The GOP head of the Arizona Freedom Caucus is advancing legislation that would bar fellow Republican Karrin Taylor Robson from becoming the next governor — even if she were to win the election.
Strictly speaking, HCR 2037 which was approved by the Senate Government Committee on March 26, says nothing about the attorney and business consultant who formally jumped in the 2026 gubernatorial race earlier this year.
But what the measure crafted by Sen. Jake Hoffman, R-Queen Creek, does say is that no person is eligible to become a state elected official who, for two years prior to the primary, has been required to register as a paid lobbyist.
And that happens to include Robson who as recently as January registered with the city of Phoenix that she is a lobbyist with AZ Strategies LLC. Robson is listed as the founder and president. That same city registration also lists Arizona Public Service, the state’s largest electric utility, as one of her clients. But a spokesman for APS said she ceased doing work for the utility in the fourth quarter of last year. And Resolution Copper Co., in its own filing with the Secretary of State’s Office, said Robson served as a lobbyist until this week.
Hoffman never mentioned Robson’s name when he first explained his measure to other members of the Government Committee, which he chairs.
“This one seems very straightforward,” he told colleagues. “We have the prohibition on lobbying following office.”
That refers to a state statute making it illegal for any former lawmakers to take a paid job lobbying the Legislature for one year after they leave office.
“We think that also should apply prior to office,” Hoffman said. “So it seems like a common-sense measure in line with what we have.”
But Hoffman conceded to Capitol Media Services this isn’t occurring in a vacuum.
He is a vocal supporter of a bid by current U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs who also wants to be the Republican nominee for governor. And Hoffman, while denying that his measure is aimed strictly at Robson, acknowledged he crafted it with her in mind.
“The public has an overwhelming distrust of paid lobbyists because their job includes the potential hazard of selling themselves and their influence to the highest bidder,” he said.
“This legislation seeks to prevent the poisoning of the public’s trust in government that would come from allowing someone in that profession to be able to immediately serve in a position of key influence such as the governorship,” Hoffman continued. “Karrin Taylor Robson is certainly a valid example as to why legislation is needed given her recent moonlighting as a paid lobbyist.”
Robson, in her own prepared response, made no mention of her registration as a lobbyist. Instead she said that Hoffman’s “desperate political tactic fails basic legal scrutiny.”
What makes HCR 2037 potentially dangerous for Robson’s political future is the way it is worded.
Hoffman’s proposal, if approved by the Legislature, would have to be ratified by voters at the Nov. 3, 2026, election.
But the measure does not say that people who have been lobbyists in the affected two-year period are ineligible to run. Such a wording could be interpreted to mean that, if approved, it would be effective proactively, affecting only those who choose to run in future years.
Instead, Hoffman crafted his measure to make anyone who has been a lobbyist for the two years before the 2026 primary — meaning Aug. 4, 2024 — legally unqualified to be sworn in.
If the measure is approved, it would become part of the Arizona Constitution when the 2026 election results are formally certified, something that is set to occur on Nov. 23, 2026.
But whoever is elected in 2026 would not take office until the first day in January 2027 — after the provision becomes effective.
Yet Hoffman called it “laughable” that he was advancing the measure in a way to convince Republicans to nominate Biggs, who is not a lobbyist and therefore would be unaffected even if voters approve his ballot measure.
“There is no need to target her given my confidence that her primary opponent will be elected as our state’s next governor,” Hoffman said, predicting he will win not only the GOP primary but defeat incumbent Democrat Katie Hobbs, who already has made it clear she wants another term.
There is no guarantee that Hoffman’s proposal will make it through the Legislature given there are many Republicans who already have announced their support for Robson. And, even if it does make it onto the ballot, voter approval is not guaranteed.
But despite his disavowals that HCR 2037 is all about Robson, Hoffman also left no doubt that he is using the measure to try to undermine voter support for her.
“A public conversation is warranted about what traps and entanglements might be present with a candidate for governor so closely aligned with, not to mention financially tied to, the largest monopoly utility in the state,” he told Capitol Media Services.
Legally speaking, there is no way for Biggs to benefit if the measure is approved: If Robson wins the GOP primary, defeats Hobbs but is unable to be sworn in, Biggs would not become governor.
So who would?
In 2022, Arizona voters agreed to create the position of lieutenant governor, beginning with the 2026 race.
Under that system, the nominees of each party after the primary will select a running mate, with the two of them running as a ticket. That is similar to what happens in presidential races where the nominee selects a running mate.
Hoffman said he reads the constitutional provision as meaning if the successful gubernatorial candidate can’t take office, the post goes to the lieutenant governor.
Robson, who ran unsuccessfully for governor in 2022 got an early boost last December when President-elect Donald Trump, speaking at an event in Phoenix, called her out in front of the crowd.
“Are you running for governor?” he asked. “I think so Karrin, because if you do, you’re going to have my support, OK?”
Biggs, a former state Senate president and now a congressional representative, became the first to officially enter the race a month later. Robson followed in February complete with an announcement touting that “endorsement” in which she mentioned the president’s name 12 times.
It remains unclear, however, whether Robson will be able to make an exclusive claim to Trump’s backing, particularly as Biggs has been a vocal supporter of the president’s agenda.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by PostX News and is published from a syndicated feed.)