Secretary of State of Arizona

The secretary of state of Arizona is an elected position in the U.S. state of Arizona. Since Arizona does not have a lieutenant governor, the secretary stands first in the line of succession to the governorship.[1] The secretary also serves as acting governor whenever the governor is incapacitated or out of state. The secretary is the keeper of the Seal of Arizona and administers oaths of office.[2] The current office holder is Democrat Adrian Fontes.

Secretary of State of Arizona
= Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes
Incumbent
Adrian Fontes
since January 2, 2023
StyleThe Honorable
ResidencePhoenix, Arizona
Term lengthFour years, can succeed self once; eligible again after 4-year respite
Formation1912
DeputyKeely Varvel
Salary$70,000
Websiteazsos.gov

Duties

The secretary is in charge of a wide variety of other duties as well. The secretary is in charge of four divisions:

The secretary administers the Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records.[4]

History

The longest-served secretary is Wesley Bolin, who served 12 full terms (including the last two-year term and the first four-year term), and 1 partial term for a total of 28 years, 9 months, 18 days (or 10,518 days). Bolin was also the shortest-serving governor, ascending to the governorship in 1977 after Raúl Héctor Castro resigned, and serving only 5 months before his death.

The second-longest-serving is James H. Kerby who was elected to 6 two-year terms in 1923–1929, and again in 1933–1939. He is also the only one to serve non-consecutively in the office. The shortest tenure goes to J. C. Callaghan who died 20 days after his inauguration.

Only two secretaries of state have been elected governor without having first ascended to the office upon the death, resignation, or impeachment of a sitting governor: Sidney P. Osborn and Katie Hobbs. Osborn was also the first governor to die in office, making Dan Garvey the first secretary of state to ascend to the position. Since then, four other secretaries of state have become governor through filling a vacancy.

Officeholders

Parties

  Democratic (15)[a]  Republican (7)[a]

#[b] ImageSecretaryTerm startTerm endPartyTerms[c]
1  Sidney Preston OsbornFebruary 14, 1912January 6, 1919Democratic3
2 Mit SimmsJanuary 7, 1919January 3, 1921Democratic1
3 Ernest R. HallJanuary 3, 1921January 1, 1923Republican1
4James H. KerbyJanuary 1, 1923January 7, 1929Democratic3
5J. C. CallaghanJanuary 7, 1929January 27, 1929Democratic12[d]
6Isaac "Ike" Peter FraizerJanuary 27, 1929January 5, 1931Republican12[e]
7Scott WhiteJanuary 5, 1931January 2, 1933Democratic1
8James H. KerbyJanuary 2, 1933January 2, 1939Democratic3
9Harry M. MooreJanuary 2, 1939November 20, 1942Democratic1+12[d]
10 Dan Edward GarveyNovember 27, 1942May 25, 1948Democratic3+12[e]
11Curtis M. WilliamsNovember 22, 1948January 3, 1949Democratic12[e]
12 Wesley BolinJanuary 3, 1949October 20, 1977Democratic12+12[f]
13 Rose MoffordOctober 20, 1977April 5, 1988Democratic3+12[e]
14James ShumwayApril 5, 1988March 6, 1991Democratic12[e]
15 Richard D. MahoneyMarch 6, 1991January 3, 1995Democratic1[f]
16 Jane Dee HullJanuary 3, 1995September 5, 1997Republican12[g]
17Betsey BaylessSeptember 5, 1997January 6, 2003Republican1+12[e]
18 Jan BrewerJanuary 6, 2003January 21, 2009Republican1+12[g]
19 Ken BennettJanuary 21, 2009January 5, 2015Republican1+12[e]
20 Michele ReaganJanuary 5, 2015January 7, 2019Republican1
21 Katie HobbsJanuary 7, 2019January 2, 2023Democratic1
22 Adrian FontesJanuary 2, 2023IncumbentDemocratic1

See also

Notes

References

External links