State Elected Officials

  • Arizona State Rep. Selina Bliss (R-Prescott)

    Selina Bliss represents Legislative District 1 which encompasses most of Yavapai County. Having lived in LD-1 since 1971, she has a deep respect for our rich history and is dedicated to protecting and strengthening Arizona.

    Selina is highly engaged with the communities she serves and volunteers for several political and civic organizations including the Yavapai County Republican Party, the State and National Federation of Republican Women, the Arizona State Rifle and Pistol Association, The Well-Armed Woman, and the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue. She is a member of the Prescott and Prescott Valley Chambers of Commerce. She has served on the Yavapai County Industrial Development Authority and the Yavapai County Education Foundation.

    Selina is using her time in office to work on local and statewide issues including securing the border, restoring election integrity, limiting government overreach, lowering taxes, promoting economic opportunity, and protecting state rights. She is also sensitive to issues throughout the district and is ready to work as a champion for challenges throughout LD-1.

    After working as a nurse at Yavapai Regional Medical Center for 36 years, while teaching nursing at Yavapai College for 27 years, she is accustomed to making a difference in the lives of others. Selina comes from a long line of public servants in her family and is called to serve the community in which she was raised. Selina is honored to serve in the State House to protect and defend Arizona while keeping this State great.

  • Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs

    “Born and raised right here in the Grand Canyon State, Governor Hobbs has dedicated her life to listening to her community and helping solve difficult challenges for the people of Arizona. A fearless advocate for Arizona, Governor Hobbs will bring transparency and accountability to the governor’s office and deliver real results for all of us.

    She learned the value of service from her parents and from her faith. Starting as a kid who volunteered at church, she has spent her entire life serving – and has never stopped. She put herself through college at Northern Arizona University and graduate school at Arizona State University with a combination of work study and scholarships, and then immediately started as a social worker helping everyday Arizonans. Her first job out of college was working with youth experiencing homelessness Phoenix, and then she helped run one of the largest domestic abuse shelters in the country.

    In her time as a social worker and running a domestic violence shelter, Governor Hobbs saw firsthand the price Arizonans pay when their elected leaders fail to address the problems people are facing day in and day out. Frustrated with the lack of leadership, Governor Hobbs decided to run for office herself, and she used her experience as a social worker to take on Arizona’s toughest challenges.

    In the legislature, she worked with both parties to expand health care to over 500,000 Arizonans. She worked across the aisle to find new ways to tackle the growing opioid epidemic here in Arizona. And she worked with a Republican governor to clear the state’s rape kit backlog and put sexual assault offenders in jail.

    When Governor Hobbs became Secretary of State in 2018, she had more tough challenges to tackle. She promised to bring trust and accountability to the office – and she did. Governor Hobbs modernized the office, fixed broken systems, battled misinformation, and navigated the pandemic.

    Governor Hobbs has never backed down from a tough fight, and she is a battle-tested leader with the strength and experience to get the job done. Now she’s ready to deliver real results for everyday Arizonans and finally bring the leadership required to solve the most urgent issues Arizona faces today.

    Governor Hobbs knows firsthand that government only works well if it’s led well. For her, that means transparency and accountability. It means focusing on our common needs, not the small differences that divide us. It means bringing people together to serve our state, not tearing us apart for political gain. And it means creating opportunity for all – regardless of zip code, gender, race, or ability.”