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Arizona governor vetoes bill to speed up counting of election results in the swing state

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Arizona governor vetoes bill to speed up counting of election results in the swing state
News

News

Arizona governor vetoes bill to speed up counting of election results in the swing state

2025-02-19 13:42 Last Updated At:13:50

PHOENIX (AP) — When Arizona was among the last states to finish tallying ballots cast in the 2024 general election, state Republicans dubbed it the laughingstock of the nation and reignited their push to get faster results.

They fast-tracked legislation aimed at speeding up the counting of ballots by moving up the deadline for voters to drop off early ballots, but Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs on Tuesday vetoed the measure over concerns that it would make it harder for people to vote.

Her office had threatened a veto earlier this month, leading to negotiations that ultimately failed to produce some compromises Hobbs sought to ensure expanded access for voters, according to her spokesperson, Christian Slater.

“Unfortunately, any potential compromise was rejected, leading me to believe the focus of this legislation is disenfranchising voters, not delivering faster election results for Arizonans,” Hobbs said in her message to lawmakers.

Arizona election results tend to come in after other states in part because of the signature verification process that state law mandates for mail ballots. Voters can currently drop off their mail ballots at polling places until 7 p.m. on Election Day. In recent elections, the state has taken close to two weeks to report its results.

Republican Senate President Warren Petersen was among those who called for moving up the mail ballot drop-off deadline by four days. The Arizona Association of Counties said the majority of the state's county recorders supported the bill. He called the veto a “huge mistake.”

Petersen said the bill mirrored a system in Florida, where the overwhelming majority of votes are reported on election night, allowing for faster race calls.

In a post on X, Arizona House Speaker Steve Montenegro accused Hobbs and Democratic legislators of blocking reforms aimed at ensuring timely and transparent election results.

"If they won’t act, we will — letting Arizona voters have the final say,” he said, referring to another proposal that passed the House and is headed to the Senate. That measure, like the failed legislation, would put the question of moving up the mail ballot drop-off deadline, among other election administration reforms, before voters.

Arizona has been a pioneer in expanding vote by mail since the 1990s, but only in the past decade has the pace of vote counting become an issue. When Republicans dominated the state, winners of most races were apparent on election night even as election officials continued counting ballots. But statewide races are now much closer, decided in some cases by a fraction of a percentage point, delaying the time when media organizations can declare a winner and drawing national scrutiny from voters eager to know the outcome of the presidency and key congressional races.

Maricopa County Recorder Justin Heap, a former GOP state legislator who questioned the administration of elections in Arizona’s most populous county, called the veto shortsighted and partisan.

Pinal County Recorder Dana Lewis, who supported the bill, said the proposed deadline would have enabled elections officials to collect the majority of mail ballots prior to election night, allowing them to start the signature verification process earlier.

If a Friday deadline was implemented and officials were unable to verify a voter’s signature, voters would have been able to vote at the polls on Election Day rather than waiting up to five days after election night for their ballot to be fixed, Lewis said.

FILE - Voters deliver their ballot to a polling station in Tempe, Ariz., on Nov. 3, 2020. (AP Photo/Matt York, File)

FILE - Voters deliver their ballot to a polling station in Tempe, Ariz., on Nov. 3, 2020. (AP Photo/Matt York, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Vladimir Guerrero's yearly salaries are front-loaded under the $500 million, 14-year contract he agreed to this week with the Toronto Blue Jays, a deal that covers 2026-39.

A four-time All-Star first baseman, Guerrero receives a record $325 million signing bonus payable in 15 installments from 2025-39, according to contract details obtained by The Associated Press.

After earning $28.5 million this year under a one-year deal agreed to in January, Guerrero gets an initial $20 million of the signing bonus within 30 days of the contract's approval by Major League Baseball.

Toronto's remaining signing bonus payments are due each June 30 from 2026-39: $13 million in 2026, $14 million in 2027, $16 million in 2028, $18 million in 2029, $20 million each in 2030, ‘31 and ‘32, $22 million apiece in 2033 and ’34, $23 million in 2035, $24 million in 2036, $29 million in 2037, $31 million in 2038 and $33 million in 2039.

Guerrero gets salaries of $17 million each in 2026 and ‘27, $16 million in 2028, $15 million in 2029, $14.5 million apiece in 2030, ‘31 and ’32, $12.5 million each in 2033 and ’34, $11.5 million in 2035, $10.5 million in 2036, $7 million in 2037, $6.5 million in 2038 and $6 million in 2039.

Adding together salary and signing bonus, the new deal will pay Guerrero $528.5 million over 15 seasons: $48.5 million this year, $30 million in 2026, $31 million in 2027, $32 million in 2028, $33 million in 2029, $34.5 million annually from 2030-36, $36 million in 2037, $37.5 million in 2038 and $39 million in 2039.

His portion received as a signing bonus presumably will be exempt from state income tax in Florida, where Guerrero is a resident. The $325 million signing bonus also would be protected from any work stoppage.

He would earn a $150,000 bonus for winning an MVP award, $125,000 for finishing second in the voting, $100,000 for third, $75,000 for fourth and $50,000 for fifth.

Guerrero would get $50,000 each for making the All-Star team or winning World Series MVP, a Gold Glove award or a Silver Slugger. He would get $25,000 for League Championship Series MVP.

Toronto will provide four seats for all regular-season home games and a luxury suite at a discounted rate, subject to availability, for all regular-season and postseason home games.

He gets a full no-trade provision and a hotel suite on road trips.

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. returns to the dugout following eighth-inning baseball game action against the Baltimore Orioles in Toronto, Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP)

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. returns to the dugout following eighth-inning baseball game action against the Baltimore Orioles in Toronto, Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press via AP)

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