The top fundraisers among Arizona statewide elected offices


Campaign finance requirements govern how much money candidates may receive from individuals and organizations, how often they must report those contributions, and how much individuals, organizations, and political entities may contribute to campaigns.

While campaign finance is not the only factor in electoral outcomes, successful fundraising can provide a candidate with advantages during a campaign. Fundraising can also indicate party momentum.

This article lists top fundraisers among Arizona statewide officeholders and candidates, overall and by party. It is based on campaign finance reports that officeholders in and candidates for statewide elected offices submitted to the Arizona Secretary of State. It includes activity between Jan. 1, 2022, and June 30, 2022.

Statewide political positions are typically offices in the executive and judicial branches of government rather than the legislative, and they most often represent all citizens in the state, rather than those in a particular district.

Top Arizona statewide fundraisers by party

The top fundraisers among Arizona statewide officeholders and candidates are shown below. Individuals are presented with the office that they are on the ballot for in 2022, if applicable. If no office is indicated, the person was an incumbent and was not on the ballot in 2022.

In the Democratic Party, the top fundraisers in the most recent semiannual reporting period were:

  • Katie Hobbs (Governor) – $1,892,582
  • Marco Lopez (Governor) – $701,497
  • Kris Mayes (Attorney General) – $593,883
  • Aaron Lieberman (Governor) – $419,000
  • Adrian Fontes (Secretary of State) – $320,498

In the Republican Party, the top fundraisers in the most recent semiannual reporting period were:

  • Karrin Taylor Robson (Governor) – $12,909,740
  • Kari Lake (Governor) – $2,103,689
  • Abraham Hamadeh (Attorney General) – $1,688,108
  • Rodney Glassman (Attorney General) – $1,123,563
  • Dawn Grove (Attorney General) – $962,467

Fundraising totals

Overall, Democratic officeholders and candidates raised $4.7 million in this period. Republican officeholders and candidates raised $22.6 million. Combined, all statewide officeholders and candidates in the Jan. 1, 2022, through June 30, 2022, filing period raised $27.3 million.

The five largest Democratic fundraisers were responsible for 84 percent of all Democratic statewide officeholder and candidate fundraising. The five largest Republican fundraisers were responsible for 83 percent of all Republican statewide officeholder and candidate fundraising.

The table below provides additional data from the campaign finance reports from the top 10 fundraisers during this period.

TOP 10 FUNDRAISERS – Arizona STATEWIDE OFFICEHOLDERS AND CANDIDATES (Jan. 1, 2022, through June 30, 2022)
Name Party Affiliation Office Sought Raised Spent
Karrin Taylor Robson Republican Party Governor $12,909,740 $15,806,540
Kari Lake Republican Party Governor $2,103,689 $2,077,784
Secretary of State Katie Hobbs Democratic Party Governor $1,892,582 $1,878,786
Abraham Hamadeh Republican Party Attorney General $1,688,108 $1,842,739
Rodney Glassman Republican Party Attorney General $1,123,563 $1,130,223
Dawn Grove Republican Party Attorney General $962,467 $1,002,384
Matt Salmon Republican Party Governor $721,278 $783,435
Marco Lopez Democratic Party Governor $701,497 $687,794
Andrew W. Gould Republican Party Attorney General $668,852 $950,219
Kris Mayes Democratic Party Attorney General $593,883 $201,418

Campaign finance reporting periods

The data above are based on campaign finance reports that candidate PACs submitted to the Arizona Secretary of State. Candidate PACs represent individuals who have run for state or local office at any point, including past and present officeholders. This article does not include non-candidate PACs. Transparency USA publishes campaign finance data following major reporting deadlines. State or federal law may require filers to submit additional reports.

Report Name Report Due Date
2021 1/15/2022
2022 Q1 4/15/2022
2022 Q2 7/15/2022
2022 Pre-Primary 7/23/2022
2022 Post-Primary and Q3 10/15/2022
2022 Pre-General 10/29/2022
2022 Post-General and Q4 1/17/2023

This article is a joint publication from Ballotpedia and Transparency USA, who are working together to provide campaign finance information for state-level elections. Learn more about our work here.