Arizona House of Representatives

The Arizona House of Representatives is the lower house of the Arizona Legislature, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Arizona. The upper house is the Senate. Its members are elected to two-year terms with a term limit of four consecutive terms (eight years). Members of the Republican Party currently hold a narrow majority in the House.

Arizona House of Representatives
54th Arizona Legislature
Type
Type
Term limits
4 terms (8 years)
History
New session started
January 11, 2021
Leadership
Russell Bowers (R)
since January 14, 2019
Speaker pro Tempore
Travis Grantham (R)
since January 11, 2021
Majority Leader
Ben Toma (R)
since January 11, 2021
Majority Whip
Leo Biasiucci (R)
since January 11, 2021
Minority Leader
Reginald Bolding (D)
since January 11, 2021
Structure
Seats60 Representatives
Political groups
Majority
  •   Republican (31)

Minority

Length of term
2 years
AuthorityArticle 4, Arizona Constitution
Salary$24,000/year + per diem
Elections
Last election
November 3, 2020
(60 seats)
Next election
November 8, 2022
(60 seats)
RedistrictingArizona Independent Redistricting Commission
Meeting place
House of Representatives Chamber
Arizona State Capitol
1700 W. Washington St.
Phoenix, Arizona  85007
Website
Arizona House of Representatives

Each of the state's 30 legislative districts elects two representatives.[lower-alpha 1]

Each representative represents a district of at least 172,000 people. The House convenes in the legislative chambers at the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix.

The last election occurred on November 3, 2020.

Leadership of the House

The Speaker is elected by the majority party caucus along with the Majority Leader, the Assistant Majority Leader, and the Majority Whip. The House as a whole shall pass a House resolution confirming the Speaker and the Chief Clerk of the House.[1] In addition to presiding over the body, the Speaker is also the chief leadership position, and controls the flow of legislation and committee assignments. Outside of legislative authority, the Speaker is given the power to employ, terminate and alter the compensation of all House employees.[2] The Speaker has full final authority of all expenses charged to the House of Representatives, further, the Speaker the individual responsible for approving House expense accounts. The minority party selects a Minority Leader, an Assistant Minority Leader and a Minority Whip in a closed caucus.

Leadership information

PositionNamePartyResidenceDistrict
SpeakerRussell BowersRepublicanMesaDistrict 25
Speaker Pro TemporeT. J. ShopeRepublicanCoolidgeDistrict 8
Majority LeaderWarren PetersenRepublicanGilbertDistrict 12
Majority WhipBecky NuttRepublicanSaffordDistrict 14
Minority LeaderCharlene FernandezDemocraticYumaDistrict 4
Assistant Minority LeaderRandy FrieseDemocraticTucsonDistrict 9
Minority WhipReginald BoldingDemocraticPhoenixDistrict 27

Current composition

31 29
Republican Democratic
Affiliation Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
Republican Democratic Vacant
End 52nd, November 2016 36 24 60 0
Begin 53rd, January 2017 35 25 60 0
End 53rd, November 2018
Begin 54th, January 2019 31 29 60 0
Latest voting share 51.7% 48.3%

Current members, 2021–2023

District Image Name Party Residence First elected
1 Judy BurgesRep Prescott 2020
Quang NguyenRep Prescott 2020
2 Andrea DalessandroDem Sahuarita 2020
Daniel Hernández Jr.Dem Tucson 2016
3 Andrés CanoDem Tucson 2018
Alma HernandezDem Tucson 2018
4 Charlene FernandezDem Yuma 2014
Joel JohnRep Goodyear 2020
5 Regina CobbRep Kingman 2014
Leo BiasiucciRep Lake Havasu City 2018
6 Brenda BartonRep Flagstaff 2020
Walter BlackmanRep Payson 2018
7 Arlando TellerDem Window Rock 2018
Myron TsosieDem Chinle 2018
8 David CookRep Casa Grande 2016
Frank PrattRep Coolidge 2020
9 Randall FrieseDem Tucson 2014
Pamela HannleyDem Tucson 2016
10 Stephanie Stahl HamiltonDem Tucson 2020
Domingo DeGraziaDem Tucson 2018
11 Mark FinchemRep Oro Valley 2014
Bret RobertsRep Saddlebrooke 2018
12 Travis GranthamRep Gilbert 2016
Jake HoffmanRep Gilbert 2020
13 Tim DunnRep Yuma 2018†
Joanne OsborneRep Litchfield Park 2018
14 Becky NuttRep Sierra Vista 2016
Gail GriffinRep Sierra Vista 2018
15 Steve KaiserRep Scottsdale 2020
Justin WilmethRep Cave Creek 2020
16 Jacqueline ParkerRep Mesa 2020
John FillmoreRep Apache Junction 2018
17 Jeff WeningerRep Chandler 2015
Jennifer PawlikDem Chandler 2018
18 Mitzi EpsteinDem Chandler 2016
Jennifer JermaineDem Phoenix 2014
19 Diego EspinozaDem Avondale 2014
Lorenzo SierraDem Phoenix 2018
20 Judy SchwiebertDem Glendale 2020
Shawnna BolickRep Phoenix 2018
21 Beverly PingerelliRep Glendale 2020
Kevin PayneRep Sun City 2016
22 Ben TomaRep Peoria 2017†
Frank CarrollRep Peoria 2018
23 Joseph ChaplikRep Fountain Hills 2020
John KavanaghRep Scottsdale 2018
24 Jennifer LongdonDem Phoenix 2018
Amish ShahDem Phoenix 2018
25 Russell BowersRep Mesa 2014
Michelle UdallRep Mesa 2016
26 Melody HernandezDem Tempe 2020
Athena SalmanDem Tempe 2016
27 Reginald BoldingDem Phoenix 2014
Diego RodriguezDem Phoenix 2018
28 Kelli ButlerDem Paradise Valley 2016
Aaron LiebermanDem Paradise Valley 2018
29 Richard C. AndradeDem Phoenix 2014
Cesar ChavezDem Phoenix 2016
30 Robert MezaDem Glendale 2016
Raquel TeranDem Phoenix 2018

†Member was originally appointed to the office.

Past composition of the House of Representatives

Committees

The current standing committees of the Arizona House of Representatives are as follows:

Committee Chairman Vice-Chairman
Appropriations Regina E. Cobb John Kavanagh
Commerce Jeff Weninger Travis Grantham
Education Michelle Udall John Fillmore
Elections Kelly Townsend Frank Carroll
Federal Relations Mark Finchem Gail Griffin
Government John Kavanagh Kevin Payne
Health and Human Services Nancy Barto Jay Lawrence
Judiciary John Allen Walter Blackman
Land & Agriculture Timothy M. Dunn Travis Grantham
Military & Veterans Affairs Jay Lawrence Joanne Osborne
Natural Resources, Energy & Water Gail Griffin Timothy M. Dunn
Public Safety Kevin Payne Anthony T. Kern
Regulatory Affairs Travis Grantham Bret Roberts
Rules Anthony T. Kern Thomas "T.J." Shope, Jr.
State & International Affairs Tony Rivero Walter Blackman
Technology Bob Thrope Jeff Weninger
Transportation Noel Campbell Leo Biasiucci
Ways & Means Ben Toma Shawnna Bolick

See also

Footnotes and references

Footnotes

  1. Two-member, multi-member districts comprise all the districts of the lower/primary legislatures of Washington, North Dakota, Idaho, New Jersey. Aside from a large minority of New Hampshire's districts which have up to 11 members, single-member districts account for most of the other states' legislatures.

References

  1. "Rules of the Arizona House of Representatives" (PDF). azleg.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  2. "Rules of the Arizona House of Representatives" (PDF). azleg.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
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