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Representative Oscar de los Santos (D-AZ) is furious about Arizona's newly passed $17.9 billion budget, and Senator David Farnsworth (R-AZ) thinks he has no reason to be.
Rep. De los Santos didn't hold back. For him, the budget came down to one infuriating comparison: $100 million in tax breaks for corporate-owned data centers, while Meals on Wheels, a program that delivers hot meals to homebound seniors with disabilities, gets cut.
"Ask any Arizonan left, right or center: should we be prioritizing tax handouts to corporate data centers or feeding seniors with disabilities?" he said. "The answer is clear."
Additionally, De los Santos argued that the budget was built for billionaires and corporations, not everyday Arizonans. He continues to emphasize that the choice to protect wealthy special interests while cutting a lifeline for vulnerable seniors wasn't just bad policy; it was a moral failure.
Sen. David Farnsworth, who chairs the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee, sees things differently. He called Democratic criticism misleading and said the Republican budget actually spends $800 million less than Governor Katie Hobbs (D-AZ) proposed budget, while still protecting schools, law enforcement, wildfire prevention, and child welfare programs.
"I believe that the people of Arizona deserve honest discussions about the state budget," Farnsworth said, adding that his office had remained open to members of both parties throughout negotiations.
Farnsworth framed the budget as responsible and balanced, a plan focused on relieving the tax burden on working families and seniors without gutting essential services, contradicting what De los Santos had described.
"While there may be disagreements about priorities, it is crucial that our discussions are based on facts rather than fear," Farnsworth added.
Both men believe they're fighting for ordinary Arizonans. The difference is who they think is getting left behind.
However, the battle doesn't end there. If Republicans and Gov. Hobbs can't reach a deal by the end of June, Arizona faces a government shutdown. The legislature is off for all of May, leaving negotiations on ice, and major issues, like Prop 123, a voter-approved measure that directed money from state land sales into education, remain unresolved. Furthermore, Hobbs says schools can't afford to leave it out.
Making matters worse, Arizona simply has less money than it used to. A flat tax that was supposed to boost revenue hasn't delivered, and a slowing economy means less coming in overall. That makes every budget decision a zero-sum fight, and with two sides this far apart, someone is going to lose.
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