Commission[68]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jonathan Nez 62,033 100.0
Total votes 62,033 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Likely R October 22, 2024
Inside Elections[46] Likely R September 12, 2024
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Likely R October 24, 2024
Elections Daily[48] Likely R October 24, 2024
CNalysis[49] Very Likely R November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe R October 22, 2024


Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Jonathan Nez (D)
Executive branch officials
Organizations

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Eli
Crane (R)
Jonathan
Nez (D)
Undecided
Noble Predictive Insights[D] October 10–12, 2024 414 (LV) ± 4.8% 42% 42% 15%

Results

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 2nd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Eli Crane (incumbent)
Democratic Jonathan Nez
Total votes

District 3

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 3rd congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Yassamin Ansari Jeff Zink
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Ruben Gallego
Democratic



The 3rd district is majority-Latino and is based in downtown and western Phoenix.[71] The incumbent is Democrat Ruben Gallego, who was re-elected with 77.0% of the vote in 2022.[1] He is not seeking re-election, instead choosing to run for U.S. Senate.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Yassamin
Ansari
Raquel
Terán
Duane
Wooten
Other Undecided
Lake Research Partners (D)[E] July 10–14, 2024 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 30% 4% 21%
Target Smart[F] April 24–28, 2024 404 (LV) ± 4.9% 20% 30% 7% 6% 37%
Lake Research Partners (D)[E] April 17–21, 2024 425 (LV) ± 4.8% 32% 21% 8% 34%
Lake Research Partners (D)[E] October 26 – November 5, 2023 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 24% 23% 42%

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Yassamin Ansari (D) $1,408,820 $506,411 $902,409
Raquel Terán (D) $856,888 $408,902 $447,986
Duane Wooten (D) $36,054[j] $25,477 $10,576
Source: Federal Election Commission[103]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[104]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Yassamin Ansari 19,087 44.6
Democratic Raquel Terán 19,048 44.5
Democratic Duane Wooten 4,687 10.9
Total votes 42,822 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Jeff Zink, strength conditioning specialist and nominee for this district in 2022[13]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jesus Mendoza[3]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jeff Zink (R) $44,132[k] $47,898 $15,336
Source: Federal Election Commission[103]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeff Zink 9,243 65.6
Republican Jesus Mendoza 4,840 34.4
Total votes 14,083 100.0

Green primary

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Alan Aversa, teacher[3]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid D July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid D July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe D June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe D June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid D November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe D October 21, 2024

Results

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 3rd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Yassamin Ansari
Republican Jeff Zink
Total votes

District 4

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 4th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Greg Stanton Kelly Cooper
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Greg Stanton
Democratic



The incumbent is Democrat Greg Stanton, who was re-elected with 56.1% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Greg Stanton (D) $1,541,651 $641,796 $933,196
Source: Federal Election Commission[117]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Greg Stanton (incumbent) 49,178 100.0
Total votes 49,178 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Kelly Cooper, restaurant owner and nominee for this district in 2022[118]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kelly Cooper (R) $363,908[l] $336,052 $86,600
Dave Giles (R) $69,898[m] $65,620 $4,278
Zuhdi Jasser (R) $428,273 $171,701 $256,571
Jerone Davidson (R) $32,121 $31,096 $1,024
Source: Federal Election Commission[117]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kelly Cooper 18,902 32.0
Republican Zuhdi Jasser 15,929 27.0
Republican Dave Giles 13,575 23.0
Republican Jerone Davison 10,664 18.1
Total votes 59,070 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid D July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid D July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe D June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe D June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid D November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Likely D October 21, 2024

Results

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 4th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Greg Stanton (incumbent)
Republican Kelly Cooper
Total votes

District 5

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 5th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Andy Biggs Katrina Schaffner
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Andy Biggs
Republican



The incumbent is Republican Andy Biggs, who was re-elected with 56.7% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Andy Biggs

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Andy Biggs (R) $901,114 $723,897 $412,689
Source: Federal Election Commission[120]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Andy Biggs (incumbent) 91,820 100.0
Total votes 91,820 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Katrina Schaffner, cosmetology business owner[121]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Katrina Schaffner (D) $5,426 $1,627 $7,578
Source: Federal Election Commission[120]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Katrina Schaffner 42,396 100.0
Total votes 42,396 100.0

Independents and third-party candidates

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Clint Smith, attorney and candidate for this seat in 2022 (Independent)[122]

Withdrawn

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid R July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid R July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe R June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe R June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid R November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe R October 21, 2024

Results

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 5th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Andy Biggs (incumbent)
Democratic Katrina Schaffner
Independent Clint Smith
Total votes

District 6

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 6th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Juan Ciscomani Kirsten Engel
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Juan Ciscomani
Republican



The incumbent is first-term Republican Juan Ciscomani, who flipped the district and was elected with 50.8% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kathleen Winn
Individuals

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Juan Ciscomani (R) $3,358,989 $961,074 $2,452,350
Kathleen Winn (R) $80,878 $76,802 $4,075
Source: Federal Election Commission[132]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Juan Ciscomani (incumbent) 59,021 59.2
Republican Kathleen Winn 40,625 40.8
Total votes 99,646 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Jack O'Donnell, development executive and former Trump Plaza vice president[134]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kirsten Engel (D) $2,509,530 $638,525 $1,872,318
Source: Federal Election Commission[132]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kirsten Engel 78,178 100.0
Total votes 78,178 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Vance Cast, educator[3]
  • Mark Siarto[3]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Vance Cast (L) $50,009[n] $36,707 $13,301
Source: Federal Election Commission[132]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Tossup July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Tossup October 31, 2024
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Tossup April 17, 2024
Elections Daily[48] Tossup June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Tossup November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Likely R October 21, 2024

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Juan
Ciscomani (R)
Kirsten
Engel (D)
Undecided
Change Research (D)[G] July 9–12, 2024 855 (LV) ± 3.8% 43% 44% 13%
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[H] May 28–30, 2024 300 (RV) ± 5.7% 50% 39% 11%
Hypothetical polling
Generic Republican vs. generic Democrat
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Change Research (D)[G] July 9–12, 2024 855 (LV) ± 3.8% 46% 45% 9%

District 7

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 7th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Raúl Grijalva Daniel Butierez
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Raúl Grijalva
Democratic



The 7th district is majority-Hispanic and covers most of the Mexico–United States border in Arizona, including parts of Tucson and Yuma. The incumbent is Democrat Raúl Grijalva, who won with 64.5% of the vote in 2022.[1]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Raúl Grijalva (D) $330,251 $223,597 $312,859
Source: Federal Election Commission[151]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Raúl Grijalva (incumbent) 55,133 100.0
Total votes 55,133 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Daniel Butierez, painting contractor[3]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Daniel Butierez (R) $6,757 $11,233 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[151]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Daniel Butierez 24,425 100.0
Total votes 24,425 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid D July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid D July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe D June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe D June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid D November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe D October 21, 2024

District 8

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 8th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Abraham Hamadeh Greg Whitten
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Debbie Lesko
Republican



The incumbent is Republican Debbie Lesko, who was re-elected unopposed in 2022 with 96% of the vote (facing only write-in opposition). Lesko announced in October 2023 that she would not seek re-election in 2024.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Abraham Hamadeh
U.S. Executive branch officials
Statewide officials
State legislators
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations
Blake Masters
U.S. Executive branch officials
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Ben Toma
U.S. representatives
Organizations
Debbie Lesko (not running)

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pat Briody (R) $15,618[p] $15,518 $100
Trent Franks (R) $277,352[q] $69,881 $207,470
Abraham Hamadeh (R) $596,623 $347,736 $248,887
Anthony Kern (R) $170,076[r] $99,994 $70,082
Blake Masters (R) $6,377,314[s] $2,026,615 $2,724,434
Ben Toma (R) $576,571 $178,456 $398,115
Source: Federal Election Commission[172]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Trent
Franks
Abe
Hamadeh
Anthony
Kern
Blake
Masters
Ben
Toma
Other Undecided
Data Orbital (R)[I] July 17–18, 2024 400 (LV) 13% 20% 5% 23% 17% 20%
Fabrizio, Lee & Associates[I] July 8–9, 2024 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 16% 26% 4% 27% 17% 2%[t] 9%
The Strategy Group Company[J] June 10–12, 2024 620 (LV) ± 4.2% 12% 30% 3% 19% 10% 26%
Fabrizio, Lee & Associates[I] May 13–15, 2024 400 (LV) 14% 16% 2% 28% 8% 0%[u] 32%
SPRY Strategies[K] April 24–26, 2024 500 (LV) ± 4.3% 9% 16% 3% 26% 9% 37%
The Tyson Group[L] April 20–22, 2024 305 (LV) ± 4.0% 11% 10% 3% 16% 9% 3%[v] 48%
Fabrizio, Lee & Associates[I] January 25–28, 2024 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 9% 24% 1% 24% 3% 3%[w] 35%
National Public Affairs (R)[J] December 16–17, 2023 418 (LV) ± 4.8% 6% 37% 3% 14% 7% 34%
National Public Affairs (R) October 23–24, 2023 301 (LV) ± 5.6% 31% 24% 11% 34%
Data Orbital (R)[I] October 19–21, 2023 450 (LV) ± 4.7% 18% 6% 33% 7% 5%[x] 32%
Hypothetical polling
Abe Hamadeh vs. Ben Toma
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Abe
Hamadeh
Ben
Toma
Undecided
National Public Affairs (R) October 23–24, 2023 301 (LV) ± 5.6% 41% 12% 47%
Abe Hamadeh vs. Blake Masters
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Abe
Hamadeh
Blake
Masters
Undecided
National Public Affairs (R) October 23–24, 2023 301 (LV) ± 5.6% 36% 27% 38%
Blake Masters vs. Ben Toma
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[h]
Margin
of error
Blake
Masters
Ben
Toma
Undecided
National Public Affairs (R) October 23–24, 2023 301 (LV) ± 5.6% 42% 15% 43%

Debate

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 8th congressional district republican primary debate
No. Date Host Moderator Link Republican Republican Republican Republican Republican Republican
Key:

 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn

Briody Franks Hamadeh Kern Masters Toma
1 April 30, 2024 Arizona PBS Rick DeBruhl YouTube I P P P P P

Results

[edit]
2024 AZ CD08 GOP primary by precinct.
Results by precinct
  Hamadeh
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  Masters
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Toma
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  Franks
  •   
  2–candidate tie
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  No data
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Abraham Hamadeh 30,686 29.9
Republican Blake Masters 26,422 25.7
Republican Ben Toma 21,549 21.0
Republican Trent Franks 16,714 16.3
Republican Anthony Kern 4,922 4.8
Republican Pat Briody 2,336 2.3
Total votes 102,629 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Greg Whitten
Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Greg Whitten (D) $159,740[y] $129,362 $30,379
Source: Federal Election Commission[172]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Greg Whitten 47,406 100.0
Total votes 47,406 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Declared

[edit]

Independents

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Jeremy Spreitzer, firefighter and Democratic write-in candidate for this district in 2022[175]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid R July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid R July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe R June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe R June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid R November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe R October 21, 2024

District 9

[edit]
2024 Arizona's 9th congressional district election

← 2022
2026 →
 
Nominee Paul Gosar Quacy Smith
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Paul Gosar
Republican



The incumbent is Republican Paul Gosar, who was re-elected unopposed in 2022.[1]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Paul Gosar
State legislators
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Paul Gosar (R) $289,507 $290,944 $118,322
Source: Federal Election Commission[178]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Paul Gosar (incumbent) 89,308 100.0
Total votes 89,308 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2024
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Quacy Smith (D) $67,034[z] $60,889 $8,232
Source: Federal Election Commission[178]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Quacy Smith 33,784 100.0
Total votes 33,784 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[45] Solid R July 28, 2023
Inside Elections[46] Solid R July 28, 2023
Sabato's Crystal Ball[47] Safe R June 8, 2023
Elections Daily[48] Safe R June 8, 2023
CNalysis[49] Solid R November 16, 2023
Decision Desk HQ[50] Safe R October 21, 2024

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This district was numbered as the 6th district prior to the 2020 redistricting cycle.
  2. ^ $150,036 of this total was self-funded by Cherny
  3. ^ $113,178 of this total was self-funded by Galán-Woods
  4. ^ $1,329,537 of this total was self-funded by Horne
  5. ^ $145,627 of this total was self-funded by Kroemer
  6. ^ $1,118,112 of this total was self-funded by O'Callaghan
  7. ^ $194,325 of this total was self-funded by Shah
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  9. ^ "Someone else" with 7%
  10. ^ $5,000 of this total was self-funded by Wooten
  11. ^ $30,000 of this total was self-funded by Zink
  12. ^ $50,214 of this total was self-funded by Cooper
  13. ^ $1,255 of this total was self-funded by Giles
  14. ^ $50,000 of this total was self-funded by Cast
  15. ^ a b Trump originally gave Hamadeh his sole endorsement in December 2023.[165] He later issued a dual endorsement of Hamadeh and Masters on July 28, 2024, just two days before the primary election.[166]
  16. ^ $15,618 of this total was self-funded by Briody
  17. ^ $250,000 of this total was self-funded by Franks
  18. ^ $50,000 of this total was self-funded by Kern
  19. ^ $6,000,000 of this total was self-funded by Masters
  20. ^ Pat Briody with 2%
  21. ^ Briody with 0%
  22. ^ Briody with 3%
  23. ^ Isiah Gallegos with 3%
  24. ^ "Refused" with 5%
  25. ^ $23,000 of this total was self-funded by Whitten
  26. ^ $40,000 of this total was self-funded by Smith
Partisan clients
  1. ^ Poll sponsored by U.S. Term Limits
  2. ^ Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, a Democratic group
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
  4. ^ Polling was sponsored by Inside Elections
  5. ^ a b c Poll sponsored by Ansari's campaign
  6. ^ Poll sponsored by Progress Arizona, which supports Terán
  7. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Economic Security Project Action, a Democratic group
  8. ^ Poll sponsored by Ciscomani's campaign
  9. ^ a b c d e Poll sponsored by Masters's campaign
  10. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Hamadeh's campaign
  11. ^ Poll sponsored by American Principles Project, which supports Masters
  12. ^ Poll sponsored by Breaking Battlegrounds

References

[edit]
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  159. ^ Singer, Jeff (February 21, 2024). "Daily Kos Elections Live Digest: 2/21". Daily Kos. Retrieved February 21, 2024. Rep. Debbie Lesko confirmed Tuesday that she would run for the seat on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors held by incumbent Clint Hickman
  160. ^ a b "Is it Johnson's time?". Punchbowl News. October 25, 2023. Retrieved October 25, 2023. Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) is endorsing Arizona's state House Speaker Ben Toma to succeed her in Congress
  161. ^ Singer, Jeff (October 18, 2023). "Daily Kos Elections Live Digest: 10/18". Daily Kos. Retrieved October 18, 2023. In the no column is state Rep. Steve Montenegro, who took third in the special 2018 primary and tells Axios he's not going to try again
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Official campaign websites for 1st district candidates
Official campaign websites for 2nd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 3rd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 4th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 5th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 6th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 7th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 8th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 9th district candidates