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Arizona GOP representative struggles to justify state bill that would purge early voting list
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A pair of Republican activists sued the Arizona Republican Party and recently reelected Chairwoman Kelli Ward following her refusal to conduct an audit of the results and procedures used for the state GOP s January elections.
The plaintiffs in the complaint, William Beard and Sandra Dowling, filed their lawsuit in Maricopa Superior Court on Friday, asking a judge to require the state party to explain why it should not conduct an audit of Ward s election.
Tucson businessman Sergio Arellano, who came in second place in the race to lead the state GOP, requested a recount in January after she won the election by only 42 votes in a runoff.
Kind of like filling a bucket with a hole in it.
Thatâs how a lot of educators feel about the effort to bolster school funding in one of the worst-funded public school systems in the country.
Educators last month won a solid victory when a Superior Court judge rejected an effort to prevent implementation of Proposition 208, which would generate up to $940 million annually by imposing and added 3.5% state income tax on individuals making more than $250,000 annually or couples making more than $500,000 annually.
Opponents â including the Goldwater Institute â asked Maricopa Superior Court Judge John Hannah to issue an injunction to keep the state from collecting the extra money. The lawsuit claimed the proposition needed a two-thirds approval, since the Arizona Constitution requires a supermajority for the legislature to impose a new tax. The lawsuit also claimed the measure might exceed a constitutional limit on school spending.
A lawsuit working its way through the Arizona court system is challenging Arizona Department of Health Services denial of four dispensary licenses in rural Arizona counties, as a Phoenix-based company attempts to fill empty spaces in the cannabis landscape and increase patient access where there currently is none.
The lawsuit pits four LLCs Joshua Tree, Cactus Wren, Saguaro and Desert Tortoise health centers against AZDHS, challenging the denial of applications for dispensary licenses in Apache, Greenlee, La Paz and Santa Cruz counties.
The initial complaint was filed in July 2020 and alleges that AZDHS denied the applications despite a ruling by the Arizona Supreme Court stating the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act requires that ADHS issue registration certificates, and necessarily open the application process, under two distinct circumstances: (1) if the allocation of dispensary certificates is below the one-in-ten ratio [of dispensaries to pharmacies] or (2) a county does not hav
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