A months-long budget dispute between Governor Katie Hobbs (D-AZ) and Republican legislators took a sharp turn Monday when the Democratic governor announced she would veto nearly all legislation reaching her desk until GOP lawmakers publicly release a budget proposal and re-engage in negotiations.
Gov. Hobbs carved out two narrow exceptions for public safety: a bill addressing death benefits for first responders and a separate measure directing $4.75 million from the Highway Patrol Fund to the Department of Public Safety.
The move comes 87 days after Hobbs submitted her executive budget, a proposal centered on middle-class tax cuts and $1.5 billion in public school funding, and since then no formal Republican counteroffer has materialized.
"All the Republicans in the legislature have done is say, 'That's not a balanced budget, we can't do that,'" Hobbs said. "Then they keep sending me irresponsible tax breaks for special interests and billionaires without showing Arizonans how they're going to pay for that… I don't know how to negotiate with people who won't show us a plan of how they want to balance the budget."
According to the governor's office, talks collapsed on March 20, 2026, after GOP leadership removed Prop 123, a key K-12 education funding mechanism, from the negotiating table.
GOP Push Back
Republican leaders, however, offered a starkly different account. Arizona House Speaker Steve Montenegro (R-AZ) swiftly pushed back, arguing that it was Hobbs who abandoned the process.
"Governor Hobbs quit the budget talks more than three weeks ago after it became clear her numbers did not add up, and now she is trying to distract from that failure with a bill-signing freeze," Speaker Montenegro said. "Arizona needs a balanced budget built on honest numbers, not press stunts and invented revenue. House Republicans are at the Capitol, doing the work and ready to govern."
Although this is not Hobbs' first legislative freeze. In April 2025, she issued a similar moratorium until Republicans passed funding for the Division of Developmental Disabilities, which was lifted roughly a week later after a compromise was reached.
Now, whether this standoff resolves as quickly remains an open question.















